Wildlife - Clackamas Drainage
There's more to it, such as modern fire suppression, but that's a summary.
One more reason we have so little 'game' animals up the Clackamas, Measure 18 in 1994. Specifically, the law banning the use of dogs to hunt cougars and bears. ODFW at the time stated that there were only 200 cougars left in the state of Oregon. Well now they estimate there to be more than 6,200. Many biologists believe there may be double that. (Me included based on their scat). A cougar kills a deer or elk every 5-10 days. If you average it out to one a week, that's over 50 a year per cougar. Simple math tells me they're definitely responsible for a large rate of game animal mortality.
What I ultimately am interested in is; where up the Clackamas do you see wildlife? I'll share some of mine.
-Soosap. There seems to be a funnel of sorts in the area between Soosap Peak and Pick Creek. I've seen many a deer in this area, including some trophy blacktail bucks. I see em mainly up on the 4540 road. I did see a bear this year at Helen Lake just to the west. This area unsurprisingly has a lot of predator scat laying about. My last trip to the area to check out some old hiking trails, I passed over 7 piles of predator scat in just over a mile. All of it laying right in the tread.
-Fish Creek. 10 Years ago I came across a herd of elk up on Whale Head that included a coyote in the mix. In 2010 I found a pair of 5-point elk sheds laying on Calico Rd, along with several deer sightings. A friend of mine seen a bear near the Wash Creek confluence a decade ago.
-Ripplebrook. I see more road-killed deer on the short section of highway between Indian Henry bridge and Ripplebrook, than anywhere else up there. There's many swamps and meadows that sustain a number of deer in the area.
-NF Clackamas
No surprise with the shear amount of logging that takes place on the private timberland of the lower NF Clackamas River that I seen a herd of elk here a few years ago near Fall Creek. The brush in this area is unfathomably thick, but there's clear cuts galore.
I've had two different people tell me that the Pansy Basin is a good spot to see deer and elk.
Another guy told me he sees deer and elk out on Indian Ridge in the roaring river drainage.
Anyone else care to share where you see animals in the district?
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