The Details of Dove Hunting

By Doug Leier  I grew up in an era before the early August goose hunt, and 25 years later it still feels a bit odd to think of hunters swatting mosquitoes and lathering on sunscreen.  Our first hunt of the season was mourning doves in early September. Where birds were plentiful, the sense of accomplishment…

Brad’s Bites: Mixing It Up

By Brad Durick Another front has the catfish on the Red River acting a little weird again. I guess 95 degrees on Sunday, 75 Monday and then a drop to 65 on Tuesday might do that. The catfish are just off the main current now. It seems that they are liking a little deeper water…

FWS Surveys, DU Projects Paint Bright Future

By Nick Simonson The recent release of 2024 duck survey results by the United States Fish and Wildlife Service (FWS) point to incremental improvements in waterfowl populations throughout the birds’ breeding territories in the country.  Those facts coupled with a substantial grant to Ducks Unlimited (DU) has the organization seeing positive gains not only in…

The Peluso Report: Some Stalling on Sak

By Mike Peluso I made the voyage back over to Lake Sakakawea last week and the walleye fishing has been okay; not lights out, but decent. I may have a skewed perspective, especially how spoiled I’ve been this summer up here since early June. The fish have definitely moved out deep. I’m sure you’ll start…

Our Outdoors: Paying Attention

By Nick Simonson It’s the little things that catch the attention of hunters this time of year.  The  grouping of mourning doves at the corner of the undeveloped road on the fringe of our neighborhood, and the outgoing evening phalanx of Canada geese are just a couple of subtle signs that there’s a shift in…

The History of August Goose Hunting

By Doug Leier Nonhunters and hunters who don’t target Canada geese may be taken a bit off guard when learning those hunters they’ve seen and heard are out taking part in the early Canada goose season in North Dakota. Relatively speaking, it’s one of the most recently added hunting season in North Dakota. Many North…

Sharpen Up for Early Sharptails

By Nick Simonson One of fall’s earliest upland seasons is for sharptailed grouse.  Humid cool mornings quickly warm into hot and sunny afternoons and finding the birds before things get too hot for dogs (and hunters), is key at the start of the season when sharpies are more readily available and far less wary than…

Brad’s Bites: Ramping Up as Summer Winds Down

By Brad Durick After our recent weather hiccups, everything seems to be getting back to normal for catfishing on the Red River in and around the Grand Forks area. The catfish are back in the middle of fast water, and they are feeding. The bite has been kind of a grind this past week as…

Tips for Late Openwater Smallies

By Nick Simonson Second only to spring, fishing for smallmouth bass in early fall can provide some of the best angling from bronzebacks as they strap the feedbag on and prepare for a winter of near dormancy.  Knowing where to look and what to use is key in connecting with smallies this time of year…

The Peluso Report: Improvement on Devils

By Mike Peluso This will be my last walleye fishing report from Devils Lake until ice fishing season starts up here. I’ll be headed back to Lake Sakakawea for the last little bit of August and into September. After that it will be river time! Well, the bug hatch we had last week on Devils…

Our Outdoors: Stand Safety

By Nick Simonson August provides some welcome downtime and a transition period from fishing to hunting.  With deer archery seasons in some areas just days away, the final preparations (or perhaps the scramble) in assessing tree stand location for both the upcoming bow and later firearms seasons are underway.  But beyond the process of assembling…

Brad’s Bites: Rainy Wrinkles in Catfish Bite

By Brad Durick At the time of this report things are up in the air as it pertains to the catfish down in the waters of the Red River. We had a huge cold front last weekend that has slowed the bite some. The pattern remained mostly the same as during the warmer days before,…

Fall Turkey Season Set

NDG&F Dept. Release The fall turkey season is set with 4,545 licenses available to hunters, 110 more than last year. Applicants can apply online by visiting the North Dakota Game and Fish website, gf.nd.gov. The deadline is Sept. 4. Only North Dakota residents are eligible to apply in the first lottery. The fall wild turkey season…

What’s Good for the Meadowlark…

By Doug Leier The Western meadowlark is North Dakota’s state bird but did you know one of it’s closest relatives is the less embraced common blackbird? Yes, meadowlarks are members of the blackbird family, which also includes orioles and bobolinks. A couple of other interesting facts: One nestling meadowlark consumes one-third pound of insects during…

PLOTS Acres Increase by 36K, G&F Eyes 1M by 2028

By Nick Simonson Agents of the North Dakota Game & Fish Department (NDG&F) are putting increased funding and manpower to use, as members of the agency’s Private Lands Initiative (PLI) added 36,000 acres to the state’s Private Land Open to Sportsmen (PLOTS) program over the past year, according to Kevin Kading, PLI Section Leader. “We…

The Peluso Report: Tale of Two Waters

By Mike Peluso I split my time again last week fishing walleyes on both Lake Sakakawea and Devils Lake. There is still a lot going on with the change in weather and a massive bug hatch on Devils Lake, and that’s where I’ll start. The walleye bite has been fairly tough on Devils Lake and…

Cold Front Connection

By Nick Simonson August cold fronts are a strange and jarring occurrence.  One week it’s near 90 degrees, humid, and every largemouth bass is living the good life in the warm shallows of the lake around the docks on the south shore.  Suddenly overnight, it feels like pheasant opener as a chill north wind riles…

Brad’s Bites: Cover the Current

By Brad Durick A small storm last weekend pushed the catfish more out of the current on the Red River. Sit times have not been affected much but if you are not in the right current you may not catch as many fish. Right now, stay set up for about 10 minutes to get that…

MN Ruffies at 50-Year High

By Nick Simonson Springtime drumming counts of ruffed grouse in Minnesota benefitted from a mild winter, resulting in 2024 tallies hitting fifty-year highs throughout much of the woodland birds’ range in the state.  In the northeastern portion of Minnesota, surveyors counted an average of 2.7 drums per stop, the highest average since 1981; statewide counts…

The Peluso Report: Back & Forth Bites

By Mike Peluso There’s a lot to talk about in this week’s fishing report as I fished both Devils Lake and Lake Sakakawea over the last seven days. Also, the National Walleye Trail (NWT) and Casino Cup tournaments were held on Sakakawea and there’s plenty to talk about there. On Devils Lake, the walleyes are…

Our Outdoors: Rapped Up In It

By Nick Simonson The rocky outcropping on the lip of the weedy flat shielded the shallows from the northeast wind, and the pods of four-to-six-inch perch dissipated as we drifted up the rise into the reef.  Steadily, I raised and lowered the tip of my baitcasting rod at the back of the boat, feeling the…

ND Upland & Waterfowl Update

By Doug Leier In the most basic of explanations, the lack of snow this winter and late arrival of spring rain was not as helpful for ducks but better for pheasants. But let’s take a closer look. The number of rooster’s heard crowing during the North Dakota Game and Fish Department’s 2024 spring pheasant crowing…

Brad’s Bites: Cat Bite Stable with Inflow

By Brad Durick A big rain upstream in the Red Lake River this past week has some water pushing through the Grand Forks area right now, but it won’t cause any interruptions in the currently good catfishing. The Red River should only come up a couple feet as a result and the rise will be…

ND Pronghorn Rebound

By Nick Simonson Thanks to a milder winter and good fawning conditions this spring, North Dakota’s pronghorn populations have rebounded from a drop evidenced in the tallies of 2023.  As a result, the number of tags issued to hunters in the state for the upcoming fall season have tripled, as the herd on the northeastern…

The Peluso Report: You’ve Got Options

By Mike Peluso This week’s walleye fishing report is once again from both Devils Lake and Lake Sakakawea. I am fortunate enough to have fished both of these bodies of water this past week, and next week will be the same I’ll start with Sakakawea where there lots of walleyes! They may be a tad…

Our Outdoors: Traffic

By Nick Simonson When I used to commute, I was fortunate to have a job that started and ended at earlier hours, which worked well for an early riser like me and made traffic all the lighter outside of normal rush hours.  Then, when I walked to work at my next place of employment, the…

The Changing Scene for PFDs

By Doug Leier I have tremendous respect for all our North Dakota game wardens. Their work is under-appreciated and most invaluable to all who spend time outdoors. Long days in remote locations, nights, weekends and holidays. And while you may take every opening day of deer season off, they likely work every deer opener their…

Brad’s Bites: Post Spawn Stability

By Brad Durick The water on the Red River has stabilized, greatly increasing the quality of catfishing in the past week.  Last week I said “I have seen more fish moving into the outside seams and faster water.”  This week the fish are in those mid-river holes with faster current and it is game on…

The Fun that Follows

By Nick Simonson The summer feeding frenzy is on, and when fish are biting things can get downright competitive, even if the alleged piece of food being contested is an imitation made of salt-impregnated plastic polymer.  The survival of the fittest fuels one of summer’s feistiest fish – the smallmouth bass – to duke it…

The Peluso Report: Simple & Super

By Mike Peluso I’ve been a bit of a road warrior since leaving Devils Lake to get to Sakakawea this week, but the first thing I want to do is congratulate everyone who participated in the ND Governors Cup on the east end of the big lake. It sounded like the walleye bite over that…