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Author Topic: Dove hunt-DNR managing 8 public fields  (Read 3950 times)

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Offline Realtree

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DNR to manage eight fields for dove hunting (2007-08-28)

To provide more opportunities for dove hunters this fall, the Minnesota Department of Natural Resources (DNR) is managing eight public fields on wildlife management areas specifically to attract doves.

The three-to-five acre fields were planted this summer with small grains, sunflowers or other crops known to attract doves. To get ready for the Sept. 1 opener, area wildlife managers have been knocking down sections of the crops, causing seeds to fall and increasing their attractiveness to ground-feeding doves.

"We're hoping to build a dove hunting tradition in Minnesota by providing opportunities for hunters to get started in the sport," said Bill Penning, DNR farmland wildlife program leader. "These fields will be an excellent place for novice hunters, as well as youth, to get a feel for hunting this fun and challenging game bird."

About one-third of the state's managed dove fields are located at the Lac qui Parle Wildlife Management Area near the South Dakota border. The remaining fields will be scattered throughout southern Minnesota, Penning said. Hunters on these fields will be required to use non-toxic shot to avoid accumulating lead in areas that attract ground-feeding birds.

Because crops are being manipulated, the fields would be considered baited under federal waterfowl regulations and are off limits to duck and goose hunters. Signs reminding hunters of the non-toxic shot requirement as well as regulations that disallow waterfowl hunting, will be posted on the fields. The new fields, however, shouldn't interfere with waterfowl hunting. "They are not located where waterfowl would typically go," said Penning. "Our intent is to expand hunting opportunities without taking anything away from the waterfowl hunter."

Because Minnesota's dove hunt is regulated under federal guidelines as a migratory game bird, the season will open Sept. 1, along with other states in the Mississippi Flyway. However, doves tend to leave Minnesota when nighttime temperatures begin to drop near freezing.

"The majority of birds generally migrate through Minnesota by the middle of September," Penning said. The daily bag limit for doves is 15. Hunters 16 and older are required to have a small game license and Harvest Information Program (HIP) certification.

The following wildlife management areas will have posted dove-hunting fields: Red Buffalo WMA, Lac Qui Parle County; Lac Qui Parle WMA, Swift, Big Stone, Chippewa and Lac Qui Parle counties; Whitewater WMA, Winona and Olmsted counties; Carlos Avery WMA, Anoka and Chisago counties.

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Offline Merimac

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Thanks OJ... Are these areas jam packed?