Archive for the ‘SD Hunting News’ Category

South Dakota Pheasant Hunting Up for 2010

Friday, August 27th, 2010

2010 appears to offer another excellent year for South Dakota pheasant hunting. Based on the news published by the SD GFP today all you tail chasers should enjoy your trips here to the Pheasant Capital. I placed the news release from the Game Fish & Parks website below:

This autumn, hunters in South Dakota will enjoy pheasant numbers that continue to be some of the best in the state’s history. The 2010 brood survey count shows a small increase from the 2009 survey.

The Game, Fish and Parks Department completed its annual pheasant brood survey in mid-August, and tallied a statewide pheasants-per-mile count that is up about 3 percent from last year.

“We had a very good year in 2009, and this peek as we go into fall tells us that hunters can look forward to some great opportunities in the coming pheasant season,” said Game Fish and Parks Secretary Jeff Vonk.

The official pheasant population estimate is based on data reported by hunters during the pheasant season, and does not come until after the season is over.

In 2009, South Dakota’s official pheasant population estimate was 8.4 million, and hunters averaged 9.9 roosters each for a total season harvest of more than 1.6 million.

Every year from late July through mid-August, GFP personnel survey 110 established routes scattered across the state to estimate pheasant production and calculate a pheasants-per-mile index. The survey is not a population estimate, but rather compares the number of pheasants seen on the routes and establishes trend information.

“We’ve had a roller coaster ride of weather conditions over the past year,” Vonk said. “Pheasant numbers will be down in a few areas, but they held strong in many other areas because of excellent reproduction in parts of the state where we have good habitat conditions.”

Survey routes are grouped into 13 areas, based on a local city, and the index value of each local city area is then compared to index values of the previous year and the 10-year average.

The 2010 statewide pheasants-per-mile average is 6.45, compared to the 2009 average of 6.26 and the 10-year average of 5.71.

“Our goal has been to increase quality hunting areas that are open to the public. South Dakota has worked intensely with private landowners and other conservation partners to promote habitat programs,” Vonk said. “Statewide Conservation Reserve Program acres have slipped to slightly more than one million acres, but there is encouraging news. Landowner interest in the program remains high and additional acres will likely be enrolled through the recent general CRP signup.”

South Dakota’s regular pheasant season opens on Saturday, Oct. 16 and runs through Jan. 2.

SD Farmers Urged To Open Hunting Lands Under “Open Fields” Program

Sunday, July 18th, 2010
SIOUX FALLS, S.D. (AP) — In wildlife-rich South Dakota, opening up more private land to public recreation — namely hunting and fishing — would seem to be a slam-dunk for attracting new tourism dollars to the state.

But while a new federal program hopes to encourage landowners to expand recreational opportunities, some balk, saying liability issues and noncompetitive rental rates on existing conservation acres make opening up more lands less appealing.

Last week, Agriculture Secretary Tom Vilsack announced the Voluntary Public Access and Habitat Incentive Program, which provides money to farmers and ranchers to provide recreation access. About $50 million in grants is available for state and tribal governments. The so-called “Open Fields” program was created in the 2008 farm bill.

“It’s something we’re definitely looking into. We think it’s a pretty good fit to the access programs we already have in South Dakota,” said Mark Norton, the state Game, Fish and Parks Department’s access and farm bill coordinator. “It’s brand new, so we’re still trying to figure out how best to apply for it. We’re just going to look to use that money, if we get it, to increase access for the sportsman.”

South Dakota already has about 4 million acres open to hunting. The acres are split between federal lands and property owned or managed by the GF&P.

One of the most popular private/public access programs is the Walk-In Program, which has 900,000 acres enrolled, according to GF&P figures. It would be the logical benefactor of Open Fields, Norton said.

The state pays landowners up to $1 an acre a year for access, plus a bonus payment of up to $5 an acre a year for permanent, undisturbed cover in the state’s prime pheasant hunting areas. Landowners also can get an additional one-time bonus of up to $1 an acre for each hunting season remaining on their federal Conservation Reserve Program contract if they enroll their CRP land as a Walk-In Area for the length of the CRP contract.

In those areas, liability isn’t an issue, Norton said.

“There’s a state statute that provides liability coverage to anybody who opens up their land to free public access,” he said. “I guess it gives them enough liability protection as you can give on a state level.”

“Yeah, but what happens if a guy wanders off those acres and gets hurt on private land?” said Paul Brandt of Clear Lake, who raises corn and soybeans and feeds cattle and hogs in Deuel County. “There’s not a lot of clear boundaries. I have a hard time finding them, and that’s a concern.”

Existing conservation payments also are a concern, farmers and ranchers said. CRP pays a national average of $53 an acre, but some South Dakota producers receive much less.

Combine that with higher commodity prices and a yearning for land among younger farmers, and many agribusinessmen are looking at their conservation acres with a new eye toward the bottom line — especially since GF&P officials are unsure what an Open Fields grant would pay landowners per acre for access rights.

“It does increase wildlife in South Dakota, but on the flip side, if this is like CRP and you take areas out of production, that’s a bad deal,” Brandt said. “I have no problem with the increased wildlife, but I continue to do the math.”

Open Fields directs the USDA to bolster existing state- and tribal-based programs that allow sportsmen to access private lands for recreation, USDA spokeswoman Isabel Benemelis said. The USDA provides the money, but states and tribes would continue to manage the lands.

“These acres must continue to fulfill the requirements of the CRP contract,” she said. “(Open Fields) does not require that land enrolled in the program cannot be used for agricultural production.”

Twenty-six states have public access programs for hunting, fishing and other related activities. The grants also can be used by states to create access programs.

Open Fields will be a boon for South Dakota, said Sen. John Thune, R-S.D.

“This bill expands the already successful hunter Walk-In Program in South Dakota and in other states,” Thune said. “As a member of the Senate Agriculture Committee, I also inserted a provision into the farm bill which grants South Dakota a higher priority when funds are awarded, because the state advertises the location of its Walk-In areas.”

Agritourism and recreation pursuits can be big business on farms and ranches, Vilsack said. According to the 2007 U.S. Census of Agriculture, 23,350 farm and ranch owners said they provided agritourism and recreation services that are valued at $566 million. Of the total number of farms, 3,637 indicated gross farm receipts of $25,000 or more.

While last year’s pheasant hunting tourism figures have yet to be released, the 2008 season brought $219 million into the state.

“It has become harder and harder over the years for citizens to access hunting opportunities given the decrease in open space,” said Sen. Tim Johnson, D-S.D., who supported the legislation. “This program will empower states to promote increased access to hunting and outdoor recreation, which will be beneficial not only to landowners and hunters, but for South Dakota’s economy as well.”

Farm Services Administrator Jonathan Coppess said the first round of grants worth $17 million could be awarded by mid-September.

Conservation groups, including Pheasants Forever and the Theodore Roosevelt Conservation Partnership, praised the announcement.

“This is an unqualified victory for fish and wildlife conservation and our hunting and fishing traditions,” said Whit Fosburgh, president and chief operating officer of the Theodore Roosevelt Conservation Partnership.

Copyright 2010 The Associated Press.

Public hunting land boosts South Dakota’s economy by $15 million

Friday, July 9th, 2010

Chet Brokaw The Associated Press – PIERRE – A state program that leases private land and opens it to public hunting helped boost South Dakota’s economy by at least $15 million last year, according to a study by the state Game, Fish and Parks Department.

Most of the hunters who pursued pheasants and other game on the more than 1.2 million acres of land in the Walk-In Areas Program also said they were satisfied with it, said Larry Gigliotti, who conducts surveys and research for the department.

The study included surveys sent to a random sample of hunters and surveys collected from people at the walk-in areas last fall. More than half the hunters who received surveys responded, Gigliotti told the state Game, Fish and Parks Commission on Thursday.

The Walk-In Areas Program started in 1988 with 23,161 acres. Gigliotti said the state spent $2.2 million last year to lease more than 1.2 million acres from farmers and ranchers, and estimated spending by hunters on the days they used walk-in areas amounted to at least $15 million.

Most hunters said the program included good wildlife habitat and was important to their overall hunting, Gigliotti said. The survey found 69 percent of resident hunters and 72 percent of nonresident hunters were satisfied with the program.

The program is “probably one of the most positive things we do for hunters,” Gigliotti told the commission, which sets hunting and fishing rules for the state.

Without the program, many people would have trouble finding places to hunt, Gigliotti said.

However, many hunters want more information about what species can be hunted at specific walk-in areas, Gigliotti said.

One hunter from Colorado was upset because an area offered little pheasant hunting, but he had gone to a site intended for deer hunting, Gigliotti said.

Commission member Mike Authier of Vivian said signs used to mark similar hunting areas in Kansas include information about which species each site offers.

State Wildlife director Tony Leif said more information could be added to the department website and a printed atlas of walk-in areas that would specify what birds or animals are available at each site.

Leif said the walk-in areas have helped draw more nonresident hunters to South Dakota and have helped keep South Dakotans interested in hunting.

The study found about 37 percent of residents and 29 percent of non-residents surveyed used walk-in areas for part of their hunting last year. Residents spent about 10 percent of their total hunting time in walk-in areas.

South Dakota native: It’s the ‘other’ game bird

Tuesday, October 27th, 2009

Brookings County Longbeards photo Josh McClain and Al Kurtenbach release wild gobblers on land near the Big Sioux River. The birds were released near the Brookings-Moody county line in 2007.

Brookings County Longbeards photo Josh McClain and Al Kurtenbach release wild gobblers on land near the Big Sioux River. The birds were released near the Brookings-Moody county line in 2007.

BY: Mike Kervin, Brookings County Longbeards

If South Dakota’s wild turkeys could speak, they’d probably be saying , “Move over, little cousin we’re struttin’ through.”

Of course, the little cousin would be the famous ringneck pheasant.

However, as most outdoorsmen and women know, the bird that generates so much publicity is actually an immigrant from China, while the wild turkey is indigenous to North America.

So it’s just possible that all that publicity given to the ringneck might literally ruffle the feathers of the homegrown turkey.

A local group is looking to change all that by cranking up the publicity for the native fowl best known for its role in Thanksgiving.

The Brookings Longbeards is a group of enthusiasts working to improve turkey habitat and population , and they’re holding their annual banquet a turkey dinner, so to speak next weekend. Banquet Oct. 30

The Brookings Longbeards Hunting Heritage Banquet will be held Friday, Oct. 30, at the Days Inn Convention Center. This will be the last banquet of the season, and organizers say the Longbeards have put together a banquet that will please the whole family.

You don’t have to be a turkey hunter or any type of hunter to attend the banquet everyone who supports the hunting heritage is welcome . Raising funds for the birds

The point of the evening, besides the fellowship of sportsmen and women, will be to raise money for turkey habitat and for general support of the creature in eastern South Dakota, something the Longbeards have worked hard at for years.

Wild turkeys in South Dakota have a strong history, and with help from the Longbeards and other wildlife groups, the birds have greatly expanded their range and numbers over the past 15 years. $279 million on habitat

The Longbeards and 29 other chapters across the state support the South Dakota Chapter of the National Wild Turkey Federation, which has spent hundreds of thousands of dollars on habitat improvements , research, restoration, education , land purchases and conservation easements in the state, while working with the South Dakota Department of Game, Fish & Parks.

The National Wild Turkey Federation (NWTF) is an organization of more than a half-million members, and since its founding has spent $279 million on conservation. Since 1985, more than $660,000 has been raised and invested by the South Dakota NWTF Chapter for state projects. The state group has 5,000 members that make up its 30 chapters.

Some of those funds have been used to support local projects, and the group is currently reviewing a proposal to support a turkey habitat project in northeast Brookings County near Lake Hendricks.

The Longbeards have continued to assist with the release of wild turkeys and for more than a dozen years have hosted the annual Hunting Heritage Banquet fundraiser. Spreading the word

The 18-member group also provides educational programs for local schools and guest instructors for Oakwood Lakes State Park programs and for other organizations in the area.

Funds raised locally go into the South Dakota NWTF Super Fund; a special board manages those funds with a goal of maintaining a strong hunting heritage in South Dakota.

In the Brookings County area, there have been two releases of wild turkeys in the past decade one at Oakwood in 2000 and one in 2007 near the Big Sioux River, south of Brookings near the county line.

Twenty-eight birds from Pennsylvania paid for in part by the state turkey federation and GF&P were released two years ago. Those releases and a few birds that may have migrated in from the north or across the Minnesota state line have increased the local population enough to prompt GF&P to open up both fall and spring wild turkey seasons in Brookings County. 100 tags offered locally

Most recently, there were 100 tags offered for the current 2009 season.

GF&P’s Wildlife Division reports that in 1995, there were approximately 16,000 wild turkeys in the state, primarily in the Black Hills, while the 2007 estimate reached 72,000 wild birds statewide

That’s an increase of 56,000 birds in only a dozen years.

In addition to the turkey releases, another reason for the population spike is the work of the GF&P and the South Dakota NWTF to increase and improve habitat for the birds.

Sportsmen looking for hunting opportunities should note the number of tags offered in 1995 was only 8,950. By 2007, the GF&P increased the number of tags to 31,393 for the Black Hills and prairie regions, a jump of over 22,400 hunting opportunities for what enthusiasts call “the grandest of all game birds.”

Sportsmen who brush up on the pheasant’s larger cousin it can weigh well over 20 pounds would learn there are four subspecies of wild turkeys in good numbers in the continental United States; the Eastern, Rio Grande, Merriam and Osceola. Turkey hunting enthusiasts seek to harvest one of each to collect what is termed the “Grand Slam of Turkey Hunting.” ‘South Dakota Slam’

The Rushmore State has its own “South Dakota Slam,” due to the fact that it is one of very few states to have three of the four subspecies available within its borders. (The Osceola subspecies is native to and is found only in Florida, which excludes it from the South Dakota Slam.)

Hunters who chase this bird will typically attempt to call the gobbler to within 25 yards or less for an easy, clean shot with a shotgun or arrow.

Modern technology has added decoys, blinds, hundreds of different types of calls, electronic range finders, aiming aids and such to their arsenal, but if you ask a respected turkey hunter, you will probably learn that they pass on most modern gadgets, preferring to hunt using only their skills against those of the big, wily bird. It ain’t easy!

Bagging a wild turkey is not easy. Turkey hunt ing is a little like rolling many hunting sports into one: You have to use precision calling; be camouflaged from head to toe to beat the birds’ fantastic eyesight; and sit still and patiently to put the meat, which tastes better than any shrinkwrapped butterball anywhere, on the table.

The local Longbeards, many of whom have no doubt mastered those skills, are hoping to teach others a little bit more about their favorite bird, raise some money to increase its presence in the state and eventually expand hunting of the creature with next week’s banquet.

There will be raffles, games, auctions, prizes, and a whole lot of fun. Tickets may be purchased at The Exchange, Gas N’ Mor or by contacting local chairman Mike Kervin at 692-9121 .

If you are thinking of attending, make sure you get your tickets before Oct. 30 to be eligible for free raffle tickets the night of the banquet.

So, “move over little cousin ” the big bird is struttin’ through” with help of the friends of the Brookings Longbeards.

Unharvested crops may foul South Dakota pheasant season opener

Friday, October 16th, 2009

By The Associated Press

YANKTON, S.D. (AP) — A fall harvest delayed by wet weather could make it harder for hunters to find the birds in the opening weekend of South Dakota’s pheasant hunting season.

The noon start on Saturday will put thousands of hunters in the field for a season that runs through Jan. 3.

“It could be a tough opener,” said Sam Schelhaas, a conservation officer for the state Department of Game, Fish and Parks in Yankton. “There’s still a lot of corn and (soybeans) for the birds to sit in during the day. But later in the day, when they’re venturing out, I expect hunters will have more success.”

The weather should be cooperative. Mostly clear skies and temperatures in the 40s and 50s are forecast.

The GF&P estimated a pheasant population of 9.9 million birds before the 2008 season. A little more than 1.9 million were killed by hunters.

A summer brood survey by the GF&P counted 6.3 pheasants per mile, down from the 8.5 birds per mile in 2008 but still the fourth highest number in 45 years and above the 10-year average of 5.58.  Officials said cool temperatures and rain in late May and early June may have reduced the hatching success.

Schelhaas said the lower pheasant count should be taken in context. “We’re still above average,” he noted. “There are still a lot of pheasants around.”

Grant McCann expects a busy first weekend at a lodge and guide service on 600 acres near Springfield. “If anything, there are more birds in our area,” said McCann, whose second-year business is booked through the first three days of the season.  He said unharvested crops will affect hunting early in the season.  “Overall, it may frustrate hunters right away,” he said. “But by the middle of November, things should be back to normal.”

The 79-day season in 2008 drew 75,831 resident hunters and 100,349 nonresidents. The GF&P calculated a $219.6 million benefit to the state economy.

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