custom ad
FeaturesFebruary 11, 2011

STONEY FORK, Ky. -- Bringing the elk back to the Appalachian hills and hollows where they once roamed has become a nightmare. Rogues from a herd that numbers in the thousands are trampling gardens, flattening fences and marring yards with manure in the southeastern Kentucky town of Stoney Fork. They have made the roads dangerous, causing dozens of car crashes...

The Associated Press

STONEY FORK, Ky. -- Bringing the elk back to the Appalachian hills and hollows where they once roamed has become a nightmare.

Rogues from a herd that numbers in the thousands are trampling gardens, flattening fences and marring yards with manure in the southeastern Kentucky town of Stoney Fork. They have made the roads dangerous, causing dozens of car crashes.

Some residents have had enough. With the state's OK, they headed out into the woods to kill elk. They killed 13 of them.

"They're dangerous. Somebody's going to get killed if they don't do something," said 73-year-old Stoney Fork resident Nelson Short.

"When they started bringing them in here, I thought it would be a good thing," Short said. "It wasn't."

Elk had disappeared from Kentucky around the time of the Civil War, mainly because of overhunting.

Wildlife managers began bringing elk into the state in 1997 from several western states in what was heralded as an important ecology and tourism program. A group of about 1,500 elk released into 14 counties has grown to more than 10,000.

The Missouri Department of Conservation has been engaged in a half-million-dollar effort to reintroduce elk to the state. Recently officials said trappers captured 46 elk in Kentucky that will make up the nucleus of Missouri's herd. The animals are being kept in quarantine for 90 days to ensure their health. Those opposed to the project, including the Missouri Farm Bureau and some legislators, cite concerns that the animals could pose a threat to crops, spread animal disease and create road hazards.

Officials in Kentucky expected the elk would thrive on the man-made meadows left behind after coal companies removed towering ridgetops in a controversial mining method known as mountaintop removal. Some of the elk, however, preferred the tender sprouts growing in the yards couched between steep mountains along a state road that passes through Stoney Fork.

More than 100 elk have been killed in collisions with vehicles since 2005, with no human deaths, according to state wildlife records obtained by The Associated Press. That number only includes crashes reported to wildlife officials.

"I feel like they don't need to be here," said Melissa Jones, who has earned celebrity status in Stoney Fork because she survived a spectacular crash which left an angry bull elk thrashing and kicking in the front seat of her Geo Metro.

Receive Daily Headlines FREESign up today!

"They're a danger to us, and we want them gone," she said.

Jones counts it a miracle that she walked away with only cuts and bruises after slamming into the cow-sized animal on her way to Bible study two years ago. The animals, which can weigh 700 pounds and stand 5 feet tall, can inflict major damage on vehicles.

Responding to complaints from Stoney Fork residents, state wildlife officials agreed to allow them to shoot elk on their property in January and February, when mountain snows push elk into residential areas in search of food.

Lawmakers are considering barring wildlife officials from moving elk into towns without getting locals' OK.

To get the permits, however, residents first had to prove they had suffered property damage during visits from conservation officers. They had to follow existing hunting safety rules that keep them from shooting too close to roads or houses.

The state is also helping to thin the herds. Kentucky Wildlife Director Karen Waldrop said her officers are capturing elk and moving them to places that haven't had the problems Stoney Fork has experienced.

Waldrop said allowing residents to shoot some elk in residential areas will cause others to flee back to the mountaintops where biologists and conservation officers have set traps.

So far, they've captured nearly 50 that will be sent to Missouri, which is starting its own reintroduction program. Virginia is also considering a plan to bring some of the Kentucky elk there to start a herd.

Waldrop said most communities have embraced the elk, though most haven't had the problems that Stoney Fork has.

"Most people enjoy the elk," she said. "They like the idea of having elk near them, and they like the positive economic benefits" from tourism.

The day when the elk will no longer be a menace in Stoney Fork cannot come soon enough for some residents.

Last month, Lou Brock plowed into two elk in his Toyota Tacoma, doing $9,000 worth of damage. "They are ignorant animals," Brock said. "If they see headlights, they run toward them. They're stupid."

Story Tags
Advertisement

Connect with the Southeast Missourian Newsroom:

For corrections to this story or other insights for the editor, click here. To submit a letter to the editor, click here. To learn about the Southeast Missourian’s AI Policy, click here.

Advertisement
Receive Daily Headlines FREESign up today!