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Tag: Waterfowl Hunters

Snow & Blue Goose Production Explodes for 2010-2011 Season

Snow Goose Production Up, Strong Fall Flight Expected;

DOA Outfitters to Goose Hunters: ‘Get Ready – Here They Come’

WINNIPEG, Manitoba—Could a bumper crop of snow geese be in the offing for waterfowl hunters this year?

Greater Snow and Blue Goose Hunting

It was a huge production year for snow geese in the arctic

Dr. Robert “Rocky” Rockwell, a biology professor at City University of New York and one of North America’s leading authorities on snow geese, thinks so. Rockwell says the summer nesting season in the subarctic region of La Perouse Bay in northern Manitoba was “spectacular.”

“This is a huge production year,” says Rockwell, who was concerned about nesting success after last year’s dismal production. “This was the most bizarrely wet year I’ve ever seen up there. The birds nested 9 or 10 days earlier than normal, and as a result nest success was very high.”

Translation: Goose hunters are staring down the barrel of what could be a banner fall flight. “Predicting hunting can be a fool’s errand, and I never like to do it, but the upcoming season appears to be shaping up awfully well,” says Delta Waterfowl President Rob Olson. “My message to goose hunters is this: get ready. The migration could be packed with young-of-the-year birds.”

Rockwell agrees. He says high nest success means lots of juveniles will be making the flight south. “We’re talking about juvenile to adult ratios of 1.5 to 1,” says Rockwell, “which means those puppies are going to be sucked right into decoy spreads. Harvest always goes up when you have a high juvenile-to-adult ratio, so I think there’s good opportunity and I think it’s going to be early, because geese are already moving south.”

Rockwell says snow and Ross’ geese are foraging heavily on berries inland from the Hudson Bay coast.  Thousands are currently south of the normal La Perouse Bay breeding range near the Broad River and are staging all the way to the Ontario/Manitoba border.

The eastern arctic is also looking good, says Dr. Jim Leafloor, a research scientist for Environment Canada who just returned from a banding program on Baffin Island.  “We’re expecting good production on Baffin, for all species, not just snows,” says Leafloor. “On South Hamption Island it’s the same deal, so the eastern arctic seems to be doing well this year.”

It’s a slightly different story in the central arctic. The migratory bird sanctuary at Karrak Lake south of Queen Maud Gulf is the breeding ground for 10 to 15 percent of the mid-continent snow goose population.

“Production of young at Karrak Lake has declined in the last four years,” says Dr. Ray Alisauskas, a research scientist with Environment Canada who’s been studying the colony since 1991. “There was later-than-average nesting due to delayed snow melt and delays in nutrient storage, stemming from reduced food availability because of very high densities of geese on subarctic feeding areas.”

Hunting Accessories

It could be a banner year for snow goose hunters

While nesting productivity is down, Alisauskas says overall populations of both snow and Ross’ geese remain very high. The number of nesting geese at Karrak Lake has grown from 400,000 to more than a million in less than 10 years. A recent assessment found survival rates have not declined since 1989, even with concerted efforts to reduce the population through liberalized hunting regulations and a special spring conservation hunt.

“This harvest is showing that it’s sustainable,” says Alisauskas. “These birds are so resilient. You see video in the spring and you say, ‘Wow these birds are getting pounded quite hard,’ but when you look at the estimates of survival, they haven’t changed in the last 20 years.”

Olson says their sublime taste hasn’t changed in 20 years, either. Delta’s president isn’t a preacher, but he has become an evangelist for snow geese, which he says are among the most underrated waterfowl species for the pot. In fact, he insists they’re among the best.

“I don’t know where the propaganda started, but the myth that snow geese are inedible is just that—a myth,” he said. “I think they’re absolutely delicious—certainly not winged liver, as some have suggested— and I challenge hunters this year to prepare these succulent birds for their friends and family. They won’t be disappointed.”

For Rob Olson’s snow goose recipes, see
www.deltawaterfowl.org/hunting/recipes/archive/024-goose.php

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Proposed Maryland Late Waterfowl Seasons & Bag Limits for the 2010-2011 Hunting Year

Each year, the Maryland Department of Natural Resources (DNR) Wildlife and Heritage Service reviews waterfowl population status information and develops waterfowl hunting season proposals based upon federal frameworks. In reviewing these proposed hunting seasons and bag limits it is important to note that the priorities considered by the DNR in formulating hunting season proposals include (1) the biological needs of the waterfowl resource, (2) regulation simplicity, and (3) maximizing hunting days (especially Saturdays and holidays) and opportunity for all hunters. Hundreds of contacts are made each year with waterfowl hunters who express their opinions and desires about waterfowl hunting opportunities. This input is critical to the development of hunting season and bag limit proposals. It is important to note that states may be more restrictive than the federal frameworks, but not more liberal when selecting seasons and bag limits within the federal frameworks.

Note: Shooting hours for regular waterfowl seasons are one-half hour before sunrise to sunset except for (1) teal during the September season when shooting hours are sunrise to sunset, (2) for Resident Canada geese during September seasons when shooting hours are from one-half hour before sunrise to one half hour after sunset/ and (3) for light geese during the Light Goose Conservation Order Season when shooting hours are one-half hour before sunrise to one half hour after sunset. All dates are inclusive. There is no possession limit for light geese; for all other waterfowl, the possession limit is twice the daily bag limit. Waterfowl hunting is closed on Sundays in Maryland by federal regulation to compensate for the prohibition of hunting for game species other than deer on Sundays by Maryland law.

National Youth Waterfowl Hunting Day

Season Date: Nov. 6

Daily Bag and Possession Limits

6 ducks (including mergansers) per day which may include no more than: 5 long-tailed ducks, 4 scoters, 4 mallards (max. 2 hen mallards), 3 wood ducks, 2 redheads, 2 scaup, 2 hooded mergansers, 2 pintails, 1 canvasback, 1 fulvous tree duck, 1 mottled duck, and 1 black duck. In addition, youth hunters may take 2 Canada geese, 2 brant, 25 light geese, and 15 coots. No open season for harlequin ducks.

Ducks, Coots, and Mergansers

Regular Duck Season: Oct. 16 – Oct. 23
Nov. 13 – Nov. 26
Dec. 14 – Jan. 29
Black Duck Season: Nov. 13 – Nov. 26
Dec. 14 – Jan. 29

Daily Bag and Possession Limits

6 ducks (including mergansers) per day which may include no more than: 5 long-tailed ducks, 4 scoters, 4 mallards (max. 2 hen mallards), 3 wood ducks, 2 redheads, 2 scaup, 2 hooded mergansers, 2 pintails, 1 canvasback, 1 fulvous tree duck, 1 mottled duck, and 1 black duck (during black duck season). No open season for harlequin ducks. In addition to the duck bag limit, hunters may take 15 coots per day.

Sea Ducks (Scoters, Long-tailed Duck, and Eiders)

Season Dates: Oct. 2 – Jan. 29
Daily Bag Limit: 5 (no more than 4 scoters) per day

Atlantic Population Canada Geese

Season Dates: Nov. 20 – Nov. 26
Dec. 16 – Jan. 29
Daily Bag Limit: 2 per day

Hunt Area: Calvert, Caroline, Cecil, Dorchester, Harford, Kent, Queen Annes, Somerset, St. Mary’s, Talbot, Wicomico, Worcester Counties and that portion of Carroll County east of MD 97 and MD 140, Baltimore County north of MD 137 and MD 13, Anne Arundel County east of Interstate 895, Interstate 97, and Route 3, Prince Georges County east of Routes 3 and 301, and Charles County east of Route 301 to the Virginia line.

Resident Population Canada Geese (Regular Season)

Season Dates: Nov. 15 – Nov. 26
Dec. 16 – Mar. 5
Daily Bag Limit: 5 per day

Hunt Area: Garrett, Allegany, Washington, Frederick, Howard, Montgomery, and that portion of Carroll County west of MD 97 and MD 140, Baltimore County south of MD 137 and MD 13, Anne Arundel County west of Interstate 895, Interstate 97 and Route 3, Prince George’s County west of Route 3 and Route 301, and Charles County west of Route 301 to the Virginia line.

Atlantic Brant

Season Dates: Nov. 20 – Nov. 26
Dec. 10 – Jan. 29
Daily Bag Limit: 2 per day

Light Geese

Season Dates: Oct. 9 – Nov. 26
Nov. 29 – Jan. 29
Daily Bag Limit: 25 per day and no possession limit.

Light Goose Conservation Order Season

Season Dates: Jan. 31 – April 16
Daily Bag Limit: No daily bag or possession limits

Hunt Area: Calvert, Caroline, Cecil, Dorchester, Harford, Kent, Queen Annes, Somerset, St. Mary’s, Talbot, Wicomico, Worcester Counties and that portion of Carroll County east of MD 97 and MD 140, Baltimore County north of MD 137 and MD 13, Anne Arundel County east of Interstate 895, Interstate 97, and Route 3, Prince Georges County east of Routes 3 and 301, and Charles County east of Route 301 to the Virginia line.

Special Regulations during Light Goose Conservation Order Season:

  1. Hunters may use unplugged shotguns and electronic calls;
  2. Extended shooting hours to one-half hour after sunset; and
  3. Hunters must possess a Snow Goose Conservation Order Hunting Season Permit while hunting light geese.
    Permits available from DNR sport license agents, online at https://www3.wildlifelicense.com/md/ or by phone (1-800-918-2870) for a $5 fee.

These seasons and bag limits are preliminary and are under consideration by the Maryland DNR – Wildlife and Heritage Service. Final season selections will be made in late August following the public review process. Final season selections will be forwarded to the USFWS no later than September 1 for approval. Final selections will not become official until mid-September. A synopsis of the 2010-11 Migratory Game Bird Hunting Seasons will be distributed to sport-license agents throughout the State in mid September and will be available online at http://www.dnr.state.md.us/wildlife/Hunt_Trap/waterfowl/index.asp.

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