New Elk Viewing Platform, Visitor Center Slated For Logan County

A new elk viewing platform and visitor center will be constructed in Logan County beginning this year. The project is expected for completion in 2025.

The West Virginia Division of Natural Resources has awarded the Morgantown-based March-Westin Company a $6.7 million contract to construct a visitor center and elk viewing platform in Logan County.

The project follows the introduction of 150 elk to West Virginia, where they were once native.

The facility’s construction is slated for a 2025 opening, with construction beginning this spring.

It will feature an elevated platform on an elk viewing tower that is accessible to individuals with mobility issues, as well as an exhibition on the elk reintroduction program, displays and conference centers.

The project was funded in part through $2.5 million in federal Abandoned Mine Land grants, $2.1 million from the West Virginia Department of Economic Development and $2.1 million from hunting and fishing license funds.

During a press briefing Friday, Gov. Jim Justice said he was excited for the project, and the ability for residents to witness the elk reintroduction program firsthand.

“These magnificent animals, we reintroduced them back into West Virginia,” he said. “Good gracious, it’s majestic beyond belief.”

State’s Elk Population To Increase With 40 More From Kentucky

The elk will be transported from the Land Between the Lakes National Recreation Area and arrive in West Virginia in late January.

Gov. Jim Justice says more elk are coming to the state this month.

Justice announced in his State of the State address this week that the elk will come from Kentucky to supplement the current population.

In his regular briefing with reporters on Friday, he talked about it again.

“We started with 22, there are 110 now, and these other 40 are on their way,” he said. “It’s good stuff.”

The elk will be transported from the Land Between the Lakes National Recreation Area and arrive in West Virginia in late January.

The governor’s office says the elk will be held for a brief time before their release into the wild.

The state plans to build a visitor center and observation tower so the public can view them.

The Department of Natural resources will be reviewing bids on the project in the coming weeks, according to the governor’s office.

The center and tower, in Logan County’s Tomblin Wildlife Management Area, will receive $2.5 million in Abandoned Mine Land grants.

Looking At W.Va.'s Elk Herd Four Years In

The West Virginia elk reintroduction program is four years in, and the project is not growing as fast as expected; however, there is a herd in the Southern Coalfields that is slowly getting bigger. 

Much of West Virginia’s elk reintroduction program is modeled after Kentucky’s, which is more than 20 years old. Officials there estimate the program provides a nearly $3 billion hunting and tourism boost to the economy. West Virginia’s Division of Natural Resources [DNR], who oversee the elk in the Mountain State project, hope to see it flourish in similar ways.

Reclaimed Mines For Elk

West Virginia’s herd of about 80 elk live on the over 35,000-acre Tomblin and Laurel Lake Wildlife Management Area that is primarily reclaimed strip mines. It is in Logan and Mingo counties – in the heart of the state’s Southern Coalfields.

Credit West Virginia Department of Natural Resources
/
Elk project leader Randy Kelley with an elk the team tranquilized to put a radio collar and/or ear tags on. This was several days after WVPB came to report.

Randy Kelley, the DNR elk biologist and leader of the program, took WVPB on a tour of the area.

“There’s an elk right there. See? Over there,” Kelley said. “There you seen your first elk in West Virginia. You’ve not even gotten out of the truck yet.”

And to the left was one of the few active strip mines in this area. 

Logan Klingler, the DNR wildlife manager, said the reclaimed land creates preferred elk habitat called early successional growth. He explained as an explosion went off.

“That’s an old mine blast,” Klingler said. “They’re blowing up rocks and they’re going to go mine it and put it back together and put grass on top of it.”

The mine reclamation process creates open areas with freshly seeded grass that are not heavily forested, something that West Virginia does not have much of naturally, but is beneficial to elk.

The Elk “Hunt”

West Virginia’s elk herd was brought in from Kentucky and Arizona between 2016 and 2018, after several eastern states began reintroducing elk. Before the Civil War and prior to industrial development, elk were common in Appalachia. The rugged landscape was spotted with the 700-pound, light and dark brown creatures bugling during mating season in the fall.

Credit Eric Douglas / West Virginia Public Broadcasting
/
West Virginia Public Broadcasting
The DNR crew waits while elk project leader Randy Kelley attempts to tranquilize an elk several miles away.

As part of the project, the DNR team locate and shoot elk with tranquilizer guns to put GPS tracking collars on them. It is how they learn about how the elk are adjusting to West Virginia — like where they are eating, drinking, bedding down and if they are staying off roads.

Kelley said he and the crew go out most days in the winter to put collars on elk that do not have them already, but they are wild animals. And sometimes, like on this day, there are no elk.

“Well we’re skunked for tonight,” Kelley said, on the day WVPB accompanied the team. “Sometimes you get the dog and sometimes the dog gets you. The dog got us tonight.”

Growing A Sustainable Herd

Four years into the project, the West Virginia elk herd is smaller than biologists had hoped it would be by now.

They received grants from organizations like The Conservation Fund, the Wildlife Restoration Program and the Rocky Mountain Elk Foundation with the goal of reintroducing elk to southern West Virginia during a five-year timespan. However, Kelley said other states are not willing to give up their elk right now, so West Virginia has seen no outside additions to the herd since 2018. 

Credit Eric Douglas / West Virginia Public Broadcasting
/
West Virginia Public Broadcasting
The West Virginia Department of Natural Resources emblem.

This pushes back one of the main goals of the project, which is to introduce an elk hunting season to West Virginia. Although, Kelley said he has high hopes for elk-related tourism, as there is already interest in tours of just the wildlife management area, without even a guarantee to see any elk. But with the state surrounded by successful, longer running elk reintroduction programs in Kentucky, Virginia, Pennsylvania and North Carolina, is it realistic to expect tourism numbers to soar in West Virginia?

Sara Cottingham, West Virginia-based community planner at Downstream Strategies who specializes in outdoor recreation planning, said maybe.

“I would not at all say that means West Virginia couldn’t be competitive, I think with targeted marketing and aggressive pushing it could really be a successful destination,” Cottingham said. “And I do think that adding elk tourism to that portfolio of what we have to offer would really enhance everything.”

Wild And Wonderful

And Kelley, the project leader, said there are more to it than just the economic benefits. It is restoring a species that was once native here, kind of adding to that magic of “wild and wonderful” West Virginia. 

“I’ve seen elk on TV, I’ve been out West, I’ve driven through Yellowstone, but seeing an elk at home is a whole lot different, or hearing it bugle in your home state as it echoes through the hills of West Virginia, it’s, you know, make the hairs on the back of your neck stand up,” he said.

As for the local community, Kelley said most are supportive.

Credit Caitlin Tan / West Virginia Public Broadcasting
/
West Virginia Public Broadcasting
Randy Kelley wearing his scent blocking clothing which helps not scare the elk when he is trying to tranquilize them.

John Burchett, a resident from Williamson said he is hopeful the program will help the West Virginia’s Southern Coalfields’ lagging economy.

“The post-coal economy is going to be kind of tourism based, and the more things we have to do, the more entertainment, more adventure tourism that we have, the better off we’ll be. And the elk program is a big part of that,” he said.

Disease Is Inevitable

Some local deer hunters have expressed concern about the ability of the elk to coexist with white tail deer, Jake Wimmer, the DNR elk technician, said. But he added that so far, the way the two animals use the land is different. 

“Deer are browsers and elk are primarily grazers,” he said. “So your deer are going to be, you know, in the hardwoods during a nice mass drop year eating acorns, while your elk are still going to be out on the strips, on the plains and grazing the good grass.”

However, the DNR recently reported a third of the elk from Arizona, about 15, perished due to the East Coast’s deadly brain worm disease, which white tail deer happen to be the host of.

The disease is caused by an infected snail or slug that animals can ingest from grazing that rarely affects deer, but typically will kill an elk. Researchers estimate about 10 percent of elk herds in the East fall victim to brain worm, albeit West Virginia is experiencing higher rates.

Kelley said it could be the stress the Arizona elk underwent traveling 33 hours cross country and adjusting to a new environment that lowered their immune systems. 

Jeff Larkin, professor of wildlife ecology and conservation at Indiana University of Pennsylvania, worked with the Kentucky elk reintroduction program back in the late 90s. He said he saw higher rates of brain worm in the early years, too. 

Credit Caitlin Tan / West Virginia Public Broadcasting
/
West Virginia Public Broadcasting
Randy Kelley inside his tent that hides him from the elk herds. He sits in there when attempting to shoot a tranquilizer dart into an elk.

“You bring in 1,000 animals, and you lose 100. Yeah, it’s 10 percent, but you still have 900 animals to reproduce and replace what’s happening there, right? It’s not like, great for the population. It’s just that the population can withstand that,” Larkin said.

Moving Forward

But West Virginia’s elk population is still relatively small, around 80, and every disease and death means the herd could be less resilient in the years to come. Growing those numbers, without bringing in more elk from out West, takes time. In Pennsylvania, for example, 177 elk were reintroduced in the early 1900s, and about 100 years later the herd is thriving at around 1000

And while the West Virginia biologists hope that it will not take that long to grow the state’s herd, they admit that the project is a little behind in their initial goal to reach 150 elk by the end of 2020.

But in the meantime, they are maintaining the herd they do have, plus, Kelley said he expects West Virginia-born elk calves this spring. 

This story is part of West Virginia Public Broadcasting’s Southern Coalfields Reporting Project which is supported by a grant from the National Coal Heritage Area Authority.

 

Elk Under Quarantine Released from West Virginia Holding Pen

A group of elk transported from Arizona to West Virginia in March have been set free from their holding pen.

News outlets report the Division of Natural Resources released 46 elk on Tuesday in Logan County.

The elk had undergone a quarantine mandated by the U.S. Department of Agriculture. The quarantine ended on June 1 but the elk weren’t set free until the results from the final round of disease testing were known.

West Virginia Gov. Jim Justice had said three elk died of stress from summer heat, prolonged confinement and the testing procedure. Two of the three were pregnant. Three other recently born calves also died while awaiting release.

Justice said wild elk like the ones caught in Arizona are more susceptible to stress.

West Virginia Officials to Show Off 50 Elk Caught in Arizona

Officials in West Virginia are set to introduce 50 elk that were captured in Arizona.

Gov. Jim Justice and the state Division of Natural Resources are scheduled to hold a ceremony Tuesday at the Tomblin Wildlife Management Area near Logan.

The governor’s office says in a news release the elk have been in a 5-acre holding pen since March to comply with federal disease testing guidelines. The pen is on reclaimed coal mine property, where grasslands have been cultivated and are considered key for sustaining elk.

They’ll join 35 other elk previously acquired from Kentucky’s Land Between the Lakes National Recreation Area.

The elk from Kentucky were first reintroduced in West Virginia in December 2016. Before that, elk herds hadn’t roamed the state since 1875.

Officials are touting the elk’s potential to help tourism.

Northern Arizona Elk to Relocate to West Virginia

Dozens of elk rounded up in grasslands of a northern Arizona wildlife area are waiting to be trucked to a new home in West Virginia.

Wildlife officials netted 60 elk from the Raymond Wildlife Area about 30 miles southeast of Flagstaff, then used a helicopter sling to take them to a holding pen for a month-long quarantine, the Arizona Daily Sun reported .

The process aims to bring elk back to West Virginia, which hunted off the last of its native Eastern elk around the 1860s, said Stephen McDaniel, director of the West Virginia Division of Natural Resources.

“We’re the ones that drove them out so we should be the ones to try to bring them back and re-establish them,” McDaniel said.

The translocation is a welcome opportunity for Arizona wildlife managers to further conservation and help another state re-establish an elk population, said Amber Munig, big game program supervisor with the Arizona Game and Fish Department.

Last week was just the second time Arizona has exported its elk to other states. The first time was in the early 2000s when the state sent animals to Kentucky to help that state re-establish its population, Munig said.

West Virginia contacted Arizona about getting elk several months ago because the state’s population is one of the few that are free of diseases like tuberculosis and chronic wasting disease. It’s also robust enough, with sufficient reproduction rates, to support removal of some animals, Munig said.

The elk will be released in two wildlife management areas that amount to 40,000 acres. The landscape is predominantly dense woodlands and grasslands, according to West Virginia wildlife officials. McDaniel said the goal is to bring in 250 elk over the next four to five years.

“Bringing the tourist industry down into West Virginia to see the elk roaming the mountains that they once did 150 years ago. I think it’s a win-win for everybody.”

Exit mobile version