Do Deer Have a 6th Sense?
Transcription
Do Deer Have a 6th Sense?
Sixth Sense? Some hunters swear that big game animals have a sixth sense, and they might be right. But can you do anything about it? By Dr. Dave Samuel, Conservation Editor The HECS Suit may very well help baffle the sixth sense of deer and other big game. 62 >BOWHUNTER BOHP-100900-SAMUEL.indd 62 N OKAY, INITIALLY I WAS not convinced, but as a scientist and former professor, I came home and started reading journal papers and researching the idea that human bodies give off some kind of electric force that animals might detect (see Sidebar on page 68). This research gave me a lot to think about. If you Google “human aura” or “electromagnetic fields,” you’ll find vast materials on these subjects, including papers that say all living beings have an electrical cloud surrounding them (check out “Sensing another’s aura” in the Sidebar). Some people claim they can sense DEER: RALPH HENSLEY/AUTHOR’S PHOTO Do Deer Have A O DOUBT IT HAS HAPPENED to you. You’ve set your stand to take advantage of the wind, and trail camera photos show several good bucks in the area. It’s a cool November morning — perfect weather for hunting — and just as the sun peeks through the trees, a buck appears on the trail, coming your way. The wind is right, and your entry trail is behind you. Perfect scenario. Then, for no apparent reason, the buck stops at 40 yards. He stands there for at least two minutes, never moving a muscle. As quickly as he came, he turns and walks away, out of your life forever. Why? In response to scenarios like this, I’ve heard hunters say that deer have a sixth sense. In fact, years ago, whitetail authorities and friends of mine Gene and Barry Wensel told me that deer have a sixth sense. I didn’t believe it. I’ve always felt that it wasn’t a sixth sense, but rather scent. I thought that it had to be odor — those bucks somehow smell you, and that is why they move away. I’ve changed my mind. The reason originates with discussions I had with Winner’s Choice president Mike Slinkard at his booth at the 2010 ATA Trade Show in January. We talked about his new company, Human Energy Concealment Systems (HECS), and the company’s new 6th Sense apparel. The theory we discussed, and the basis for his new company and clothing, is that our bodies give off electromagnetic radiation — a sixth sense. “Dave, I’ll send you some literature, and you decide whether deer have a sixth sense,” Mike said. “I believe it is clear that not only do all animals and humans have and give off electromagnetic signals, but that deer and other animals can detect them.” We then discussed how his new garments reduce transmission of electronic radiation, making it harder for animals to detect a hunter’s presence. SEPTEMBER 2010 6/24/10 3:28 PM this aura and even see it. Scientific papers describe ways to photograph it. For hundreds of years, Indian religious leaders have spoken of aura, and ancient medicinal scholars speak of the human energy field surrounding our bodies. For thousands of years, Chinese practitioners have used the Qigong form of meditation to enhance their human energy field. Masters of Qigong also developed various forms of martial arts as well as acupuncture. Remember when we thought such activities were just the frivolities of the Orient? We were wrong. One Internet reference indicates that 97 different cultures refer to the human energy field, or aura, surrounding living creatures. Sure, the presence of an aura is debatable, but there’s enough smoke here to suggest a fire burns somewhere. Scientists have known for years that some birds, bats, fish, turtles, and other creatures can detect electromagnetic fields and use these to migrate, in some cases thousands of miles to nesting, feeding, and wintering grounds. Other studies show that cattle, as well as red and roe deer, have the unique “sense” to face in a north-south direction with the Earth’s electromagnetic lines. Research- 66 >BOWHUNTER BOHP-100900-SAMUEL.indd 66 ers at the University of Duisburg-Essen (Germany) used Google Earth images to determine this (Sidebar). In addition, fresh snow beds of deer and cattle showed that the animals “faced a more magnetic north-south direction rather than geographic north-south.” They’re apparently “feeling” it. One study published in a 1991 issue of the Journal of Bioelectricity demonstrated that some people have more sensitivity to electromagnetic fields than others. This all makes me wonder whether some animals or some species have more sensitivity than others. It also makes me wonder whether some bowhunters give out more or less electromagnetic radiation than others, making them more or less detectable by game animals when those animals get close. Do relaxed hunters give off less electromagnetic radiation than tense or excited hunters — and thus more efficiently evade the sixth sense of big game animals? Scientists know that electronic charges zip through human brains because they can measure them via an electroencephalogram. Lots of people have irregular heartbeats caused by bad nerve pathways over the surface of the heart. Doctors can go in there and measure those electronic pathways and then laser the bad ones. In fact, it was via such a surgical procedure that I suffered an irreversible “mistake” that has negatively impacted my ability to hunt forever. That’s been a journey that I’d love to forget, but cannot. Research also shows that it’s possible to block a person’s electromagnetic field (EMF) by placing the person in a metallic enclosure known as a Faraday Cage, which can be built of solid metal, metallic mesh, or other fiber materials. (For details, Google “Wikipedia,” “electromagnetic field,” and “Faraday Cage.”) WITH THIS BACKGROUND, let’s look at the results of tests done with EMFblocking garments. Researchers wanted to test the theory that EMF, even at very low levels, could be blocked or reduced to lower the potential of detection by animals. First, they determined if the garments changed the electromagnetic readings of people wearing them. Using a Trifield Natural EM Meter, they found the average of 10 readings was 4.24 microteslas for test subjects not wearing the garments and 1.98 for those wearing the garments, a reduction of 53 percent. continued on page 68 SEPTEMBER 2010 6/24/10 3:28 PM continued from page 66 Next, researchers used individuals in camo clothes, with as little movement as possible and facing into the wind, to observe cattle, horses, and mule deer. I’ll report just on the mule deer studies. Again, test subjects observed mule deer from positions 12-20 feet to the side of known travel routes between bedding and feeding areas. For observers not wearing the garments, the average closest distance deer got before detecting the observers was 48 yards. And 67 percent of deer groups (10 tests), or individual deer within groups, detected observers and gave alarm calls. For observers wearing the garments, the average closest distance before detection was 14 yards, 54 percent of deer detected the observers, and none of the deer gave alarm calls. In a second study, researchers watched as a person stalked directly at mule deer in an open field. For three tests, the average distance at which the deer first reacted to the stalker was 176 yards, and the closest the stalker got without detection was 168 yards. For stalkers wearing the garments, those numbers were 120 yards and 52 yards, respectively. In a third study, a person not wearing the garments stalked deer in an open field, moving only when the deer had their heads down, feeding. The average detection distance was 143 yards, and the closest distance was 124 yards. For stalkers wearing the garments, average detection distance was 65 yards, and the closest distance was 32 yards. In conclusion, it sure seems that humans give off an electromagnetic radiation of some kind, that animals can detect this, and that specialized garments can reduce the level of radiation. And even though the sample sizes for the mule deer observations are small, the numbers show that wearing these garments improves hunters’ potential for going undetected. The author of the study did note that detection, with or without the garments, was less when the “hunters” did not move. That’s nothing new, but looking at the numbers, I predict we will hear a lot more about HECS 6th Sense apparel in the future. RELATED RESEARCH “Developmental origin of shark electrosensory organs,” Evolution & Development 8:74-80 (2006). Vertebrates have evolved sensory organs to detect electrical stimuli in their environment. This paper talks about how these have evolved and function in sharks. “Glycoproteins bound to ion channels mediate detection of electric fields: A proposed mechanism and supporting evidence,” Bioelectromagnetics 28:379-385 (2007). You need to be a medical physiologist/physicist to follow this complex paper, but it basically shows the complex mechanism that allows many animals to detect weak electric and magnetic fields, via electroreceptor cells. “Sensing another’s aura,” www.schoolforchampions.com/senses/aura.htm. Humans, animals, and plants have an electrical aura around them. “Magnetic alignment in grazing and resting cattle and deer,” Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, August (2008). “The human electromagnetic energy field: Its relationship to interpersonal communication,” Journal of Theoretics 4 (2) (2002). Discusses the complex way that our thoughts and emotions cause electromagnetic changes in our bodies. “Electromagnetic field sensitivity,” Journal of Bioelectricity 10:241-256 (1991). Controlled study showing that certain people are more sensitive to electromagnetic sources from their environment than other people are. Does not discuss whether some animals are more susceptible or have more sensitivity to electromagnetic sources than others. 68 >BOWHUNTER BOHP-100900-SAMUEL.indd 68 SEPTEMBER 2010 6/24/10 3:28 PM