NDGF summarizes 2012 deer season

The North Dakota Game and Fish Department cut the number of firearms deer licenses that were available last fall, and the reduction buoyed hunting success, the department said.

Fewer deer hunters were able to draw tags last fall in North Dakota, and the reduction helped boost hunter success to 63 percent for the 2012 firearms season. Hunter success hit an all-time low of 51 percent in 2011, when nearly 110,000 licenses were available. (N.D. Game and Fish Department photo)

Deer hunters last fall reported 63 percent hunting success and spent an average of 4.4 days afield. Game and Fish issued 65,150 gun licenses, down from 109,950 licenses available in 2011 and the lowest total since 1988.

Randy Kreil, wildlife chief for Game and Fish, said the reduction helped hunter success bounce back from an all-time low of 51 percent in 2011.

“The 63 percent clip is fairly good, but still below the long-term average of around 70 percent,” Kreil said. “In addition, the number of days spent hunting is still higher than usual, which is expected with lower deer populations.”

Hunter success for antlered white-tailed deer was 76 percent, and antlerless whitetail was 62 percent. Mule deer buck success was 81 percent. No mule deer doe licenses were issued in 2012.

Hunters with any-antlered or any-antlerless licenses almost exclusively shoot white-tailed deer. These buck and doe hunters each had a success rate of 64 percent.

Game and Fish is in the process of determining how many licenses to issue for the 2013 deer season. Department staff will discuss the recommendations at the spring Game and Fish advisory board meetings, scheduled for the week of April 15-18.

The proclamation setting the rules for this fall’s deer season will be sent to the governor’s office for approval in late April.

Group plans first-ever auction for S.D. bighorn sheep tag

The Midwest Chapter of the Wild Sheep Foundation annually auctions off a North Dakota bighorn sheep tag, but this year, for the first time ever, the Northfield, Minn.-based group is auctioning off a South Dakota bighorn tag.

The auction is scheduled for March 23 at the chapter’s annual banquet in Minnetonka, Minn.

In a news release, Curt Babler, president of the Midwest Sheep Foundation chapter, said the auction will help raise funds to aid in rebuilding a South Dakota bighorn population that has fallen by more than 30 percent in recent years.

He said the chapter hopes to raise $50,000 to $80,000 from the auction. Last year, South Dakota offered two bighorn sheep tags in the Black Hills.

“The auction has been a very large success in other states around the country in helping to benefit the health of the wild sheep population and, ultimately, affect the population numbers in a positive way, Babler said in the news release. “We’re pleased we can help play a role in raising funds for the sheep population in South Dakota.”

The chapter last year raised $42,000 by auctioning a North Dakota sheep tag and also donated an additional $10,000 for sheep management in North Dakota. Proceeds from the auction funded the recent transfer of 12 bighorn sheep from a heavily traveled stretch of U.S. Highway 85 near the North Unit of Theodore Roosevelt National Park to a safer part of the Badlands where the animals are less susceptible to roadkill.

The relocation cost about $8,000 plus another $1,000 for radio-collars fitted on eight adult sheep.

For more information on the upcoming South Dakota auction or to register online, click here www.fnawsmnwi.org/banquet.html or call (507) 645-8811. No membership is required to attend.

DNR sets March 12 public input meeting in TRF

The Minnesota Department of Natural Resources has scheduled a public meeting for 7 to 9 p.m. March 12 at Northland Community and Technical College in Thief River Falls to take input on a number of hunting-related proposals.

Items up for discussion include:

Creating limited opportunities for open-water duck hunting.

Allowing Canada goose hunting in August to reduce depredation problems for farmers in west central Minnesota.

Opening the second portion of the state’s 124-day crow season later in the year.

Opening prairie chicken season earlier in October than the current season.

Allowing youth age 17 and younger to hunt during all spring turkey seasons with a limit of one. Youth would not be required to select a permit area.

Besides the Thief River Falls meeting, input sessions also are scheduled for March 11 in Hibbing and March 13 in Alexandria. The DNR is encouraging people who cannot attend one of the meetings to complete a questionnaire online at mndnr.gov/wildlife/input.