MNR fed deer successful for over 50 plus years in places like Loring, Shawnaga, etc. They used to pack down trails for them too. You only
emergency feed with alfalfa and other mixtures but you must continue until spring and only in an emergency. I laugh at all the armchair folks who have never fed deer but have an opinion based on something they have read published online by some self serving fiscally and possibly politically motivated government agency.
I have piece of property in an area that was hit real hard for a couple of winters in a row. I would see the deer starving with their sunken fuzzy faces gathering under cedar trees where their was less snow. With no food and deep snow they were dying and fast.
I fed them ($400 plus a year out of my pocket) and so did some of my neighbors until they disappeared in the spring. Guess what? I still have a lot of deer while other areas around me have none. Just remember most areas in Northern Ontario have very poor habitat for deer. There is limited cutting (logging) now going on and most areas with a deer herd population have now exceeds the habitat carrying (food) capacity because of the mature timber. Please don't forget we also now have areas closed off to wolf hunting, wolf tags and due to the past cancellation of the spring bear hunt, we have a larger predator base. You must also throw in cohabitation competition with a growing moose herd in the muskokas (elk some areas) to make things tougher.
Yes cut down browse and help them out. I grew up hunting in the late 70's and early 80's when there were no deer. The anterless deer tag system, MNR and private supplemental feeding and some milder winters certainly helped. We hunted wolves and shot lots of bears. I believe MNR even used to encourage trappers to catch wolves in the deer yards. Some areas even had bounties. This all resulted in an excellent deer population in the 90's and early 2000's in Ontario. Extended seasons (archery, ML, Control Hunts, etc.), surplus tags etc. Why and what has changed in 2017? I been there and don't want to go back to the deer herds of the 70's and 80's.
People will now play the CWD argument. If deer get too close to each other they transmit the disease. That late in the season I don't believe their is any validity to that argument. Deer are a social animal and count on herding in the North for their survival. When it comes down to do or die, I don't believe it doesn't matter. If they have CWD, they already have CWD. If they all starve the result will be the same.
Hell I live in a city where lots of people feed deer and they routinely attack our bird feeders - lol. The deer population is actually a bit of a problem at times. Explained that? Shouldn't they all die with bird seed in their bellies?
All the Northern States employ some emergency feeding in times of dire need. Not Ontario anymore. Here is a link to Minnesota.
http://www.wideopenspaces.com/emerge...minnesota-dnr/
I recall about 5 years ago one of the states was even giving deer feed free to landowners to help the starving deer. It may have been Wisconsin - not sure.
Anyway that is my rant. Do what you want, but I have a healthy deer herd on my property and in the area to prove it makes a difference.
Next......................lol