Elkader zone, same as last year. The positive this year is south and east of the blue square. In section 16,17, 20, or 21. I didn't mark my map but I'm pretty sure it was in one of those sections of Boardman Township. The zone wasn't expanded the usual 5 miles. The explanation was there wasn't any good way to set the boundaries in the direction they needed to expand and they didn't want hunters guessing what side of a tree they needed to be on.
Harpers Ferry zone, the one confirmed positive is marked with a brown triangle north of Harpers Ferry, the 5 presumptives are not marked and I didn't write down their locations. As I remember there was one in the northern area of the zone causing the zone to be pushed west and north, another by Waterville and one or two further south that caused the area to be pushed further south and west:
As stated the DNR's goal is to get 300 additional samples from each zone.
The DNR's thinking is the pattern of positives, or lack of, is two fold, natural movement of deer along creeks and rivers and dispersal of young bucks looking for territory to call their own. In my opinion another possible explanation is there are more samples from one area in the zone than another. I did not see a current map of samples per section so I can't say that's what is happening.
Why are they looking for more cases? In my opinion, the goal of the DNR is not to eradicate CWD, but try to slow the spread so the rest of the hunters in Iowa don't have to go through what Clayton and Allamakee Counties are experiencing for as long as possible. It absolutely sucks to sit in these meetings year after year and see the hunters in that area go from denial that CWD is a problem, then to anger that CWD is a problem and now to a sort of depression over what this disease had led to.
Also, in my opinion, as the disease moves the DNR does more testing to try and give hunters an idea where CWD is and if the should think about getting their deer tested prior to consumption.
There was a very sad story shared at the Elkader meeting. A large family group of hunters had 16 deer tested during one of the shotgun seasons. They have their own cooler or freezer large enough to hold all of the carcasses. No one communicated to them that testing results may be delayed due to a shortage of test kits. They waited a very long time, as I recall it was 2 weeks or maybe more (tests were supposed to be back in 10 days or less) to hear if any of their deer were positive. Hearing nothing and not knowing of the test kit shortage and delays in results they assumed their deer were negative for CWD. They butchered all of the deer and three hogs to grind into the venison. Three days after they did all of the butchering, grinding and packaging they got a call that one of the deer was positive for CWD.
Now they have huge decisions to make. Eat the meat? CDC say you shouldn't. Throw out all of the knives, cutting boards, grinders? Prions are not killed by regular household cleaners. Burn the cooler? Prions withstand temps of 1300F which is cherry red steel.
So how did this happen? All the holes in the Swiss cheese lined up. The DNR did put out a news release on their web site about the delays in test results. I have personally signed up several times to get email notices of their press releases. I only find out about them days later when I read it somewhere else or somebody sends me the link. I did know about the delay in test results but only though word of mouth.
It would have been very easy for someone in the DNR to call the local newspapers or radio stations to do a PSA on the test delays. In my opinion the information coming out of the DNR, not only the Fish and Wildlife Division but all of the DNR is so closely regulated by the Executive Branch that the folks running the CWD efforts could lose there jobs by saying something that wasn't fully vetted and released through the DNR communications department. Again, I'm not making excuses for what happened to that family and the loss they suffered but if this incident doesn't change how information is dripped out, then wow, the system is definitely broken.
Let's hope that by next year there will be a better system in place for test results. A whole page of the DNR website dedicated to CWD results updated daily. Much like reporting a turkey or deer, you are given a number that identifies your deer. You go to the website, enter your DNR hunter number (it is on all of your tags and licenses) that number is tied to your deer test number(s) so you can see where the sample is in the process and get the results immediately. Hopefully there will be an increase in funding for the Fish and Wildlife Division so some sort of system can be implemented.
My heart goes out to that family. They were at the meeting. They were upset, and who wouldn't be, but they remained calm and in control. I'd would have wanted my 16 deer and three hogs worth of flesh, but they would just have been shooting the messengers and I think they understood that.
If anybody has more information or can clarify the notification story please feel free to share it. I'm going strictly on memory for that one.
Sorry for the crappy jpegs of the zones.