H&N
photo by Gary Thain Ross
geese can be seen in a pasture near the Klamath Wildlife Area south of
Klamath Falls Wednesday morning. Farmers and landowners discussed problems
they are having with migrating geese and possible solutions during a
meeting Friday at the Klamath County Fairgrounds.
“They’re keying in on these pastures,” said Ron Cole, refuge manager
at the Klamath Basin National Wildlife Refuges. “They’re keying in on
alfalfa. These are important crops for these geese.”
Geese will often feed at the center of a field, eating the freshly emerging
crop down to the dirt. Damage to an alfalfa field can be total since the
crop cannot be reseeded.
“They don’t just take the first crop of alfalfa, they take the whole
stand,” said Frank Anderson, a Miller Island area farmer.
In an effort to keep geese out of fields, farmers use decoys and loud noises
to scare them off, but it doesn’t keep them away for long.
“They’ll get it sooner or later,” said Luther Horsely, a Midland area
farmer.
Bare dirt in fields depleted of crops also provide a foothold for noxious
weeds, which in turn increases herbicide costs for farmers. Geese present a
different problem for cattlemen.
Bacteria present in geese feces can cause scours, or diarrhea, in newborn
calves.
And ultimately, migrating geese populations may not be an issue just for
farmers. As county development spreads, Cole said, a comprehensive plan will
be needed to address the needs of farmers, refuges and residential
developments in rural areas.
Finding a solution to the problem
may not take drastic measures, and Basin area growers can utilize a goose
depredation study done in the Willamette Valley as a resource.
“Maybe it will take five or six little things,” Flowers said. “We
don’t have to blaze a new trail on these issues.”
Some solutions considered at the meeting included changing habitat in the
Klamath Basin and further south into California, introducing a special
spring-season hunt, and compensating farmers.
“It’s going to take a combination of things,” Cole said. “There are
a lot of tools that are out there.”
But, he added, there should be compensation of some
sort for the wildlife habitat farmers provide.
“You’ve been bearing it on your back and providing the food
these birds are eating,” Cole said. “In the end you’ve got to have
some kind of compensation for the conservation work you’re doing.”
But the idea of financial compensation didn’t please everyone.
“I’d rather make my money off the ground. I farm,” said Ryan Kliewer.
Kliewer and his wife Laurinda grow 250 acres of mostly organic alfalfa and
grain.
Getting federal monies to fund a compensation program is unlikely, according
to Klamath County Commissioner Bill Brown, who also attended the meeting
Friday.
Brown, back from a trip to Washington, D.C., said discretionary spending,
due to increased costs from Medicare, Medicaid, and disaster relief, is
limited, and new appropriations will be difficult to attain.
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