Free: Contests & Raffles.
Just remove the lymph nodes yourself. I went down a few weeks ago just to be prepared. Really not that big of a deal.
I have mixed feelings on my experience. The good side of things was that there were multiple locations to drop off the samples that were easy to find and well marked. The bad side was that there was no in person sites since general deer season hadn't started yet and also really no directions on how to get to the lymph nodes. We tried watching a few youtube videos that each showed different ways of getting to them. Honestly, I don't even know if what I got was the actual lymph nodes but I put in the little envelope what we guessed were them so we did our part. Bigger picture, do I think doing all this will make a lick of difference with how they manage the herds, that is a big fat negative.
Yeah, I hear what you’re saying and agree they could have sent out training for removals of the lymph nodes. We have new hunters every year that need/want the training for this kind of thing for sure. Lack of the tools bags and zip ties is definitely an issue but sadly does not surprise me. On a side note, I am all for this requirement as it can help determine possible hot spots for this. Which in turn may affect my future hunting plans. When I talked to the techs at the WDFW in Colville they told me there has been 5 confirmed cases in Washington total. 4 down south of Spokane and one in GMU113.
This has got to be a joke! Daughter got her deer Monday and I had planned to swing by the last resort check station and let them pull the lymph nodes on the way home. They aren’t open except on the weekends. A lot of good that does… decided to just stop at the drop off location at the ranger station in pomeroy. We had left 4 inches of neck attached to the skull after boning the entire deer out in the field. Got to the drop box and read the instructions. Said fill out the info on the form and put in provided ziplock bag, and attach it to the bag you put the skull in. Said use the provided saw to cutoff the skull cap and leave the rest of the head and neck in the box. Well, I wasn’t going to do that with her buck because we were doing a euro mount and going to boil the skull after dropping the lymph nodes and heading home. Anyways, there was no saw, no ziplock bags, no zip ties, no paper to fill out…. I was ANGRY! I ended up cutting the neck I left attached off at base of skull and made sure the lymph nodes were with, took an envelope out of my truck and filled out whatever info I figured they’d need since it didn’t say, and put in the garbage bag and attached the info and put in the box. I made sure to write down my displeasure on the envelope. What does the state expect us to do when they make this mandatory yet missing all of the required pieces at the drop sites?
Quote from: vandeman17 on Yesterday at 10:15:45 AMI have mixed feelings on my experience. The good side of things was that there were multiple locations to drop off the samples that were easy to find and well marked. The bad side was that there was no in person sites since general deer season hadn't started yet and also really no directions on how to get to the lymph nodes. We tried watching a few youtube videos that each showed different ways of getting to them. Honestly, I don't even know if what I got was the actual lymph nodes but I put in the little envelope what we guessed were them so we did our part. Bigger picture, do I think doing all this will make a lick of difference with how they manage the herds, that is a big fat negative.Same here with lymph nodes. They're not as easy to find as the videos show. I did my sister's and my son's buck. Pretty sure I got both the glands on my sister's deer, but on my son's I got three things that looked like a lymph node. I bagged all three. Hope I did it right, but clearly I'm not 100% sure. I'm not turning in the heads, we did euros on both bucks.