Wednesday, February 2, 2011

Snow Goose: Early Spring Waterfowl

Snow Goose Hunting in Late Winter and Early Spring



WHITE OUT: Atlantic Flyway population studies indicate that between the mid 1960s and now, snow goose numbers grew from an estimated 50,000 to more than one million. Officials predict that by the middle of the next decade, roughly two million snowies might compete for limited space, doubling in current size. (Delta Waterfowl media photo)



By Steve Hickoff

The so-called regular waterfowl seasons may be over, but don’t put your gear away just yet. Clean it, for sure, but keep it ready to roll . . .

In the heavily human-populated Atlantic Flyway where I write this — and elsewhere around the United States — it’s not just humankind competing for space. Snow goose numbers are at all-time highs, migration time depending.

That’s good news for hunters. In late-winter and early-spring you can jumpstart your waterfowl season, extending it into spring turkey time.

Snow goose numbers exceed available food and habitat in many areas. As a result, federal and state wildlife management organizations now offer expanded seasons for these waterfowl in many locations. By conservation order, the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service has specifically mandated this effort to control growing numbers.

Though they’re hunted elsewhere, eight states in the Atlantic Flyway were open last year under the “conservation order” for late-winter and early-spring snow goose hunting. These included North Carolina, Virginia, Maryland and Delaware to the south, and New Jersey, Pennsylvania, New York and Vermont to the north. Check your current regulations as changes may appear there.

More geese? Waterfowl hunters couldn’t be happier. So how do you hunt them?

First check to see if your state offers a late-winter or early-spring season. Many do.

Once licenses, permits and stamps are secured, assess your waterfowling gear. You may need to amp up your decoy holdings with snow goose fakes. Shells and full-body options are widely available for this growing sport.

As with real estate, location is everything. Scout for these so-called “light geese” in agricultural haunts. Gain permission from landowners to hunt these spots. Be there before dawn the next morning to set your spread of dekes.

Huddled in a layout blind, snow goose calls on a lanyard around your neck, non-toxic loads chambered in your shotgun, you’re ready to roll.

Some other tips to hunting these light geese include:

Your effort to find them might begin where they roost, and include locating a nearby field where they feed and/or might forage. Study them for a pattern of use. They’ll often move and feed early in the day and later in the afternoon, loafing elsewhere during midday. Sometimes too they just move on.

Study maps, drive and glass fields, and seek landowner permission at all costs, explaining what you’ll be doing and even why. Set your spread at midday for later afternoon hunts. If it feels right, get back there the next morning too. Don’t pressure a spot; then again, hunt it while it’s hot and even just a little warm.

As camouflage goes, wear white if snow covers the ground, or standard options if you’re in a layout blind or using natural cover. Blend in, no matter what. Snowies feel the pressure, and adjust accordingly. If possible, hide all unnatural evidence, including your truck, trailer and four-wheeler. Make it look real.

Spreads should consist of as many snow goose decoys as possible. Full body snows, shell fakes, and silhouettes should round off your presentation. It’s not unusual for a hardcore snow goose hunter to place several hundred to even 1,000 or more decoys out in a field, and even use wing flags to impart movement to the spread.
Snow Goose Guides - Mound City, Missouri

Tuesday, February 1, 2011

Nebraska's Outdoor Activities for February

LINCOLN, Neb. – The following is a listing of Nebraska Game and Parks Commission events and activities in February:


Feb. 1 – Prescribed Burn Training Workshop, Holdrege

Feb. 1 – District IV Waterfowl Meeting, North Platte

Feb. 2 – Prescribed Burn Training Workshop, Gothenburg

Feb. 3 – Prescribed Burn Training Workshop, Burwell

Feb. 3 – Prescribed Burn Training Workshop, Sumner

Feb. 3, 5, 10, 12 – Firearm hunter education class, Grand Island
Feb. 4 – Dark goose hunting season closes in Niobrara Unit

Feb. 5-6 – White-fronted goose hunting season

Feb. 5-6 – Bow hunter education class, Crawford

Feb. 5, 12, 19, 26 – Firearm hunter education class, Hay Springs

Feb. 6, 13 – Bow hunter education class, Wilber

Feb. 8 – Prescribed Burn Training Workshop, St. Paul

Feb. 8 – Boater education home study review and test, Grand Island

Feb. 8, 10, 12 – Firearm hunter education class, Ceresco

Feb. 9 – Dark goose hunting season closes in Platte River and Panhandle units

Feb. 9 – Statewide light goose hunting season closes

Feb. 9 – Prescribed Burn Training Workshop, McCook

Feb. 9 – Prescribed Burn Training Workshop, Geneva

Feb. 10 – Prescribed Burn Training Workshop, Greeley

Feb. 10 – Light Goose Conservation Action begins

Feb. 10-14 – Eugene T. Mahoney State Park

Feb. 11-12 – Firearm hunter education class, Beatrice

Feb. 12, 15, 17 – Bow hunter education class, Ceresco

Feb. 15 – Prescribed Burn Training Workshop, Niobrara State Park

Feb. 15 – Prescribed Burn Training Workshop, Ravenna

Feb. 15, 17, 22, 24 – Firearm hunter education class, Grand Island

Feb. 17 – Prescribed Burn Training Workshop, Denton

Feb. 17, 19, 24, 26 – Firearm hunter education class, Grand Island

Feb. 18-20 – Beyond Becoming an Outdoors-Woman Ice-Fishing Workshop, Valentine National Wildlife Refuge

Feb. 19 – Boater education class, Omaha

Feb. 19-20 – Beyond Becoming an Outdoors-Woman Snowshoeing Trip, Platte River State Park

Feb. 23 – Prescribed Burn Training Workshop, David City

Feb. 23 – Prescribed Burn Training Workshop, West Point

Feb. 24 – Boater education home study review and test, Grand Island

Feb. 27 – Cowboy Poetry and Music Jam, Arthur Bowring Sandhills Ranch State Historical Park

Feb. 28 – Hunting and trapping seasons close for bobcat, raccoon, Virginia opossum, long-tailed weasel, mink, red fox, gray fox, and badger

Feb. 28 – Hunting seasons close for cottontail and jackrabbit


For more details, visit OutdoorNebraska.org and click on the Calendar link, or go to: http://outdoornebraska.ne.gov/education.asp.

Tuesday, January 25, 2011

Nebraska Extends Grouse Season, Focus on Pheasant

LINCOLN, Neb. — The Nebraska Game and Parks Board of Commissioners on Friday voted to expand the grouse-hunting season starting in 2011.

This year’s grouse season will be Sept. 1 through Jan. 31, 2012. Regulations previously called for the season to open on the Saturday nearest Sept. 15.

By making the change, Game and Parks is providing more hunting opportunity for a lightly hunted species and is aligning the dove and grouse season openers on a common date.

The board also approved a revised Focus on Pheasants plan. The plan seeks to create new focus areas and incentive programs to promote habitat improvements and to work with biologists to maximize effectiveness of habitat program delivery within those areas. Also, the plan hopes to continue researching the amount of habitat needed to establish and maintain a huntable pheasant population, and it will try to secure more pheasant habitat through U.S. Department of Agriculture conservation programs.

Commissioners also approved the funding of $254,383.60 for eight grants through the State Wildlife Grant (SWG) program, which addresses the needs of declining fish and wildlife populations. Game and Parks allocates part of its annual SWG funding, distributed by the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service, to other conservation entities on a competitive basis, with awardees required to provide a one-to-one match. The awarded projects must be deemed a priority in assisting Game and Parks in implementing the Nebraska Natural Legacy Plan.

Monday, January 10, 2011

Nebraska Game and Parks Commission Activities

© 2011 Scott Croner and
Nebraska Hunting Company™

LINCOLN, Neb. – The following is a listing of Nebraska Game and Parks Commission events and activities in January:


Jan. 1 – New Year’s Day Buffet, Eugene T. Mahoney State Park

Jan. 2 – Duck hunting season closes in Low Plains Late Unit

Jan. 2 – First segment of light goose hunting season closes

Jan. 8-9 – DeSoto muzzleloader deer hunting season

Jan. 10 – Spring turkey hunting permits available for purchase beginning at 1 p.m. Central Time

Jan. 10 – Youth fishing instructor training, Alliance

Jan. 12 – Duck hunting season closes in High Plains Unit

Jan. 12 – Venison sausage-making workshop, Ak-Sar-Ben Aquarium

Jan. 13 – Youth fishing instructor training, Fullerton

Jan. 14 – Beyond Becoming an Outdoors-Woman scuba workshop, Lincoln

Jan. 16 – First segment of dark goose hunting season closes in Platte River and Panhandle units

Jan. 18 – Season Choice, landowner and youth deer hunting seasons close

Jan. 19 – Special crow hunting season closes

Jan. 20 – Regular crow hunting season opens

Jan. 21 – Nebraska Game and Parks Board of Commissioners meeting, Lincoln

Jan. 21 – Dark goose hunting season closes in North Central Unit

Jan. 21-23 – River City Hunting and Fishing Expo, Mid-America Center, Council Bluffs, Iowa

Jan. 21-23 – Beyond Becoming and Outdoors-Woman small game hunt, Keith County

Jan. 22 – Second segment of light goose hunting season opens

Jan. 22 – Second segment of dark goose hunting season opens in Platte River and Panhandle units

Jan. 22 – Youth fishing instructor training, Denton

Jan. 26 – Dark goose hunting season closes in East Unit

Jan. 28-30 – Pheasant Fest trade show, Qwest Center, Omaha

Jan. 31 – Squirrel hunting season closes

Jan. 31 – Grouse hunting season closes

Jan. 31 – Pheasant, quail and partridge seasons close

For more information, contact Game and Parks at (402) 471-0641 or visit OutdoorNebraska.org.

Best to you,
Scott Croner
Nebraska Hunting Company