Wednesday, March 25, 2015

Going Against the Grain

In preparing to start my first blog article, I wondered what I could contribute with my limited exposure to southern gardening.  An article on Facebook inspired me to dig a little deeper into my responsibility to nature.


Some inhabitants of McVay Park


This article (read it) by Melissa Mayntz  shared information on what to feed waterfowl.  I never really gave it much thought, but she states that bread has no nutritional value for them and that poor quality breads could actually be harmful to them.  

A park near our home has a pond surrounded by a walking path.  We enjoy viewing the ducks and geese that make their home in the pond as we exercise our dogs.  We often see people feeding the waterfowl.  The ducks & geese are always more than ready to run up to people looking for handouts.  

After reading her article, I will start making more informed decisions and not just do things because "that is what everyone else is doing."

As I continued to dig for more information, I began to wonder if we should feed them at all.  Feeding animals makes us feel good, but what is the big picture, how does it affect nature?  Wildlife should be just that: wild.  They look to us for food because we have conditioned them to it, not because it is natural for them.  In Wyoming we still have Canadian geese that migrate.  Seeing them flying overhead should signal a change in the season.   I don’t see many Memphis geese migrating.  How much has the free food and luxurious living interrupted their migration instinct and patterns?  

A publication on the UT Extension website, click to read, discusses managing nuisance animals like geese around the home.  It seems that we are having to manage "nuisances" that we have created.  Our actions have caused the overcrowding in urban areas and the decimation of the landscape near the ponds in our neighborhoods.

In most towns in Wyoming, citizens feed the big game animals.  Small herds of deer and the occasional moose hang out in parks, yards & fringes of towns looking for the free food.  People feel like they are helping the animals survive the harsh winter conditions.  However, most times they are providing the predators a tastier, more tender meal as the animals lose their edge, their flight instinct.

Wyoming Wildlife

We should remember that our interaction with nature should not harm it.  Just by being here, we are already changing the environment.  So let's go against the grain and do better job at minimizing our harmful impact on nature.

Dawn B
TEMG'13

3 comments:

  1. This is a very informative article. People feed bread to the ducks and geese at our neighborhood pond as well. I've often wondered how this impacts them as far as them never leaving the pond area.

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  2. Great article, Dawn! It's been a while since I've fed any ducks or geese because a goose charged me as a child and it scared me off of the practice. I guess that was nature's way of telling me to mind my own business!

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  3. Great article, Dawn! It's been a while since I've fed any ducks or geese because as a child I was charged by a goose and that scared me off of the practice. I guess that was nature's way of telling me to mind my own business!

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