By Brad Durick When it comes to angling for big catfish on the Red River this time of year, one can really tell the days are getting shorter now. Cool mornings and longer nights have the water temperature making its annual descent. So far it has been a slow process, but it is becoming more…
Author: dakotaedgeoutdoors
Youth Waterfowl Weekend Builds Hunters & Conservationists
By Nick Simonson North Dakota’s youth waterfowl weekend is Sept. 16 and 17, and with some impressive upticks in duck populations this year, the special focus of the two-day season for young and novice hunters, and the benefits it provides, many are looking forward to this year’s opportunity. For those mentors looking to take young…
The Peluso Report: Front Edge of Fall
By Mike Peluso If you have been paying attention to the recent National Walleye Trail (NWT) Championship held recently on Devils Lake, I’m sure it opened a few eyes. The weights these guys caught were incredible! Devils Lake proves once again why it’s one of the top walleye fisheries in the country. Let’s be honest,…
Our Outdoors: Not a Wrap
By Nick Simonson With a hit like a freight train, my rod doubled over on the lift of the firetiger Jigging Rapala and the walleye that showed up as an arc on the screen of the sonar a second before was suddenly a real-life connection at the other end. While the fifteen-inch fish wasn’t all…
Upland Counts Jump, Huns Hit 30-Year High
NDG&F Dept. Release North Dakota’s roadside surveys conducted in late July and August indicate pheasant, gray partridge and sharp-tailed grouse numbers were up. State Game and Fish Department upland game biologist RJ Gross said survey conditions were exceptional this year, which might have led to increased observations, but survey conditions shouldn’t have large effects on…
A Turn to the Twenty
By Nick Simonson It happened more than a decade ago. My wife won a 20 gauge over-under at our local Pheasants Forever banquet and gifted the featherweight shotgun to me. In my hands, it felt tiny, but it snapped to my shoulder with a quickness and a natural flow unlike any other shotgun I had…
Pointers for PLOTS
By Doug Leier The goal of the Private Land Open To Sportsmen program is to provide walk-in public access for hunting on private land. Just because hunters are allowed access doesn’t mean it’s open for any type of use. Even if you are hunting, PLOTS agreements do not allow activities such as horseback riding, camping,…
’23 ND Partridge & Grouse Season Preview
By Nick Simonson Ahead of this weekend’s Hungarian partridge and sharptailed grouse opener in North Dakota agents of the state’s Game and Fish Department (NDG&F) report solid rebounds for both birds on their summer surveys, particularly in the west. According to Upland Game Management Supervisor Jesse Kolar, Hungarian partridge are doing very well and are…
The Peluso Report: September Recharge
By Mike Peluso Like most years, I usually take a couple day break from walleye fishing over my birthday (September 2nd) to recharge my batteries and my boat batteries. This year has been a busy season no doubt. It has also been probably one of the best years of fishing I have seen. I know…
Our Outdoors: The Stick is the Carrot, for Now
By Nick Simonson Summer bookended the season with a Labor Day weekend of epic proportions as stable weather and warm temperatures produced a three-day September holiday unlike any other in recent memory. While lazily fly-rodding bluegills just after sunrise from the dock at the cabin, I listened to the distant thunder of shotgun blasts beyond…
Hunters Encouraged to Submit Wing Envelopes
NDG&F Release Hunters can help in the effort to manage upland game birds in North Dakota by collecting feathers from harvested birds and sending in wing envelopes. Birds included in the North Dakota Game and Fish Department’s (NDG&F) upland game wing survey, which has been in practice for decades, are ring-necked pheasants, sharp-tailed grouse, Hungarian…
Dog Prep for Hunting Season
By Doug Leier When it comes to seeing, hearing and understanding the issues hunters encounter firsthand, North Dakota Game and Fish Department game wardens are reliable sources for issues such as hunter safety. Their guidance provides hunters with points of emphasis to keep themselves and other hunters safe. The same goes for one of the…
Brad’s Bites: Wide Variety
By Brad Durick Angling for channel catfish on the Red river this past week provided a variety of conditions, with different weather each day. As a result, the catfish reacted in kind by moving from on current, to off current and back on again. The good news is the cats have basically been in the…
Habitat Concerns Remain for Deer Rebound
By Nick Simonson North Dakota’s deer populations find themselves in a rebuilding phase following the challenging winter of 2022-23, which thanks to significant snowfall and brutal cold temperatures from November into May, resulted in increased mortality of both white-tailed and mule deer across the map. With an accommodating late spring and summer under their feet…
The Peluso Report: Quality Comparisons
By Mike Peluso It’s hard to believe we are already at the beginning of school and football season. Summer buzzed by us way too quickly here. I still have quite a few days left here of guiding for walleyes on both Devils Lake and Lake Sakakawea, so here it goes. I left Devils Lake in…
Our Outdoors: A Skins Game
By Nick Simonson About this time of year I start to get really primed for what’s to come. Sure the cool mornings and warm afternoons behind a good dog while under a clear blue sky surrounded by the beiges and golds of rolling grassy hillsides are a moment in time to be held in memory…
Southeast ND Deer Set for Recovery, Hunters May Turn to Archery
By Nick Simonson While near-record snowfall across the southeastern portion of North Dakota hampered survival of the state’s white-tailed deer population over the winter of 2022-23, those animals that made it through the challenging season have had conditions helpful to their recovery since spring. Temperate conditions and ample rainfall have helped those does able to…
Somehow We Manage
By Doug Leier August means the early Canada goose season and the beginning of the 2023 hunting seasons. Part of the process is looking for places to hunt from the first geese to ducks, deer, pheasants and grouse. Did you know about 93 percent of the land in North Dakota is privately owned? It’s no…
Duck Brood Counts Jump 80% over 2022
NDG&F Dept. Release State Game and Fish Department migratory game bird biologists expect a fall flight of ducks similar to 1998, 2004 and 2020. If those past seasons don’t ring a bell, the fall flight is anticipated to be about 23% above last year’s fall flight, based on observations from the annual mid-July duck production…
Brad’s Bites: That Fall Feeling
By Brad Durick The feeling of fall is setting in while we’ve been fishing for cats on the Red River of the North The water temperature on the flow has dropped down to around 70 degrees and all the fronts throughout the past week have pushed the catfish to an off-current pattern. This means the…
PLOTS Program Adds 5,000 Acres, Better Habitat for ’23
By Nick Simonson North Dakota’s Private Land Open to Sportsmen (PLOTS) program added approximately 5,000 acres of access opportunity to hunters for this fall, but what drives the system which has been in place for nearly 25 years now is a focus on better habitat. In the era of lowered conservation reserve acres, a heightened…
The Peluso Report: Devils Lake Firing on all Cylinders
By MIke Peluso It’s been a great week for walleyes up here on Devils Lake. We have caught lots of fish and they are ranging in every size imaginable! The lake is healthy with small fish and a nice mix of bigger walleyes too. The combination of good spawning and good management of the system…
Our Outdoors: Stronger Suggestions
By Nick Simonson There comes a day in every August where the shift to fall is heavily hinted at. Some years, it’s the chill in the night breeze as the boat comes up the launch after a humid evening of walleye fishing that implies autumn is on the way. In others, it seems as if…
Goose Season Is A Go
By Doug Leier High school fall sports practices are underway, school has either started or will begin soon. Like it or not, it’s hunting season. The good news is the fishing season in North Dakota never closes so hunters who lament the loss of the true summer can choose not to take part in the…
Brad’s Bites: Summer Surges
By Brad Durick For Red River catfish, the past week has been really good for numbers and more and more big fish are showing up. The pattern has not changed all that much in terms of locations with fish still mostly right down the middle of the river. What has changed, however, is that we…
Powering Summer Perch Fishing
By Nick Simonson While yellow perch are most notably pursued through the ice and are a primary target of many anglers throughout the region during the cold weather months, these fish can provide fast summertime action and a stockpile of delicious fillets that can rival the stash that winter anglers accumulate. Connecting with roaming schools…
The Peluso Report: A Trio of Tips
By Mike Peluso This report will be a quick recap of what I know on two bodies of water and what I’ve heard on another. Once again, my job has taken me to both Devils Lake and Lake Sakakawea this week. As far as Sakakawea goes at this time of year the bulk of the…
Our Outdoors: Five Tips to Finish Out
By Nick Simonson Late summer brings with it fast fishing, but it can provide challenging conditions as well. Gearing up for the home stretch of the season and the start of fall, which produces some of the biggest and fastest bites of the year, requires anglers to rethink some strategies, remain persistent on others and…
Learning from the Dead
By Doug Leier It’s been nearly 20 years since the first legal mountain lion season in North Dakota. To think there’s a generation that has grown up never knowing a time when there wasn’t a season. It puts into context the label of “new” or “experimental” when describing one of the more recent additions to legal…
Fluoro Facts
By Nick Simonson The modern ranks of anglers throughout the upper Midwest are armed with uncountable lures, amazing watercraft and technology that rides the cutting edge. As a result, this concentrated core of well-equipped sportsmen is able to make up for the increased pressure that equally-endowed anglers have produced in recent seasons, making fish just…
