Donation would help reduce goose population on Delavan Lake
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Goose capture input
If Delavan Lake property owners who do or do not want the U.S. Department of Agriculture Wildlife Services to remove Canada geese their property are asked to call Delavan Town Hall at (262) 728-3471.
Officials have not set a date for the goose capture, but it likely will take place between mid-June and early July.
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DELAVAN TOWNSHIP Dorothy Burwell isn't thrilled about hiring the U.S. Department of Agriculture Wildlife Service to drastically reduce the goose population on Delavan Lake.
From her seat as the chairwoman of the Delavan Town Board, she doesn't see any options.
The town for years has been trying methods of controlling the goose population around the lake and has not been able to get ahead of the problem, Burwell said.
"It's devastating," she said.
The crux of the problem is goose poop, Burwell tried to say politely.
"It's pretty darn big," she said. "If your ball runs through it, it's absolutely disgusting. Children can't play there. You can't go through there with sandals. It's an issue."
The town of Delavan got a $4,000 donation from the Delavan Lake Sanitary District to hire the wildlife service to capture and kill the geese.
The money was a donation from the Delavan Lake Sanitary District, Burwell said.
Wildlife service workers plan to capture geese from Community Park and any private properties where the owner consents, Burwell said.
In June or July, workers will herd geese into poultry cages, said Chip Lovell, district supervisory for the wildlife service in Waupun. Captures take place in summer when the geese have molted and can't fly, he said.
The adult geese will be processed for human consumption. The wildlife service stores the meat while it's tested for contaminants, he said. Once the meat is determined to be safe, it's donated to food pantries.
Pantries in the Delavan area will get the first chance at the goose meat. If they don't want it, lots of pantries are willing to take the meat, Lovell said.
The juvenile geese are processed for use as feed at animal shelters and sanctuaries, Lovell said.
Last year, the service captured geese in more than 30 communities, he said.
The USDA will capture and kill geese only if a municipality can show it's tried other options without success, Lovell said.
The town of Delavan has tried spraying eggs and holding a special early fall goose hunt, park director Steve Shoff said. For the last two years, the town has had a special permit to destroy goose nests, Shoff said.
Some municipalities and golf courses have used dogs to chase the geese away or installed fake coyotes as deterrents, he said.
Those options won't work in Community Park, Shoff said.
"There's no easy solution," Shoff said.
At times, he's counted 150 geese in the 15-acre park.
The capture won't eliminate geese from the lake, Lovell said. Geese molt at different times, and some will be able to fly away, he said. Some property owners probably will not allow the wildlife service access to some properties, Lovell said.
"The goal is not to eliminate the geese from the lake," Lovell said. "The whole idea is to get the geese down to a manageable level."
So far, most of the residents who have called the town hall about the goose capture have said they want the USDA to eliminate geese from their private property, Burwell said.
Some residents have called to oppose the capture.
One township resident, Rebecca Stritt, has started a Facebook page opposing the capture. Stritt is not opposed to goose management, but she's not confident that the town can show due diligence in its previous attempts to control the geese, she said.
"There's not a lot of data," Stritt said.
Burwell would be thrilled, she said, if a resident or organization came up with the money and the tools for a viable alternative, Burwell said.
"If all these people who are calling and protesting would sign up to be in the park to chase the geese out, it would be great," Burwell said. "We don't' have the money."

Sep 21, 2010 at 2:20 p.m.
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Conservation. Let's keep it in balance with things. Quit being horrible humans and trying to get rid of it all of the time.
Jun 1, 2010 at 10:04 a.m.
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I say we ask them to prove their citizenship. If they cannot produce the required documentation, deport them back to Canada!
Jun 1, 2010 at 7:53 a.m.
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Well,Wll.Delavan towship makes the news again.People around the lake started it all by feeding them,now they are bitching.Just like the City of Delavan did with there swans.They feed them then a couple of big wigs did not like them crapping on there grass,so City of Delavan(Swan Creek) that was there long before the people came got rid of all the swans.What a pitty we have come.City of Delavan also banned the raising of the common honey bee in the city limits.Now they are paying for it with tere lovely crabapples not not doing good due to the lack of pollunation.
May 31, 2010 at 8:41 a.m.
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Eman, you said you could "make a really big dent in it (the goose population) all by myself." A little egocentric, aren't you? The Delta Waterfowl association estimates there are 5 million geese in North America. How could you possibly make a dent in the population all by yourself?
I don't think God giving man dominion over the creatures means He wants us to kill them all off. Once you start messing with God's natural food chain, you're going to get more problems. The elimination or significant reduction in the geese population will cause an increase in the amount of insects and land and acquatic weeds. Geese also provide food for our hawks, fox, coyote and wild cats - like the cougars that are making a resurgance in the area. Kill of all the geese and there will be more cougars attacking our farm animals. Yes, yes, I know, you could then kill off all the cougars, you master hunter.
All this talk of religion is getting off track. The real point is that killing the geese that are there now is a temporary solution. More geese will come. You alone cannot kill 5 million geese and society would be well-advised not to interfere with the food chain. There are other solutions to this problem. The cheap, easy solution is usually a temporary fix that solves nothing and brings about other problems.
May 30, 2010 at 4:03 p.m.
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SarahB1 wrote: "Eman: I know that I've only read parts of the Bible, but where does it say that "God gave us dominion over the animals"?"
Genesis 1:verse 26: "Then God said: "Let us make man in our image, after our likeness. Let them have dominion over the fish of the sea, the birds of the air, and the cattle, and over all the wild animals and all the creatures that crawl on the ground."
Personally, I like to make a shredded goose barbeque from them using the breast meat, ketchup, brown sugar and a little beer.
May 30, 2010 at 1:36 p.m.
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well jesus sacrificed alot of animals in his day so he cant be too against it....
May 30, 2010 at 11:57 a.m.
May 30, 2010 at 11:47 a.m.
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SKY CARP!!!
May 30, 2010 at 8:38 a.m.
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the original goosebuster was good but goosebusters 2 kinda sucked....
May 29, 2010 at 11 p.m.
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After they kill off the geese that are there now, more will come... you can't kill all the geese in Wisconsin/ Canada. Delavan would be well-advised to use the money to buy a goose buster, a device that gives off the sound of a goose in distress, so geese won't land there. They work! Ask your area communities that have used them.
May 29, 2010 at 6:53 p.m.
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Now if we could train the geese to do their thing in ONLY the goose lovers yards. Maybe then they'd realize the problem & be willing to have something done
May 29, 2010 at 6:44 p.m.
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Isn't the Delavan Lake Sanitary District a public department, and the donation was taxpayer money ? Why is it being called a donation ?
May 29, 2010 at 5:58 p.m.
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Fire up the grills...lets get on with it!
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