Events add to excitement during bugling
season, 100th anniversary year.
Year
after year, Labor Day weekend kicks off a period of increased activity on
Pennsylvania’s elk range.
As
elk begin ramping up their routines ahead of peak bugling season, visitors flock
in greater numbers to areas where they can see the wild spectacle
unfold.
In
a typical year, an estimated 75,000 to 100,000 people visit Elk County alone
during the two-month span between Labor Day and Halloween.
But
2013 isn’t a typical year in regard to Pennsylvania’s elk. Rather, it’s an
extraordinary one.
This
year marks the 100th anniversary of efforts to restore elk to
Pennsylvania, and in commemoration of that landmark anniversary, special events
are planned each weekend through Columbus Day at sites on the elk
range.
With
the added attractions and excitement over the anniversary, it’s hard to say how
many people might make Pennsylvania’s elk country a destination this year. But
there seems this year to be even more of a buzz than usual surrounding bugling
season, Pennsylvania Game Commission Executive Director Carl G. Roe said.
“If
you’ve ever made a trip to the elk range in autumn and been a part of those
enormous crowds, it’s hard to imagine you could add more excitement to the mix,”
Roe said. “But that seems to be the case this year. With the anniversary going
on, and events taking place each weekend, things are building to a fever
pitch.”
Those
who make weekend trips to the elk range this fall will have an opportunity to
take part in several tours of state game lands in hopes of seeing elk or hearing
them bugle. Some tours are by vehicle, while others are by bicycle and go
farther off the beaten path. There’s also an elk-viewing hike set for Saturday,
Sept. 21.
Performances
by Van Wagner, an award-winning educator and musician, tell the story of the
elk’s comeback in Pennsylvania, and otherwise celebrate the state’s rural
heritage.
The
corral trap used in the Game Commission’s initiative to capture elk and expand
the overall range of the herd will be on display through Columbus Day. And, as
always, there’s something for everyone at the Elk Country Visitor Center near
Benezette.
Different
events are scheduled on different weekends, and at different times. For a full
schedule of events, visit the homepage of the Game Commission’s website,
www.pgc.state.pa.us
and click on the button labeled “100th Anniversary PA Elk
Restoration.”
Roe
said that while those making the trip to the elk range this year will be treated
to something extra with these events, the elk themselves remain the real
attraction. There’s really nothing like the display of a bull elk moving in at
close range and piercing the brisk morning air with a cloud of vapor and an
ear-splitting bugle, he said.
With
the herd now containing more than 850 animals living in parts of five
northcentral Pennsylvania counties, there’s as broad a chance as ever for
visitors to take in those sights and sounds.
It’s
a remarkable contrast to the era of more than a century ago, when elk found
themselves eliminated from their natural range in Pennsylvania and the rest of
the Northeast, Roe said. That turnaround is a reason for celebration, he said.
“One
hundred years later, there’s no arguing that elk restoration here in
Pennsylvania has been about as successful as could possibly be expected,” Roe
said. “It’s something every Pennsylvanian can be proud
of.”
Elk in
Pennsylvania
Historically, elk
inhabited much of Pennsylvania. But as more of the state was settled, the elk
population declined.
By the late 1800s,
Pennsylvania’s elk were eliminated from their last stronghold in areas around
Elk County. And by the time the Pennsylvania Game Commission launched an effort
to reintroduce elk to Pennsylvania, the animals had been gone from the state for
about 50 years.
Between 1913 and
1926, the Game Commission released 177 elk into Pennsylvania’s wilds. And the
elk that live here today are the progeny of those animals.
A three-year
trap-and-transfer program launched by the Game Commission in 1998 expanded the
elk’s range from 350 to 800 square miles, allowing the herd to grow. And
aggressive management of habitat for elk also has helped to boost the number of
elk, and steer elk into areas where they are less likely to have conflicts with
people.
Today,
Pennsylvania’s elk herd contains between 850 and 900 animals living in parts of
Elk, Cameron, Clinton, Potter and Clearfield counties in the northcentral part
of the state.
And a century after
the first reintroduction efforts began, the elk’s restoration represents one of
the great successes in wildlife conservation history.
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