Hell has frozen over and the pink pigs are flying

Mark W

Well-known member
Never, and I really mean this, ever did I think I would see any of this in the "State where absolutely nothig is allowed" let alone four in one shot. Earlier opener, split season, zones, and opening first day shooting 1/2 hour before sunrise. Someone pinch me.

All that was missing is shooting hours extended until sunset, not 4:00 pm for the first couple of weeks. Also think the youth day on Sept. 10 could be problematic on duck ID for the young ones. Duck season offers more options, opens one week earlier
(Released August 2, 2011)
A season of change is coming for Minnesota waterfowl hunters.
Opening day, opening day shooting hours and the annual youth waterfowl hunt all will be earlier than in the past. Bag limits for wood ducks and hen mallards will be higher than last year. And north and south hunting zones have been added to provide additional hunting opportunity.
“We needed a change,” said Tom Landwehr, commissioner for the Minnesota Department of Natural Resources (DNR). “We heard from waterfowl hunters that they supported these changes, and with waterfowl hunter numbers at record lows, we don’t expect season changes to negatively affect breeding populations.”
Landwehr said the 60-day, six-duck limit waterfowl season will open Saturday, Sept. 24, opening day shooting will start one-half hour before sunrise and youth waterfowl day will be Saturday, Sept. 10. Duck bag limits are consistent with most other states in the Mississippi Flyway.
“The changes are designed to maintain Minnesota’s waterfowl hunting tradition by increasing opportunity and better utilizing the federal regulatory framework set by the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service under which we operate,” Landwehr said.
The changes reflect input from a recently formed citizen waterfowl hunting focus group.
This year’s earlier-than-usual opener will allow hunting when greater numbers of migrating wood ducks and blue-winged teal are around, yet maintains late-season opportunities.
Hunting north of Minnesota Highway 210 – the North Duck Zone – will be allowed continuously through Tuesday, Nov. 22. Hunters in the South Duck Zone – anywhere south of Highway 210 – will have a split season. Hunting will be allowed Sept. 24-25 to take advantage of early migrations then close for five days. The season in the south will resume on Saturday, Oct. 1, and continue through Sunday, Nov. 27, Thanksgiving holiday weekend.
“As we set this year’s season, we looked hard for ways to improve hunter opportunities and satisfaction while maintaining healthy waterfowl populations,” said Landwehr. “I believe this framework strikes that balance.”
Legal shooting hours on Sept. 24 will be one-half hour before sunrise rather than the 9 a.m. start that has been in place for the past seven years. Shooting hours end at 4 p.m. daily statewide until Saturday, Oct. 8, when hunting will be allowed until sunset.
Hunters will be able to keep up to four mallards, two of which may be hens, and three wood ducks. The hen mallard and wood duck limits increased by one compared with recent years. Daily limits for pintail, scaup and redhead remain at two. Hunters may still take one canvasback and black duck. The possession limit is twice the daily bag limit.
Minnesota’s 2011 mallard breeding population is estimated at 283,000, which is 17 percent higher than last year’s estimate of 242,000 breeding mallards, 3 percent above the recent 10-year average and 26 percent above the long-term average. The continental population is 9 percent above 2010 and 22 percent above the long-term average.
“While we are very concerned waterfowl hunter numbers have been in decline in Minnesota, the Dakotas and Canada,” said Landwehr, “fewer hunters has resulted in lower duck harvests. In Minnesota, we are confident our mallard population is strong enough to absorb an increase in harvest, given the reduced pressure.”
The special September Canada goose season will remain similar to last year. September Canada goose season opens Saturday, Sept. 3, and runs until Thursday, Sept. 22 statewide, with a bag limit of five Canada geese per day.
The opening of the 85-day regular Canada goose season coincides with the opening of duck season on Saturday, Sept. 24, and retains a daily bag limit of three. Hunters north of Minnesota Highway 210 may hunt continuously through Saturday, Dec. 17. Hunters in the south zone may hunt Sept. 24-25 and resume on Saturday, Oct. 1, continuously through Thursday, Dec. 22. Another goose zone near Rochester will provide additional late hunting opportunity.
Minnesota’s traditional Youth Waterfowl Day will be conducted Saturday, Sept. 10, two weeks before the regular duck opener. It is timed to provide youth with an opportunity to hunt abundant early migrating teal. To participate, youth 15 and younger must obtain a free small game hunting license, a Harvest Information Program (HIP) certification, and be accompanied by a non-hunting adult. Duck limits will be the same as the regular season and youth will be able to take five Canada geese.
“I’m really looking forward to this waterfowl season, and I hope Minnesota’s duck hunters are, too,” said Landwehr. “Given favorable weather conditions, Minnesota hunters should see more birds in the sky and more in their bag. And if that happens – and the entire conservation community continues to work together on providing the food, cover, nesting and refuges areas that waterfowl need – it will be a good thing for hunters, waterfowl, and the businesses whose livelihoods are linked to hunting.”
Hunters should consult the waterfowl hunting regulations supplement for additional details. The booklet will be available at all license vendors and online by late August.
 
I thought maybe you had gotten word that Travis Bruce was coming up to ice fish or something...


That will really be the day. Way funny. Surprised you remember.

Mark W
 
congrats Mark, now that leaves my backwards state as teh ONLY state that does NOT open duck season at 1/2 hour before sunrise....We at least got them to change from noon to 9 following your progressive state about 4 years ago....Someday...

So does this mean you will be hunting more in MN than WI this year?
 
Goosebruce and his pontificating are legendary. Ice fishing, the Earle weejuns, having a "lick"...you should be around him in person...holy schnikees....

Lee Harker and his tin-pot-hatted stick figures, decoys from "tooba" wood.

Milk-fed rhino jerky.

Dave Parks....WAUGH!!! The man could probably trip over a limb, have it expose a rock, dig it up and it be a gold nugget the size of a Volkswagon...the stuff he managed to find...just shake my head thinking about it...that and his little "creek blind" where the salmon would swim up through the decoys on their spawning runs on occasion...closest thing to a true mountain man I'll probably ever know.

Some, like Art Stoop, aren't necessarily good memories, but they are a part of the site.

Good times, good people...why I love this place...like a hunting cabin you can just walk into and find the perfect chair...I mostly only get to lurk and check in these days because work, school and family keep me running, but it has saved my sanity more than once.
 
We lost the best week of the year down in SE Minn. Everything freezing up and mallard heads so green it hurts to look at 'em. Only guys out have ice in their beards and a crazy gleam in their eyes. Thankfully we can cross the channel and be in Wisconsin for the best time of the year.
 
".....So does this mean you will be hunting more in MN than WI this year?"


I'll still be hunting WI more than MN but MN is looking more appealing now. I just booked my opener out in Western MN on the SD/Mn border today. I wasn't going to go due to the old regs but this will make it interesting now. I even have my MN license and don't have the WI license yet. That is a new one for me as well.

I live closer to western WI than I do the good spots left in MN and the hunting pressure is significantly less (nothing new here to you). I can typically go out to WI any day of the week and hunt without anyone around. Weekends are a different story but that is true in Mn as well. Almost anywhere in MN within 1 hour of where I live will have others vying for the same spots.

My hope now is that WI will change the zone split location back to where it was prior to the latest split line. If that were to happen as well, there will be no need to move the WA for the 75 or 90 days season (or whatever they have).

I feel so lucky, I may buy a lottery ticket on the way home today.

Mark W
 
good luck with getting the splits or zones changed. Huge fight on that one. What a joke.

Either way, good luck hunting this fall,

Oh, it is 107 days...those lucky bastards.

I keep pushing guys to try and get a SEA DUCK season here on the Great Lakes too, that would open it up to 107 days as well, but for some reason guys are idiots and don't push for it.
 
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