White moose is the talk of the town in Delta
by Tim Mowry / tmowry@newsminer.com
3 months ago | 8022 views | 12 12 comments | 173 173 recommendations | email to a friend | print
Lisa Stossmeister photo
A white moose calf browses in Frank’s U-Pick Garden on Nov. 30. Delta resident Lisa Stossmeister saw the white calf on consecutive days.
Lisa Stossmeister photo A white moose calf browses in Frank’s U-Pick Garden on Nov. 30. Delta resident Lisa Stossmeister saw the white calf on consecutive days.
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FAIRBANKS — Frank Borman of Delta Junction pulled out of his driveway one day last week and saw several cars parked alongside the road in front of his u-pick vegetable farm.

“I thought it was a traffic accident,” Borman said. “Then I got up there and seen it in the field.”

“It” is a white moose calf that has been wandering around Delta Junction for the past six months with its brown mother.

“It’s not as white as a polar bear, but it’s definitely white,” Borman said. “It was out there acting like a moose when I saw it. It was down on its knees eating cabbage.”

Despite several sightings throughout the past few months, nobody had been able to get a good picture of the mutant calf until Lisa Stossmeister snapped a couple photos last week that were posted on the Delta News Web, a local Web site that features photos and news from the small farming community 100 miles southeast of Fairbanks on the Richardson Highway. Stossmiester saw the moose eating leftovers in Borman’s garden along Tanana Loop Extension on consecutive days last week.

“One of my friends said he saw it the week before so one day I thought, ‘What the heck; we’ll go down and look for it.’ And it was right there,” she said. “We kind of lucked out. I’ve been in Alaska for 31 years, and I’ve never seen anything like it. I was really excited.”

So were her two sons, 12-year-old Eric, who was the first one to spot the moose, and Doug, 8.

“My littlest boy said, ‘Mom, my heart is pounding so hard. I’m so excited about seeing this moose.’”

Stossmeister saw the moose on Dec. 1 and 2 but hasn’t seen it since. She makes a point of driving by Borman’s farm each day on the way home from her sons’ school.

The white calf doesn’t appear to be an albino, Stossmeister said.

“It doesn’t have pink eyes,” she said. “It has blue-gray eyes.”

The calf is whitest on its head and shoulders, Stossmeister said.

“It reminds you of a white lab,” she said. “It’s yellowish and tannish.”

Partial-albino or white-phased moose, as they are called, are not common, but they occasionally pop up in moose populations. Like other mammals, including humans, white or albino moose are the result of a double recessive gene that is passed down through generations.

After hearing multiple reports of the white moose calf in Delta Junction in October and November, wildlife biologist Steve DuBois with the Department of Fish and Game in Delta finally saw the moose on Thanksgiving weekend in the same neck of the woods that Stossmeister found it.

“It seems to be circulating right around there,” he said of Tanana Loop Extension.

DuBois got a picture, too, but the moose was far away.

“It’s not a very good picture, but there’s no doubt it’s a white moose calf standing next to its mama,” DuBois said. “It’s acting like a normal calf.”

White or partially white moose have been seen in other parts of the Interior, specifically the Alaska Range south of Fairbanks in game management unit 20C near Healy.

The Fairbanks Moose Lodge inherited a mostly white moose hide that came from a moose that was shot in that area in 1974. North Pole taxidermist Charlie Livingston made a head mount of that moose for the lodge back in 2005.

White moose also have been spotted in Denali National Park and Preserve. The last white moose seen in the Denali area was in 1990 when a white cow with brown spots was photographed near the Parks Highway.

The appearance of the moose near Healy prompted the state Board of Game to pass a regulation that prohibits shooting “white-phased or partial albino” moose — defined as being at least 50 percent white — in unit 20C. At this point, it is the only area in the state with such a regulation.

Contact staff writer Tim Mowry at 459-7587.
comments (12)
« Ursus_Arctos wrote on Sunday, Dec 13 at 03:20 PM »
inthebush66,

I've only heard that they were good luck. I would think seeing something so rare could only be good luck!!

No matter...sure is cute.

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« MrsSaenz wrote on Sunday, Dec 13 at 12:05 PM »
Yes, Pearl they can. My deaf dog also had weird shaded eyes and obviously had only peripheral vision. A double whammy.

If I were a biologist I'd be foaming at the mouth to study this baby.
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« Pearl=W wrote on Sunday, Dec 13 at 12:01 PM »
MrsS - are those pale eyes an indication of possible weak vision, poor eyesight, also? Do you know? In domestic animals I've seen, they frequently indicate blindness, or nearly so.
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« Pearl=W wrote on Sunday, Dec 13 at 11:38 AM »
Pinhead - photo is at the wrong angle for sex determination.

Pretty calf! I have a cow around here that has 4 perfect white stockings all the way up to her body. Makes her very hard to spot in patchy snow. She's had at least 1 calf with the same markings. I think moose are not as uniformly colored as often thought, and some white patches are not super unusual. But all white with blue/grey eyes is definately special!
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« MrsSaenz wrote on Sunday, Dec 13 at 11:35 AM »
I remember the stuffed one that was at Alaskaland many, many years ago.

The recessive genes that produce the white coat often times result in other mutations, too. Deafness is one that comes immediately to mind. Blue/light colored eyes are very indicative of deafness in a white animal, too. If that is the case with this baby, her days are numbered. Sad, huh? I would drive to Delta to get a look at this one!

There is a grain of truth in the wives tale about bad luck. It's bad luck for the moose.

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« Pinhead wrote on Sunday, Dec 13 at 06:50 AM »
Isn't the lodge down near Denali (I think it's in Healy) named after an albino that used to wander that area some years back? Is that the one they are referring to at the end of the article? Would be very cool to get a look at this one. Excuse my ignorance--can anyone tell what sex this is?
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« Copper_River_Red wrote on Sunday, Dec 13 at 05:30 AM »
My grandmother told me not to believe old wife's tales.

White bison are always held in reverence by Plains Indians, it won't hurt to hold this animal and others in the same manner and a sense of appreciation for the wonders of this world will probably be enhanced.

Not your everyday moose, fer sure.

I recall another one in that area years back as well.

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« tburris01 wrote on Sunday, Dec 13 at 04:17 AM »
I thinks theres supposed to be some sort of old Indian folklore, myth or something about White Buffalos or other animals being some kind of sign from god, the spirit world or what ever religion is being worshipped.
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« tburris01 wrote on Sunday, Dec 13 at 04:10 AM »
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« MP210 wrote on Sunday, Dec 13 at 03:43 AM »
Sounds like right wing fear mongering.

I've never heard anything about white moose being bad luck.
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« inthebush66 wrote on Sunday, Dec 13 at 12:57 AM »
MORNING FELLOW ALASKANS,MY GRANDMOTHER ONCE TOLD ME,THAT WHITE MOOSE WERE BAD LUCK,ANYONE ELSE HAVE ANYTHING ABOUT THIS?
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« inthebush66 wrote on Sunday, Dec 13 at 12:52 AM »
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