By Doug Leier While some hunters have been in the field enjoying dove, waterfowl and upland game hunting opportunities, there’s many hunters who just hunt deer and the new electronic posting regulations may not be understood. It’s difficult to address each question and scenario so I suggest taking time to understand the regulations and reading…
Author: dakotaedgeoutdoors
Kautzman’s Perfection Propels BSC to MCAC Championship Win
By Nick Simonson The Bismarck State College (BSC) Mystics Clay Dusters trapshooting squad put on a dominant performance at the Minnesota Collegiate Athletic Conference (MCAC) 2021 Clay Target Championship on Oct. 19 in Alexandria, Minn., with sophomore Ayden Kautzman posting a perfect 100 to lead the team to its first championship and earn him the…
Crossing Safely
By John Bradley On a recent road trip back from Denver, after exhausting all my podcast downloads and Spotify playlists, boredom struck, and in desperation to stay awake, I decided to count roadkill. I’ve always called out game when driving, pointing out deer, antelope, or pheasants, while often annoying my passengers, but never roadkill. This…
Our Outdoors: Problems with Plastic
By Nick Simonson I’ve come to despise plastic. I guess not all plastic, just the plastic that gets in the way of enjoying the outdoors and the aesthetics of being in places where plastic shouldn’t be. Like all things in this life, it’s a harsh duality and a battle of rationalization along a fine line…
The Peluso Report: Cold Snap
By Mike Peluso It’s been a rough week weather wise. I did fish one day on Sakakawea and one day on the Missouri River near Bismarck. I’ll start with Lake Sakakawea out of Indian Hills Resort. We had a ton of wind and our first cold snap of the season. We marked a ton of…
Pelt Perfection
By Nick Simonson Autumn is often a brief part of the circle of seasons in the upper Midwest, but for those that piggyback their ice fishing or angling success on the hunting adventures that come with it, it may be the most important portion of the year. The wide and varied game bag afforded hunters…
Our Outdoors: Hope In Habitat
By Nick Simonson When it comes to hunting, where you find habitat, you find your quarry. While fields of corn and soybeans will draw pheasants, deer and waterfowl to their edges to feed, the other 95 percent of their lives are spent loafing, staying warm, remaining hidden and raising their young in places kept away…
The Peluso Report: Waiting for Fall Bite
By Mike Peluso So the calendar is saying fall. The temperatures lately are saying otherwise. Unfortunately, this is slowing the start of the fall river bite somewhat. The fish are biting at times and other times they are not. The one thing I’ve noticed is the fish are feeding in short spurts with right before…
Bird Surveys Aren’t Censuses
By Doug Leier One of the key points in explaining many North Dakota Game and Fish Department numbers is understanding the index is not a census. Not every pheasant, deer or grouse in the entire state is counted. Think of how time-consuming, expensive and impossible this would be. Instead, routes are determined and surveyed each…
The Pheasant Hunter’s Prayer
By Nick Simonson That favorite day of many outdoorsmen is fast approaching – pheasant opener. With head bowed, eyes skyward (is that physically possible?) and tongue firmly in cheek, we once again pray that divine intervention outweighs Murphy’s Law this autumn with the following blessing: Heavenly God, to whom I pray,provide me birds on opening…
Soaked But Successful
By Nick Simonson Sportsmen are rarely dissuaded by the weather, unless it’s life-threateningly cold, or hot to the point of taxing the well-being of a field dog, adventures in the uplands continue through all sorts of conditions. Wind, snow and even rain impact how pheasants relate to their habitat and where they seek shelter, and…
Our Outdoors: The Sprint
By Nick Simonson They say summer moves fast, and it’s true, but by far, fall goes by the quickest of all the seasons; especially for those of us of a hunting mindset, and specifically in this particular autumn we’re experiencing. It always feels as if the next three months will be subject to the wills…
Q&A with Jeb Williams, NDG&F Director
By Doug Leier Jeb Williams began as the director of North Dakota Game and Fish late summer and it’s been a busy start to his tenure. While he’s been a coworker for more than 20 years, here’s a conversation to help us all get to know Jeb a little bit better. What is your wildlife…
Taming Fall Tigers
By Nick Simonson Along with all the hunting seasons that come with it, fall also provides a chance to stalk a couple types of massive beasts long ago introduced to the great plains. But they don’t possess paws with which to corral their prey, or hooves with which to make a quick escape, rather these…
A Guide to Mentored Hunts
By Nick Simonson This weekend’s youth pheasant season allows young hunters their first crack at upland success. As it requires adult hunters to be with them in the field and not carrying a shotgun, there’s no second guessing who gets the shot at a rising rooster during this special two-day stretch. Having participated in the…
Brad’s Bites: End-of-Season Report
By Brad Durick Recent hot days have water temperatures holding at 63 degrees on the Red River. The lack of moisture over the past few weeks has flows back down to about nothing, however. Over the past week, the catfish have not been responding well. We are back to having fish pick up the bait…
Our Outdoors: Ready for the Return
By Nick Simonson The recent mornings have at least brought a taste of cool autumn air mixed with the above-average summerlike afternoon temperatures the region has experienced at the start of the season. In those chilly stretches around dawn, whether walking around the block with the dogs or running along the edge of town, I…
Know Where to Go
By Doug Leier The old parental response of “the journey is half the fun” to kids wondering “are we there yet” fits for hunting as well. Even just the scouting can make for memories. Most can think of a few stories where finding a place to hunt at times can be as much a part…
The Peluso Report: Finding Fall Fish on Devils Lake
By Mike Peluso This will probably be my last Devils Lake fishing report until the upcoming ice fishing season. I will say this, if the open water season on Devils Lake is any indication on what this winter will be like, it’s going to be epic! We have finally hit the fall transition. The leaves…
Precision Ag: From Planning to Planting to PLOTS
By Emily Spolyar, ND PF Pheasants Forever’s (PF) Precision Agriculture and Conservation Specialists are intentionally positioned to connect not just with growers who are already thinking about conservation practices, but more specifically, with growers who may not be currently considering conservation practices as a viable solution to lower-producing acres on their operations. These specialists seek…
Our Outdoors: Running Into Fall
By Nick Simonson This Saturday was the second of two back-to-back weekend road races which capped off the most amazing summer of running for me. It was blissfully cool in the morning ahead of the two-day warm-up which, once again in this summer’s style, timed out perfectly for an enjoyable weekend. With the major milestones…
Brad’s Bites: Catfish Cooling
By Brad Durick Cool mornings and shorter days are leading to the end of the 2021 catfishing season on the Red River. Right now, the water temperature is holding at about 63 degrees which is a great place to be for a couple more weeks of angling. Water levels, while still low, are very stable…
Hatcheries Make Historic Fishing Highs Possible
By Doug Leier Numbers get hard to comprehend when I relay to North Dakota anglers that over the past 30 years nearly 250 million walleye and 2 million pounds of trout and salmon have been stocked in North Dakota waters. It’s where a little perspective and history can help make you appreciate more of what…
The Peluso Report: Devils Lake Turning Over
By Mike Peluso The fall transition has started on Devils Lake and the walleyes are starting to do the same. Expect things to be a little inconsistent for a bit. The water temperatures have started to drop, and I noticed some of the muck from the bottom floating on the surface this week while fishing….
Kellen’s Call: Fall Haul
By Kellen Latendresse It’s too bad we can’t extend some seasons in North Dakota, as fall is the one I wish was twice as long! There isn’t time to do it all. I have two nights off this week and have one buddy wanting me to join him for a dove hunt, another asked me…
Stuff That Works
By John Bradley There’s a Guy Clark song called “Stuff That Works” that has been stuck in my head for weeks. The refrain is: “Stuff that works, stuff that holds up. The kind of stuff you don’t hang on the wall.” While he sings about his old guitar, his old blue shirt, his old boots,…
PF’s Soil Health & Habitat Program Increases Focus on ND & SD
By Nick Simonson Pheasants Forever’s (PF) Soil Health and Habitat program, an initiative created with corporate support from Purina Inc., is helping to establish more grassland habitat and better soil and water quality throughout the nation’s Prairie Pothole region in North Dakota, South Dakota, Minnesota and Iowa. Now entering its third sign-up, the partnership is…
Brad’s Bites: Late Summer Stabilization
By Brad Durick Water levels on the Red River remain low but the flow is substantially better than a few weeks ago, running about 700 cfs in Grand Forks. While it is still not great, it is good for the fish. The catfish seem to be responding to the stable higher water quite well with…
Our Outdoors: Hot Dogs
By Nick Simonson In what has been an historically hot summer across much of the country, and certainly the upper Midwest, it’s easy to assume those temperatures will stick around into fall. As the old saying goes, when in a drought, don’t predict rain. But even in those average years over the past few decades,…
Highlighting ND’s WMAs
By Doug Leier North Dakota’s 200 wildlife management area’s total around 220,000 acres of state land open to hunters. These aren’t Private Land Open To Sportsmen acres. PLOTS are private lands enrolled in the Game and Fish administered program. The department WMAs have specific rules and regulations to balance and reduce potential conflicts, which can and do occur when areas attract…
