Quote from: paulie on Today at 12:39:27 PM
Hi! Wow! Thanks for all the comments and sharing excitement with me.
BrokenLug, I liked your pun! We heard about the Elk when we bought our land a bit over twenty years ago but they weren't in our area yet. During the construction of our log cabin (began about one year and a half ago after the pandemic lock down) is when the contractor and his guys who live around there mentioned the Elk were slowly moving down from Elk County.
The cabin is in Clearfield County.
Benezette PA is a big Elk viewing area and has a Visitor's Center. One of my daughter's went there years ago and said the locals there and Elk co-exist. Elk walk through town and yards and locals said sometimes they'd see someone's laundry that was drying on a clothes line would be on an Elk's antlers!!
Last year a road sign warning of Elk in area was posted on the road about a half mile from the cabin.
We had planned to go to Benezette some day but my husband said we don't have to go to see Elk there any more. True!
Thank you for the link you posted. Very interesting indeed.
Here's a link to Benezette.
https://visitpago.com/counties/elk-county/benezette/Thanks BL for saying my description was awesome. Oh my it was!
And I'm very glad The male trusted and didn't see me as a threat!
I laughed reading your instructions on what to tell them boys!!
Trust me. I did!!
They said they'll hope to find shed elk antlers somewhere on our land.
The sheds of a Bull Elk ~ hard to find and retrieve them wholeAlmost all the critters in that neck of the PA woods consume them.
PA Elk apparently and usually shed their antlers about mid-March.
Deep snow there with some healthy rough wooded terrain. Finding.
A recovered shed, properly preserved and mounted PA Bull Elk Rack mounted somewhere at the cabin does just feel so feel right imho.
The caption from Uncle George on this particular shed shelter, was, well kids be careful these tines could poke your eye out.