By Doug Leier The top outdoors priority changes with the seasons but this word carries over no matter the day, month and time of year. Safety. Summertime in and on the water. Winter ice safety and cold weather. Fall hunting and gun safety. I’ll never tire of reminding hunters the size of a deer, bag…
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Brad’s Bites: A Wrap on the Red
By Brad Durick Water temperatures are coming down fast on the Red River of the north as fall settles in and I think the end is near for our consistent catfish bite this season. While the angling is never truly over, once the water temperature comes down another ten degrees it will get tough. The…
Pheasant Fun Facts
By Nick Simonson The North Dakota pheasant hunting season opens Oct. 12, and the youth pheasant weekend is just a couple of days away on Oct. 5 and 6. That means the wait is almost over for another autumn afield, and with good numbers of birds forecasted in state agency surveys, the excitement is building…
The Peluso Report: Wind Up, Water Down
By Mike Peluso I’m getting this walleye fishing report on the Missouri River out a little later this week, I was pulling a little double time with fishing and coaching hockey. Last week was a week filled with wind, pre-fishing, and then angling in the Big Muddy fall walleye tournament. This week was a chance…
Our Outdoors: Windward Wisdom
By Nick Simonson If you’re in the field frequently, it doesn’t seem like it, but on the average, October is one of the calmest months of the year when it comes to wind speed. The gales don’t really start ramping up until November and on into the winter months when things peak with the whipsawing…
Wetland Conditions Vary for Duck Hunting
NDG&F Release The North Dakota Game and Fish Department’s annual fall wetland survey indicates variable wetland conditions for duck hunting throughout the state. Mike Szymanski, Department migratory game bird management supervisor, said the statewide estimate of the number of duck hunting wetlands holding water is nearly double last year’s estimate, and almost 30% above the…
Report All Poaching Activity
By Doug Leier I’ll be the first to admit how rapidly the world has changed since I was a game warden. No need to explain more than technology has changed. Hunting has changed too. How people report poaching also. What hasn’t changed is the spirit of a legal hunter. They don’t want their pastime tainted…
ND Deer Health Good in Slow Rebound
By Nick Simonson Deer populations across the Peace Garden State have recovered from a brutal winter of 2022-23 which decreased their numbers by more than a third in some firearms hunting units following that cold weather season which brought more than 100 inches of snow and below average temperatures to the state. Those conditions piggybacked…
Brad’s Bites: Steady into Fall
By Brad Durick Water temperatures on the Red River are holding in the high 60s for now and the flow is noticeably lower than it has been all season. I find myself fishing for these early-autumn catfish using two ounces of weight on the line now with the lesser current. North Grand Forks is fishable…
Master the Mentoring Process
By Nick Simonson Mentored hunts, whether part of an organization’s efforts to get new hunters into the field, or simply a one-on-one introduction between a veteran and novice are a big part in recruiting and retaining individuals who will not only enjoy the new experiences they have in the field, but likely will keep them…
The Peluso Report: A Delayed Drop
By Mike Peluso What a week it was on the Mighty Missouri River! There was lots of wind, dropping water levels, shifting channels, and the list of condition changes could go on and on. The fishing definitely isn’t red hot on the river yet. Things may be delayed a bit after the recent cut in…
Our Outdoors: Movement
By Nick Simonson The uphill slant of the final mile of the half marathon bore a similar feel to the steep climb up and over the grassy rise to the truck at the end of my grouse hunt the day before, but somehow it came a bit easier than a few previous runs this summer….
ND Waterfowl Season Opens Sept. 21
NDG&F Release North Dakota’s waterfowl season opens for residents Sept. 21, while nonresidents may begin hunting waterfowl Sept. 28. The season for swans opens Sept. 28 for both residents and nonresidents who have purchased a swan license. Shooting hours for all geese are one-half hour before sunrise to 2 p.m. each day. Extended shooting hours…
The Situation with Sage Grouse
By Doug Leier I keep three North Dakota OUTDOORS calendars on the wall in my office. When I glance up and see a dark shaded day I know it’s pretty significant. A season opener or application deadline is reason for a second look. While glancing at September I recalled how years ago there would be…
Brad’s Bites: Bucking the Fall
By Brad Durick With the North Dakota youth deer season, I have only fished two times since last week’s report, but I am happy to say that my boy harvested a very respectable buck on Sunday night. On the Red River, most anglers are still reporting good catfishing. The flow has fallen again to the…
Making Partridge Pop
By Nick Simonson Far less heralded than its upland counterparts such as sharptailed grouse and rooster pheasants in the field, the Hungarian partridge is also less colorful, especially when compared to the former’s feathering. However, the barred feathers found on the Hungarian partridge are an integral part of many flies and lures for everything from…
The Peluso Report: Waiting for Fall
By Mike Peluso There is a lot starting to happen around our great state of North Dakota when it comes to walleye fishing. We are still a little on the warm side yet, but that will change soon enough. I’m not exactly sure when the Corps of Engineers are going to cut the flows on…
Our Outdoors: A Dewy Morning
Wading into the grasses from the cut wheat field, I knew the chances of finding any grouse would be limited. The sea of dew that coated the bluestem, forbs and wildflowers in the conservation planting of the public access parcel might as well have been lake water as the hydro-resistant material on the lower part…
ND Sharpie, Hun Numbers Dip Ahead of Opener
By Nick Simonson A strong recruitment year in 2023 helped sharptailed grouse and Hungarian partridge in North Dakota rebuild after a tough winter, and a milder cold-weather season in 2024 brought bigger numbers of birds into spring. However, the cooler, damp conditions in late spring and early summer likely hampered recruitment for the upland birds…
Recruiting, Retaining & Reactivating Hunters and Anglers
By Doug Leier I wouldn’t be surprised to find out kids who grew up on the beaches of California are more likely to surf than a kid from North Dakota. Fair is fair. If you were raised in the Midwest, I’d suggest your odds of growing into hunting and fishing are more likely than those…
Brad’s Bites: The Call of Fall Cats
By Brad Durick Fall is in the air. The cottonwoods are changing colors fast, the young eagles are flying and the Red River is back down to a wonderful level. With that, most anglers are reporting good catfishing, and I am seeing average numbers but more big fish over 15 pounds. Of course, we had…
Near Perfect Conditions Boost Pheasant Tallies
By Nick Simonson From a mild winter with limited snow to a warm spring, conditions were nearly ideal for ringneck pheasants in North Dakota over the past 12 months, and an increase of approximately 25 percent in birds observed statewide in summer roadside counts conducted by the North Dakota Game & Fish Department (NDG&F) reflected…
The Peluso Report: Rocktober
By Mike Peluso Things are just starting to change across the state of North Dakota and we are nearing what I like to call “Rocktober.” This is definitely the time of year that it gets really hard to choose what a person wants to do outdoors. For me, my first choice is still a rod…
Our Outdoors: The Other Dog Days
By Nick Simonson The dog days of summer are gone, even though this week’s temperatures might suggest otherwise. The heat and humidity of August fade into those first cool nights of September with its dewy mornings and from there it isn’t long until that same condensation soaks the knee-down region of my field pants and…
Prepare Yourself for Fall Hunting
By Doug Leier With the close of summer, you’ll notice a swing from fishing rods to shotguns. For many it’s a seamless transition and welcomed, even if the tradeoff means we’re one step closer to winter. People who hunt all fall, starting with early goose, then doves and working through upland game and waterfowl, gradually…
Brad’s Bites: Positioned for Fall
By Brad Durick I have not fished for catfish on the Red River much over the past week as Labor Day week is always a slow one in the guide world, so I took my boy on a trip before school started. Reports from other anglers the past seven days are about the same as…
Spoon Secrets for Fall Trout
By Nick Simonson Few lures are as effective at covering water and triggering big fall trout as a spoon cast out over lakes where these fish are once again rising as the water cools with the season. Properly working a spoon, however, goes a bit more beyond the cast-and-crank which will catch fish, but does…
The Peluso Report: Headed Downstream
By Mike Peluso This week’s walleye fishing report is a closer to my time on Sakakawea and a briefing of the Missouri River near Bismarck ahead of my fall fishing season there. Lake Sakakawea is still producing some really nice walleyes! We found early on this week that the fish were in the deeper water,…
Our Outdoors: Don’t Switch, Stitch!
By Nick Simonson Labor Day weekend has come and gone, and the unofficial end of summer (or if you’re a hunter, and a glass-half-full type, the unofficial start to fall) has come with it. The transition is never a clean break though, with plenty of summerlike fishing opportunities and warm days yet ahead with the…
Youth, Military Waterfowl Weekend is Sept. 14 & 15
NDG&F Dept. Release Introduce a youngster to duck hunting during North Dakota’s two-day youth waterfowl weekend Sept. 14-15. In addition, the special veteran and active military personnel waterfowl season is set for the same weekend. The North Dakota Game and Fish Department has a Virtual Duck Hunting Mentor webpage with all the basics, including license requirements, regulations,…
