Garden Dilemmas, Delights & Discoveries, Ask Mary Stone, New Jersey Garden blog

Please don’t feed deer, Dear

a hand with grain feeding deer

Hello Fellow Readers, Last week’s buck rub chat inspired John from Pen Argyl, PA, to ask if feeding deer would keep them from eating his shrubs. There are signs around town offering deer corn for sale, which means folks with kind intentions feed them. Or, maybe planning to bate them for a hunt, which hardly seems fair game. Why you shouldn’t feed deer, dear.

It’s tough not to feel bad for wildlife when temperatures are frigid, and snow abounds. However, feeding deer can actually harm them. And because food piles won’t meet all of their nutritional needs, it will devastatingly add to deer browse as feeding concentrates deer in one area. Never mind their enormous mess of leave-behinds and yellow snow.

Feeding deer increases the risk of disease.

Their unnatural concentration also increases the risk of spreading parasites and diseases such as Chronic Wasting Disease (CWD) found in Pennsylvania in 2012 – thankfully not yet in our local area. CWD is similar to mad cow disease, though there are no confirmed cases of humans contracting it.

Deer have a blend of bacteria in their digestive system that work together to enable them to break down plant material as seasons change. Their bacteria changes to accommodate the available food. According to the NJ Division of Fish & Wildlife website, ‘When deer are fed high carbohydrate foods out of season, they lack the necessary gut microflora to digest these foods. This can result in lactic acidosis, which causes bloating, diarrhea, enteritis, and in some cases, death.’

Mary Stone, Garden Dilemmas, Ask Mary Stone,Gardening tips, Garden Blogs, Stone Associates Landscape Design, Garden Blog, Feeding Deer

Feeding deer is NOT a good idea!

While we hear more concern over bear being a threat…

Like feeding bear, by feeding deer, they lose their fear of humans and can become dangerous. I recall reading about a human attacked by a deer a few years back in Lake Hopatcong, NJ.

Yes, we’ve moved into their territory, making guilt a motivation to offer up food. But feeding deer (and bear by leaving trash outside) can dramatically increase their fertility, which adds to the problem of overpopulation.

Deer are hardwired to get through the winter on their own. They go into a feeding frenzy to build up a fat reserve to go along with their winter coat in the fall. As the cold weather sets in, their metabolism slows, they become less active, and they’ll seek sheltered areas. Supplementing food interrupts its natural ability to adapt and survive. So no help is the best help for deer (and your garden).

Garden Dilemmas? AskMaryStone@gmail.com

Column updated 11/20/2020

About Buck Rub

Link to – NJ Division of Fish & Wildlife

Mary Stone, owner of Stone Associates Landscape Design & Consulting. As a Landscape Designer, I am grateful for the joy of helping others beautify their surroundings which often leads to sharing encouragement and life experiences. These relationships inspired my weekly column published in THE PRESS, 'Garden Dilemmas? Ask Mary', began in 2012. I dream of growing the evolving community of readers into an interactive forum to share encouragement and support in Garden and Personal Recoveries - seeking nature’s inspirations, stimulating growth, weeding undesirables, embracing the unexpected. Thank you for visiting! Mary

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