Fauquier Times 03/04/2020

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11

Fauquier Times | March 4, 2020

BUSINESS WWW.FAUQUIER.COM

The bugle blows again March 14 fundraiser celebrates restoration of North American Elk By John Hagarty

Contributing Writer

More than 150 years ago, the last of Cervus elaphus canadensis (elk) disappeared in Virginia. As is often the case when man battles wildlife, man won. When the Mayflower landed in 1620, more than 10 million of the magnificent animals roamed the United States. By 1900, fewer than 100,000 remained in small, scattered herds in the lower 48. But man saw the error of his ways, and today 1 million elk populate the United States, mostly in the western states. The resurgence of elk herds in the eastern U.S. has been an even more remarkable story. While paling in numbers to its western brethren, efforts over the last several decades have seen numbers rise from almost zero to herds totaling more than 16,000 elk. Today, Kentucky, North Carolina, Tennessee, Virginia, West Virginia and Pennsylvania are reaping the benefits of the elk comeback, with the economic rewards to rural communities among the more notable accomplishments. How did it unfold?

Rocky Mountain Elk Foundation

The RMEF was founded in 1984 by four outdoorsmen sitting around a western elk hunting camp. They lamented that unless action was taken, both elk habitat and the species itself would disappear. Its success is measured today by the 500 active chapters and thriving herds around the country. The organization’s template was taken from the pages of Ducks Unlimited, who have worked tirelessly since 1937 to successfully preserve wetlands and associated upland habitats for waterfowl, other wildlife and people. The RMEF has brought more than seven million acres under conservation easement and provided critical survival habitat for the American elk. While the emphasis has been on western land preservation, a cadre of other dedicated sportsmen have achieved similar success in the eastern U.S. One of the drivers of the eastern success story is Danny Smedley. Smedley is a retired senior manager for an electronic funds transfer company. He ignited his passion for elk and elk hunting 30 years ago when he picked up a magazine called Bugle, published by the RMEF and headquartered in Missoula, Montana. “I was out in Yellowstone on a family vacation after my first child was born. I looked through that magazine and was very impressed and joined the foundation,” Smedley said. “About six months later, a gentleman who had been a former chair of the national organization invited me to a meeting in D.C. He said they were thinking about starting a Warrenton chapter of RMEF. “I attended that meeting three decades ago and have been involved with both the foundation and organizing the local fundraiser that supports our cause ever since.” In part through his efforts, today there are now 15,000 elk in Kentucky, 200 in North Carolina’s Great Smoky Mountains National Park, 200 near

Today, some 200 elk reside near Grundy, Virginia. There is a visitor center and viewing stations to see and hear them. Grundy, Virginia, 1,000 fittingly thriving in Elk County, Pennsylvania, and 100 in the Monongahela National Forest in West Virginia. By any measure, the success of the establishment of these herds represent diamonds on an elk’s rack. Moreover, the location of some of the herds is on reclaimed strip-mining land in poorer sections of the country. “Down in Grundy, Virginia, they’ve got little cabins, a visitor center and viewing stations throughout the area. Annually over 350 people visit and pay $30 each to see the elk and listen to them bugle,” Smedley said. “Hunting is conservation.” This is the slogan of the RMEF and underpins why the hunt plays an integral part in saving a threatened species. Smedley says he is often asked about the dichotomy between hunting and recovering threatened wildlife. Actually, the two go hand-in-hand. He cites as an example the tale of two birds: The American wood duck and the white-billed woodpecker. The former thrives as both a game duck and a successful survivor because Ducks Unlimited became its “sponsor,” recovering wetlands and building hundreds of thousands of duck boxes. Today it is one of the most numerous ducks in the country, providing mutual enjoyment for both birders and hunters. Conversely, the latter had no sponsor, and today the white-billed woodpecker is extinct. “A

PHOTO BY BETSY BURKE PARKER

species can lose out if it does not have a purpose and a sponsor,” said Smedley.

Fundraiser

This year, the RMEF’s local fundraiser will again be hosted at the Fauquier County Fairgrounds on Saturday, March 14, from 3:30 to 9:30 p.m. In addition to speakers updating attendees on the success of elk restoration nationwide, there will be games, live and silent auctions -- including an Indiana whitetail hunt, dinner at Sibby’s in Warrenton and high-end firearms by Weatherby, Winchester, Kimber and others. Tickets are $85 each, $135 for couples, and support the goal of elk revival throughout the United States. Tickets can be purchased by contacting Danny Smedley at 540-222-4994. Smedley is also ready to answer questions on the foundation itself or on how to make a donation to the cause. Order tickets online at https://events.rmef.org/shop/bullrun1. With tickets in hand, you’ll join some 200 other sportsmen and wildlife enthusiasts and learn more about the valued work of the Rocky Mountain Elk Foundation. A digital tour of the world of elk recovery can be taken at www.rmef.org. Finally, consider visiting any of the East Coast elk recovery areas and be entranced by the stately king of the forest and its haunting bugle call. For more business and wine tales, visit Hagarty-on-wine.com READY TO REPAIR: The first payment from the first customer at the just-opened Larkins Leather Repair in Marshall included a traditional, ceremonial “dollar bill” to owner Maryalice Matheson Thomas. Culpeper County horsewoman Julie Williamson, left, paid for her saddle repair bill in part with a crisp new dollar bill for Thomas to frame. Larkins is open for business, although Thomas says she’s still working out pertinent details like days and hours. For now, she says, Master Saddler Luke Berg will be in the Main Street shop most days, and that “if the lights are on, we’re open.” She adds that Larkins will keep “working horsemen’s hours,” including weekends, as they get moving with the uniquely Virginia hunt country business.


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