Posts Tagged ‘north’

from North Dakota Game and Fish

Paddlefish Fishing in North DakotaNorth Dakota\’s paddlefish snagging season opens May 1 and is scheduled to continue through the end of the month.

North Dakota\’s paddlefish snagging season opens May 1 and is scheduled to continue through the end of the month. However, depending on the overall harvest, an early in-season closure may occur with a 36-hour notice issued by the state Game and Fish Department.

Legal snagging hours are from 8 a.m. to 10 p.m. daily. One tag per snagger will be issued. Snagging is legal in all areas of the Yellowstone River in North Dakota, and in the area of the Missouri River lying west of the U.S. Highway 85 bridge to the Montana border, excluding that portion from the pipeline crossing (river mile 1,577) downstream to the upper end of the Lewis and Clark Wildlife Management Area (river mile 1,565).

Mandatory harvest of all snagged paddlefish is required on Wednesdays, Thursdays, Fridays, Saturdays and Sundays. On these days, all paddlefish caught must be tagged immediately. The use or possession of a gaff hook within one-half mile in either direction of the Highway 200 bridge on the Yellowstone River is illegal at any time during the snagging season.

Snag-and-release of all paddlefish is required on Mondays and Tuesdays. Those planning to participate during snag-and-release-only days need to have in their possession a current season, unused paddlefish snagging tag. Use or possession of gaffs is prohibited on Mondays and Tuesdays, and, if it occurs, during the snag-and-release extension period.

If the season closes early because the harvest quota is reached, an extended snag-and-release-only period will be allowed for up to seven days immediately following the early closure, but not to extend beyond May 31. Only snaggers with a current season, unused paddlefish snagging tag are eligible to participate. Only a limited area at the confluence of the Missouri and Yellowstone rivers is open to this extended season snagging opportunity.

All paddlefish snaggers must possess a paddlefish tag in addition to a valid fishing license and certificate that may be required. Cost of a paddlefish tag is $3 for residents and $7.50 for nonresidents.

See the original article at GotHunts.com

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2
Mar

Successful Wolf Hunters

   Posted by: admin    in Outdoor Syndication

Quite a few of my friends got their wolves in Idaho\’s first wolf season last fall. I went wolf hunting a few times, but came up short. One friend of mine got his wolf by North fork Idaho on the 31st of Oct. There was another wolf killed in the same spot the day before and more have been spotted since. There is no shortage.

Enjoy the pics.



See the original article at GotHunts.com

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5
Feb

The Agonies of the Monday Morning After

   Posted by: admin    in Outdoor Syndication

I know, that title doesn\’t make a whole lot of sense, but somehow after what happened yesterday and how I feel today, and what I feel like I should do tomorrow it all makes perfect sense.  In short, yesterday I got talked into going chukar hunting with two of my sons, Todd and Tom.  Today I feel like I got hit by a bus and tomorrow I got this hankering to go see a psycho to find out why I let myself get talked into this excursion.  Worst of all I have only to look in the mirror to find the guy who introduced these two to the joys of chasing these feathered fiends all over the hills.  When the three boys were small and woke up on Saturday mornings between September and January, wondering where dad was, if he wasn\’t elk or deer hunting, they more than likely heard that he was chukar hunting.  So I\’m sure there was a certain amount of curiosity as to what this chukar hunting was all about, especially since there was very little meat that came out of these hunts.

In this barren country there is some real beauties such as this water fall which we found a short distance from the road.

Now I\’m reaping my reward for getting them cranked up about such a hopeless cause.  My mind is still saying yes but the body is calling me some awful names.   Deep inside I knew better, but it wasn\’t until we stopped at the base of the hill and looked up that I had to face the fact that my smarts had stayed at home.  Roaming the hills for elk is one thing, but chasing these berating little birds is another.

Looking down river on the Snake. This is looking at the south slopes where the snow line is higher.

The boys were kind enough to give me the south slope of the hill to hike up on as the north slope became snow covered shortly after leaving the pickup.  We had hiked for an hour, seeing no birds and hearing no shots, before I started getting those familiar feelings of being snookered by my own mind into thinking this would be fun.  Shortly after I was reasoning with myself and coming up with the sane idea that there was no birds around and I might as well head back down.  Just then I heard my first bird calling and as close as I could tell it was coming from way up in the head of the canyon.  To those that haven\’t heard the chukars\’ call, it sounds like their name ‘chukar\’, but to those that have hunted them it sounds more like \’sucker\’.  I don\’t know what there is in that call that makes us do stupid things, but all thoughts of reason and the pickup disappeared and I headed back up the canyon.  Looking across the canyon I could see the boys struggling in the snow but they had evidently heard them too and were heading up the hill.

Lunch break, Todd and Tom. Thank goodness for the ridges which gave some relief from the deep snow.

Within thirty minutes I too had reached snow line even on the south slope, and shortly thereafter found out what the boys had been dealing with.  I had kind of thought they were over doing it that morning when they put on there heavy boots as I chose my 6″ hikers.  Sons are now smarter than dad.  It was the kind of snow where you could walk on the crust four or five steps then you\’d fall though.  First it was up to the knee, then it became up to the high center mark.  I was exhausted, but those birds sounded just around the corner.  The next time I fell though the crusted snow I lost one of my 6″ hikers and it\’s just as well as I had to take the other one off too as it also was needing to be emptied of snow.  I hadn\’t gone 20 feet when the bottom went out again.  I was just standing awkwardly in this hole wondering if it would work to call AAA to get me a tow truck to pull me out when less then 10 yards ahead of me two chuckers took off.  I should have saved my lead but I didn\’t come this far or work this hard just to watch chukars fly off without a fight.  They were far enough out there by the time I got situated good enough to shoot that I\’m sure all those #6 shot were responding to gravity long before they got to the birds.   I was thoroughly disgusted with myself and was having a little talk with self when a third bird barrelled out from the same bush.  Bird going down hill, pull below it and fire.  This bird was going down hill, but was still on the rise.   Self, your brain has got to react faster then that.  I had reached my limit so I sat there and waited for the boys to come around to where I was.  As they came I saw at least 4 covies leave the area ahead of them.  These birds had evidently been well educated and were leaving early.

Getting below snow level we spread out for one more shot. Nice thought but not very productive.

When Todd and Tom reached me, they dined on their cold pizza and I on my chicken sandwich as we discussed our disgust for these birds.  These were some of the most uncooperative birds we had ever seen.  One thing we acknowledged was defeat and we might as well start our 1600′ vertical decent to the pickup.   When we cleared snow line we spread out along the hillside to give it one last try.  Hope springs forever, you know, for hunters.   Tom got caught blowing his nose when a bunch of 15 got up and he gave them a ‘fair thee well\’ send off.  About twenty minutes later I had a long shot at the same bunch I think.   So as Todd put it, I was 0 for 4, Tom was 0 for 1 and he hadn\’t missed all day so he did the best.  I couldn\’t argue with that.  It still doesn\’t give us much to eat though.

The snow storm hit us about half way down and kept us moving till we hit the road at the bottom.

The thing that scares me the most about myself after that day is, if the season were still open next Saturday, I\’d probably be fool enough again to have another go at them.

This article by: BaseCampLegends.com

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Holly and the Wild Goose Chase

Holly A. Heyser, hunting blogger and college lecturer

I am pretty much the last person anyone – including myself – would have expected to take up hunting. I was born in Southern California and have spent all of my adult life in urban areas. After college, I spent 19 years as a newspaper reporter and editor (Orange County Register, San Jose Mercury News, St. Paul Pioneer Press, Virginian-Pilot, Sacramento Bee) before leaving the business in 2006 to teach journalism at my alma mater, California State University, Sacramento. Reporter. Professor.

Urbanite. Not someone you think of as a gunner.

But I have always craved unusual experiences, and hunting started worming its way into my realm of possibility back when I was in my late 30s. I was living in St. Paul, Minnesota, with my boyfriend Hank Shaw, and we were both working for the St. Paul Pioneer Press. We had befriended the hunting and fishing writer there – Chris Niskanen – and what he did was really piquing Hank\’s interest. One day Hank announced that he wanted to take up hunting. “That\’s fine,” I said. He\’s a cook, so I knew he\’d eat what he\’d kill, which was my threshold of acceptance for hunting.

He was really getting into it, spending a lot of time out in the woods, and pretty soon he started asking if I\’d like to join him. I didn\’t, because I was busy training for marathons at that point, and I rightfully concluded that I couldn\’t fit two activities that intense into my weekends. But a couple years later we moved to Sacramento, and I stopped running, and I finally said I was ready to join him. My first hunt was a pheasant hunt, but what really grabbed me was duck hunting. Half of the ducks in the Pacific Flyway spend their winter in the Sacramento Valley about an hour north of us, and the duck hunting can be amazing. I will hunt anything that I\’m willing to eat – pheasants, turkeys, wild boar, deer – but there\’s just something about ducks. They\’re fast, the marshy terrain is challenging and the worse the weather, the better the hunting. I love a challenge. And ducks taste divine. Duck is by far my favorite meat, followed closely by wild boar.

Me and Second Chance in the field

I very quickly dedicated myself to my new pursuit. I had just started my teaching job and was overjoyed when I realized my winter break covered the last six weeks of duck season, so when Hank was working, I\’d drive up to one of my favorite wildlife refuges and head out into the marsh myself, determined to teach myself how to actually hit these birds. (Three years later, I\’m sorta kinda getting the hang of it.)

A year to the day after I fired my shotgun for the first time ever, I started a blog about hunting, NorCal Cazadora (www.norcalcazadora.com). NorCal stands for Northern California, and “cazadora” is Spanish for huntress. I figured no one would care what a novice hunter had to say, but boy was I wrong. I quickly found that even the most veteran hunters enjoyed the frustration-filled tales of trying to learn how to do this hunting stuff right. Since, then, I\’ve expanded a bit and have begun writing for magazines including California Waterfowl, Delta Waterfowl and Turkey Country, and I\’ve done quite a few hunting stories for the Sacramento Bee, which has shown amazing openness to hunting.

I\’ve also taken up photography, and do a lot of food photos for my boyfriend, who started a blog shortly after I did – Hunter Angler Gardener Cook (www.honest-food.net) – and writes for a variety of food magazines. I\’ll be doing photography for his upcoming book as well.

Writing and photography has opened many doors. I\’ve begun doing a lot of volunteer work for California Waterfowl, which graciously honored me with its Artemis Award this year. And I\’ve made friends all over the country and world, which means if I can afford a plane ticket someplace, I could probably find someone to hunt with there. I feel incredibly blessed.

Probably the biggest blessing, though, is having been able to enter the hunting world in the first place. I was not naïve about where food came from before I started hunting – I spent some time in the country as a kid, and my family raised a lot of animals for meat. But participating in food, nature and the cycle of life at this level has been a revelation, and it has improved both what I eat and how much I appreciate it exponentially. So many things had to fall into place to get me here: meeting Hank, moving to Minnesota, befriending Chris. There are any number of different choices I could have made that would have put me on a different path. But I got lucky, and I\’m incredibly grateful for that.

Holly Stone cold killaz

See the original article at CampWildGirls.com

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