Las Vegas Review-Journal (Sunday)

Fawning over hue

Former Army depot home to herd of rare white deer

- By John Kekis

DENNIS Money unlocks the gate to the 3,000-acre spread that practicall­y serves as his home away from home, jumps into a van and cautions his guests.

“I won’t guarantee you’ll see one, but there’s a good bet you will,” Money, a retired utilities executive, says as they proceed past the 10-foot-high fence that keeps the world’s largest herd of white deer safe and in one place.

Seconds later, one of the ghostly white creatures leaps out of the woods, stares for a second at the intruders — then darts away. It won’t be the last sighting on this day as Money, president of Seneca White Deer Inc., maps a route for another tour of a most unusual wildlife sanctuary — a military relic in the heart of the Finger Lakes region of upstate New York.

The former Seneca Army Depot, about 57 miles southwest of Rochester, was the U.S. Army’s main East Coast munitions storage facility for six decades until it was decommissi­oned in 2000. Now it’s home to approximat­ely 75 white deer.

Seneca White Deer conducts tours year-round — fall is a prime

time for viewing — and helps make sure the deer have enough food to survive. The color of the deer makes them easy targets for predators and hunters.

“I absolutely love it. I’m so proud of what they’re doing there,” said 84-year-old Pidge Bower, who owns a 500-acre farm in nearby Potter, New York. “It blew me away. I love the white deer. I think they’re beautiful and I’m glad they’re protected.”

The history of how the depot became home to the deer is as fascinatin­g as spotting one of the snowy white creatures. On the brink of entering World War II in 1941, the U.S. Army selected a site between Seneca Lake and Cayuga Lake to build a facility that would house the latest munitions. Constructi­on of 519 concrete igloos, which still stand and are part of the tours, was completed in just four months along with 70 miles of roads that crisscross­ed a 10,000-acre layout.

When all of the igloos were filled, it’s estimated they held 100 million pounds of explosives. Documents found by Seneca White Deer suggest the depot housed the Army’s largest stockpile of atomic weapons.

“We lived through those times,” Bower said. “There were rumors locally, but you know what, most of them were probably true. The nuclear thing was huge. The country folks knew something was going on. It was very obscure. It was rumored. ‘Do you know what?’ ‘I don’t believe that. Why would they do that?’ It was just fascinatin­g to me.”

Several dozen white-tailed deer, which are native to the region, were trapped inside the 24-mile-long depot fence when it was erected and, shielded from predators and hunters, the herd multiplied. In 1949, two all-white deer, a natural variation of the white-tailed deer, were spotted by soldiers and protected on the depot grounds.

Over the ensuing decade the white deer population grew to around 200. The herd then gradually declined, but after most of the depot grounds were transferre­d to a private owner two years ago, preservati­on of the rare animals became a priority.

 ?? Dennis Money ?? Approximat­ely 75 white deer roam the former Seneca Army Depot, about 57 miles southwest of Rochester, N.Y.
Dennis Money Approximat­ely 75 white deer roam the former Seneca Army Depot, about 57 miles southwest of Rochester, N.Y.
 ??  ?? A white buck and a smaller brown deer bolt after seeing people at Deer Haven Park in Romulus, N.Y.
A white buck and a smaller brown deer bolt after seeing people at Deer Haven Park in Romulus, N.Y.

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