A3 THE DAILY ASTORIAN • WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 6, 2019 Tube man waves bye-bye to wolves in s outhern Oregon A clever tactic against predators maintain a human presence in the pasture. Still, the wolves would eventually return, jolting Birdseye out of bed when- ever he heard the guard dogs bark at night. “Most people don’t real- ize the amount of stress and anxiety,” Birdseye said. “You don’t go back to sleep.” Suzanne Stone, of Defenders of Wildlife, said the group has been interested for years in using infl atable tube men — also known as air dancers — as a tool to prevent confl icts between wolves and livestock. Stone said they set up an infl atable tube man for the fi rst time last year at a farm near La Grande, where wolves had killed several of the landowner’s pet lla- mas. Since then, she said the landowner has had no more problems with wolves on the property. “It’s always struck me as something wolves would be particularly skittish of,” Stone said of the 20-foot- tall, undulating tube man. “It’s unpredictable, and very foreign to them.” The strategy has been similarly effective for Bird- seye at the Mill-Mar Ranch. Every evening around 8:30 or 9 p.m., he drives out to the pasture and fi res up the gas generator that sets the tube man waving. He also shines a spotlight from the ground to give the tube man its eerie, alien-like glow. “If I was a wolf and saw something like that, I’d take off running in the other direction,” Birdseye said. By GEORGE PLAVEN Capital Press BUTTE FALLS — The display is almost hypnotic, watching the infl atable tube man twist and wave at Ted Birdseye’s ranch bordering the Rogue River-Siskiyou National Forest in s outhern Oregon. His kids say it looks like a neon green alien danc- ing at night. His wife’s co-worker jokes about the ranch turning into a used car lot. But so far, Birdseye said he is sleeping sound at night with the tube man standing guard against wolves that have repeatedly attacked his cattle. Wolves from the nearby Rogue pack have killed or injured at least seven calves and one guard dog in the last year at the Mill-Mar Ranch in Jackson County, frustrating Birdseye and wildlife managers trying feverishly to keep the pred- ators at bay. Following the most recent confi rmed depredation on Jan. 18, Birdseye received two infl atable tube men — one green, one yellow — on loan from the environmental group Defenders of Wildlife, which is assisting ranchers across the state with haz- ing wolves using non lethal deterrents. Wolves remain a feder- ally protected species in Ore- gon west of highways 395, 78 and 95. Over the months, George Plaven/Capital Press Southern Oregon rancher Ted Birdseye fi res up an infl atable dancing tube man, loaned by the environmental group Defenders of Wildlife, used to scare wolves away from the pasture where he grazes cattle. Birdseye has tried install- ing bright fl ashing lights and hanging fl adry along fences at the 276-acre ranch. John Stephenson, Oregon wolf coordinator for the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service, has even camped overnight to Ranchers should not expect tube men to work in all circumstances, Stone said. They are mostly effec- tive in a smaller pastures, placed within view of the livestock. As always, she said the most important thing producers can do is to make sure bone piles and carcasses are cleaned up to avoid attracting wolves in the fi rst place. In Birdseye’s case, Stone said the tube men are a tem- porary fi x until they can fi nd money to install a permanent electric fence at the ranch. “This thing is pretty terri- fying,” she said. For now, Birdseye said he is fi nally sleeping through the night, though the jury is still out on whether the tube men will continue to pro- tect his herd. Though it is outside the box, he expects more local ranchers to begin showing an interest. “They may be facing the same issues here shortly,” Birdseye said. Consult a PROFESSIONAL have a Medicare Q: I Supplement plan and my premium keeps going up. Can I change companies if I can find a lower premium? are three main ways to A: There change Medicare Supplement Steve Putman Medicare Products 503-440-1076 Licensed in Oregon and Washington putmanagency@gmail.com companies: The first is to apply to any company you choose at any time of the year. To do this you would need to answer the health underwriting questions and acceptance could be denied based on your answers. Second you may apply using the “Oregon Birthday Rule”; there are specific rules that apply. 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