ROCHESTER, NY (WXXI) - One of Seneca County’s better-known attractions, the white deer at the former Seneca Army Depot will no longer be part of the bus tours that started a couple of years ago.
The former U.S. Army munitions facility which closed in the 1990s has an unusual type of deer roaming that property: white deer. They are not albino deer, but apparently carry a recessive gene which causes the lack of pigmentation.
The deer have always garnered interest by tourists and two years ago a conservation and tourism group called Seneca White Deer began offering regular bus tours through the property.
But Dennis Money, the president of the group and its lead conservationist said they have been losing money so the final day of the tours will be December 29. He says that in terms of attendance for the tours, "The numbers did not meet our expectations and we also didn't think about the wintertime months and so it was a learning curve for us as a new business.”
But he said this effort has been helpful in bringing attention to the deer and to wildlife conservation.
“When you see the smiles on a 6 year old kid and a 60 year old person after they’ve seen a white deer or a Blue Heron or a bald eagle at the Depot, you know you’ve made an impression,” Money said.
Money said the white deer tours brought people from all over the world to Seneca County.