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Friday, May 21, 2021

Should You Feed the White Tail Deer?

Cedar Grove, NJ - The town government and the NJ Division of Fish & Wildlife have asked that residents do not feed the white tail deer in town.

Here are some reasons you shouldn't feed the deer:


  • Feeding increases reproductive potential. - Deer with higher nutrition levels have larger litter sizes and breed earlier. Does dependent solely upon natural food sources generally breed at 1.5 years of age and give birth to a single fawn. Does with supplemental food breed at 6 months of age and give birth to one fawn; 1.5 year olds generally have twins, and triplets are not uncommon in older does.
  • Deer lose their fear of humans. - In NJ, deer are considered a "potentially dangerous species" because of their ability to inflict serious physical harm to humans with their hooves and antlers. Male deer become more aggressive during the breeding season, and females may become defensive of their fawns. The last reported attack of a deer on a person was in 2012 in Lake Hopatcong, NJ. Deer that become problematic are usually euthanized.
Feeding enhances the spread of disease and parasites, and may compromise the health of non-target species. - Concentrating deer in unnaturally high numbers around food piles increases nose-to-nose contact and may heighten the transmission of pathogens and parasites. Additionally, large piles of supplemental foods like corn often develop toxic fungi, which cause ill effects to both deer and other animals that come to the food pile.

Love to garden? Have decorative flowers? Not for long with deer feeders around. Remember, "Deer feeders are bad neighbors. - Deer cannot meet all their nutritional needs from a food pile, and will consume the plantings of surrounding properties or devastate the surrounding natural environment after the supplemental food is consumed. Because feeding concentrates deer in unnaturally high numbers, environmental damage is often severe."

Additionally, New Jersey is engaged in a decades-long battle to keep Chronic Wasting Disease out of our heavily wooded state:

Chronic Wasting Disease (CWD) is a progressive and fatal neurologic disease affecting members of the Cervid family such as deer, elk, moose, and reindeer and is caused by an infectious protein called a prion (the same as in Rabies and Mad Cow disease). CWD results in emaciation, abnormal behavior, loss of bodily functions and death, and is easily spread from deer to deer. It poses a serious threat to New Jersey's deer herds and eventually wears down and kills every infected animal.

CWD has so far been found in captive and wild deer in 26 states, with the closest known occurrence to New Jersey in Lancaster County, Pennsylvania. Preventing CWD from entering New Jersey is the Division of Fish and Wildlife's primary focus, and the Division aggressively monitors and tests for CWD in New Jersey's deer herd.

By feeding deer, we undermine efforts to keep our community safe to the detriment of both humans and deer.

In 2018, a proposed bill to make feeding white tail a deer illegal in the interest of public health (with an exception for hunters) was narrowly defeated.

Tuesday, May 18, 2021

BB Sniper in Cedar Grove Causes Mayhem

By Cedar Grove News Staff

Cedar Grove, NJ - In Cedar Grove New Jersey, a suspect in a series of snipings along Fairview Ave by
Cedar Grove Park remains at large. The five sniping incidents have put residents and pets at harm and caused extensive property damage. In a recent attack, a 3 year old and 1 year old in car traveling down Fairview Ave were showered with broken glass when their car window was shattered a BB or pellet traveling at high velocity. Neither child was seriously injured. Some evidence suggests that the sniper may be firing from an upper floor in one of the newly constructed Hilltop Townhomes, a K Hovnanian development of luxury townhomes which routinely sell for over $650,000.

Other incidents date back to April of 2021 and include a dog walker who was struck with a pellet before fleeing.

Pyramid Air, a manufacturer of air powered pellet guns, states that many airguns can remain dangerous up to 150 yards. The company, and others, sell pellet and BB rifles capable of firing over 400 yards and which can be equipped with scopes and laser sights, just like their military counterparts. Attacks with airguns can be lethal, even if the strike is accidental, and a murder was committed with an airgun in Pennsylvania in 2020.

The nearby county park and playground remain open, though with Covid restrictions, at this time. No arrests have been made at this time and residents are urged to remain vigilant.