Thursday, April 4, 2013

Here is a copy of my testimony I read in Salem at a legislative hearing. I got through half of it and just emailed this copy to the representatives instead. I will get the photos and rest of the story together here soon. Thanks for following me here!



I am the owner of Pacific Meadows Alpacas near Junction City.  I am also a member of Oregon Outdoor Council and writing in support of House Bills 2624 and 3395. I am not a hunter, I am an Oregon farmer who has been completely destroyed by the overpopulation and poor management of the cougars in Oregon.

In May 2009 cougars started killing the alpacas, 19 total in the last four years. Having the ability to use bait or dogs to hunt the predators that killed the alpacas as well as other livestock and wildlife throughout Oregon is not a guarantee, but it helps balance the odds. We have had dogs out within an hour of spotting a cougar near a fresh kill, it was a day we lost three in one day. It’s not always successful to eliminate the predator but it puts a fear in the cougars and bears that they want to avoid the hunters and their dogs.

The overpopulation of cougars in our area as well as the rest of the state is a serious problem. I tried to get some attention to our problem after hikers reported being stalked on Spencer’s Butte in Eugene. We only had seven alpacas killed by this time but after calling all the news stations, we found out ODFW was saying we were isolated and they wouldn’t cover it. We aren’t isolated. Everywhere I go, I am always finding someone who has had a story about a cougar sighting, kill, stalking, tracks, etc. I have heard of cougars thumping their tail on the roof of a house in Eugene after the owner came back home from a dog walk, I have heard of a cougar in the Amazon Creek near downtown Eugene, multiple sightings above Churchill High School, a mile north of Eugene Costco, in the parking lot of Oaklea School in Junction City, as well as one impaled on a fence 1 mile west of my home in Eugene. I have even been told of a guy who was at 26th and Chambers in Eugene being told by the police to be careful, that a cougar was spotted in the area. The guy said “Oh yeah, I seen it. He was following me for a while. They aren’t a problem, they have a right to be here too.” I even have emails from LCC campus security warning of cougars in the south parking lot.

I have called the local officials. I even called Rob Handy, who was my county commissioner at the time. I was trying to find support and find the funding available to get the county trapper out to help us. He very specifically told me I didn’t know what I was talking about, that there was no money available for a trapper, even if I needed one, and that a cougar in no way could possibly kill an alpaca, alpacas were too big. I told him I had reports of llamas being killed, calves, a trained bird dog, horses attacked and I knew my predator was cougars, that a professional trapper confirmed it. He still disagreed with me. I then offered to bring down a carcass on a tarp and he could tell me what killed it, since he didn’t think it was a cougar.

While reporting one of my kills, I sarcastically asked our local wildlife biologist when I was going to see the whites of a wolves eyes on the farm. He told me to expect one within two years. That two years is this May and there are rumors of wolves being sighted about 20 miles west of us.  I have gone from being a person who was grossed out near a dead animal to the local alpaca coroner. This whole experience changes you. It is disturbing that we can come up to a dead alpaca or deer, evaluate it’s body, pull up the animals head, turn it over looking for wounds, check for dislocated vertebrae and evaluate the rectum for trauma to know if the death was by cougars, other predators or of natural causes. To be so familiar with the smell of blood and death, to be so experienced doing that is frankly disgusting when I realized it was becoming so easy and routine. It shouldn’t be routine and shouldn’t be normal. The loss of each of those animals haunts you, especially when you realize you are waking up screaming or hitting the wall fighting off the cougars in your nightmares.

One of the things we enjoyed most out at the farm with the alpacas was the peace and serenity. We marveled at the abundant wildlife, countless turkeys, plenty of deer, raccoons, skunks, gray squirrels, ducks and more, all surrounding the alpacas. When you have a predator at the top of the food chain, nothing is preying on them but they will eat whatever is necessary to survive. If you have too many of these top predators in a given area, they will eventually run out of resources and look for other food, which in my opinion, is why we are finding them in populated areas more often. We always enjoyed the deer munching on the fallen apples across the road with the year’s new babies. Now the apples lay on the ground untouched. Wildlife we recognized on site were disappearing as well such as the young buck with a half rack and the floppy eared doe with the fawns at her side. Now we have mostly just cougars and buzzards. We are lucky to see an occasional deer or gray squirrel and we haven’t seen the elk herd in years. The cougars are not afraid of people or houses and there are more people being surprised by cougars close to home, in their own driveways or on their decks. There needs to be balance in nature and that is just not the case here.

The predators in this state are getting a pass to roam freely without any reason to fear for their safety. Before the law was passed in 1994 banning dog use, cougars and bears had a healthy fear and respect of people and hunting dogs. That’s not the case anymore. They are on our campuses, our playgrounds and in our backyards. Today they have no fear of people. We have been stalked, watched, followed, even snarled at. We were told that the snarling was a warning to get out of it’s territory. Despite numerous attacks, we’ve only managed to spot a cougar a handful of times, and never enough time to get a clear shot. A couple weeks after being snarled at, we had our 19th killed, once again, a cougar.

I have lost several hundred thousand dollars in just the animals alone, not to mention what they would produce for the years to come. I was an active breeding ranch, these alpacas were production animals. I lost them as well as their future production. No one is compensating me for this devastation. This has completely destroyed my business. I didn’t ask for this, I loved raising my alpacas. I am a known fiber artist and sell nationally. When my fleece is gone, that too will be gone.

Thank you for your time and your attention to this problem. Hopefully with the passage of these bills, us farmers can feel we have the support again from the state and an effective means of restoring balance.

..........

While listening to testimony on April 2 at the hearing, I wrote several notes. I was cut off from stating the above statement at 3 minutes and told them I wanted to make one more statement. The following paragraph is basically what I said, but I have cleaned it up and have been emailing it to representatives and senators in Oregon since the hearing:

I also want you to consider the following when thinking about statistics ODFW releases, which I feel are grossly inaccurate. For every reported attack, sighting, stalking, and snarling we endured, I called Lane County biologist for ODFW. This totaled over 20 calls. Last spring, I was defending myself in a small claims lawsuit. I called ODFW and said I need a have a copy of all his records of all my reports so I could show the judge we weren’t lying about our cougar problem.  ODFW sent me a report with 6 records of my calling. I called over 20 times. When ODFW says they have very few reports of human interaction with cougars, either they are dealing with incidents such as mine, or… as many Oregonians have come to feel, no one calls it in anymore. I really do come across countless people who have had, or know of someone who has had a sighting or killing pertaining to cougars. When a flood of calls come in with sightings and other stories after the issue makes the news, such as the woman who said it was all politically motivated, I personally feel the it’s not politically motivated but rather a flood of people who think someone actually cares what they have experienced.





Tuesday, April 2, 2013

I just looked at my status on how many are looking at my site here. Forgive me, I know I say I will be getting this updated. I just testified in Salem today, brief but did it, and am ready to update this and get the written story completed. Please keep watching. I will get this finished and looking much better. Thanks for watching. AND... if you are some people who think I have no idea what killed my alpacas, don't worry, we KNOW it was cougars. We have been stalked, snarled at, watched, followed etc.... we have seen cougars many times. We are never in a good location to safely shoot. Thanks for continuing to check out my blog!

Monday, March 18, 2013

For anyone following this blog... after the death of cougar was our favorite new baby, one that we had bred for over and over, kept getting what we wanted but they were all boys... then we finally got a girl and 6 months later a cougar killed her. I stopped posting and will get back to this. There was 19 total and need to finish.

Thanks for following this!
Pam