Sporting Gun

Some notable achievemen­ts

Jon Snowdon and his colleagues in the deer management group collate whatever detail they can on the ground to help them with their task and to stay safe

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The deer management group I run has a system that ensures we are always in contact via text when a colleague is on the ground. informatio­n is sent by the individual concerned to every member of the group, and added later to a full report. The following describes the type of informatio­n we share.

This Time on and off

This is primarily for a member’s safety. The text ‘GDMG on the ground’ and ‘GDMG off the ground’ lets the whole Greenlee Deer

Management Group know where a colleague is. If a text ‘off the ground’ does not arrive after a few hours then members of the group will contact that person to check all is OK.

This informatio­n is collated onto the main fuller report that gives informatio­n about the group’s (and an individual’s) activities. It gives the amount of time an individual and a group have spent on the ground managing deer. It also tells us the average time it takes to cull one deer.

For example, at the end of the season 165 hours divided by 19 equals 8.68 hours per deer. The figures can also give some insight into the population for an area.

If the hours per carcass goes up and recorded sightings go down then it is likely the deer population is dropping for that area. This may be the aim of the deer management group for any particular estate.

Some areas are much more challengin­g to remove deer and that would also show up on the hours spent in that regard.

Wind direction/strength

This gives us knowledge of where deer are seen in an area – useful informatio­n for each manager. It also helps to focus the most productive effort in a particular area and, in turn, helps to avoid time being wasted.

Route taken

Again, invaluable informatio­n to each member of the group. The text will show what was seen and where. If a member is going in the next day or even a week later and takes note of past informatio­n, they should have a very good idea of where and when the deer may be in a particular area on an estate. This informatio­n builds up over time and gives a clear picture of deer movement on an estate.

What was seen

Where have the deer been seen? Do they have young? Also, informatio­n on other

“It helps to focus the most productive effort in a particular area.”

wildlife that may be of interest to an estate. Our maps have all the woodland and fields numbered. Some of the woodland is also split into smaller sections.

This informatio­n gives us concise areas where deer are observed. The deer taken are recorded even more precisely into threemetre square areas that can be observed on Google Earth, which is really useful.

Deer taken

This details the sex, species, weight, health, precise placement of the shot and carcass declaratio­n number.

It also highlights episodes such as signs of poaching, dogs out of control, deer RTA’s (road traffic accidents) and where people

 ?? ?? A roe deer on high alert in a forest glade
A roe deer on high alert in a forest glade
 ?? ?? Stalkers keep in touch like this
Stalkers keep in touch like this

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