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Snow Goose Production Way Up, Strong Fall Flight Expected Goose Hunters Get Ready

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

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.”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.”

http://www.ammoland.com/2010/09/01/snow-goose-production/

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Duck Hunting Season

In this stretch of years the hunting pressure more than doubled. 448,204 duck stamps were sold in the all-time low year or 1935, and 1,487,029 in 1944. Then came World War II with another decline in hunting pressure and a rest for the ducks. But overshooting and the pressure of man made themselves felt again soon after the war. Ducks went into another tailspin. In 1945 the United States Fish and Wildlife Service estimated 20,000,000 fewer ducks than in the previous year. By 1946 the duck population had fallen to a total of 80,000,000 a decline of 45,000,000 from the estimated 125,000,000 population of 1944. So the 1946 season was cut to 45 days with limits of 7 ducks daily 14 in possession. Further reductions were necessary in 1947, with a 30-day season and four and eight limits in the Mississippi and Atlantic flyways where the greatest waterfowl declines had been observed. Once again man’s self-imposed restrictions and the weather came to the rescue of the ducks. There was a slight improvement in the waterfowl population in 1949 and a 40-day season was permitted. But the limit was held to four and eight that year, and in 1950, when a temporary duck setback was recorded, the season was cut to 35 days.

Then weather intervened again in the form of good rains. In my 1952 Sports Afield survey of ducks in western Canada I reported the best hatch in 15 years. It was spectacular in Alberta, Saskatchewan and northern Manitoba. So the season was extended. By 1953 the United States Fish and Wildlife Service estimated the duck population at 160,750,000. In the fall of 1954 heavy rains provided conditions for a real boom in waterfowl the following year. The early spring and ideal nesting conditions of 1955 accentuated the boom. There was water everywhere, western Canada was in great shape for waterfowl and there was a great hatch of ducks.

The season was liberalized in 1955, with an all-time high sale of 2,181,566 duck stamps. Sales held pretty well through the next year, then went up to 2,332,014 in 1957.

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Polar Bears in Canada: Trailing the world’s largest carnivore

Melting ice forces polar bears onto mainland Canada every year, where they can sometimes be viewed at very close quarters, as an awestruck Jolyon Attwooll finds out.

There was, perhaps, the length of a football pitch between me and the world’s largest terrestrial carnivore. Just in front of me the imposing shape of our guide, “Butch” Saunders paused sharply, one hand clasping the Winchester 303 rifle slung over his shoulder. Ahead, one ton of polar bear was rising onto its haunches.

Instinctively, we followed Butch’s lead, silencing the squelch of boots in the dark, sulphurous mud. The bear scanned the horizon, somehow aware that more than just the sub-Arctic wind was intruding into its afternoon repose.

For a fleeting moment, seared forever on my mind, its gaze fell on three puny human forms, motionless on the tidal flat grass. Planting one huge paw in front, it shortened the length of the football pitch. Then its enormous form wheeled around and it ambled toward the sanctuary of Hudson Bay, just as we backtracked urgently to the safety of a larger cluster of humans behind.

It was late summer in northern Manitoba, when polar bears are forced on to the mainland by the melting Hudson Bay ice. There, amid the beach ridges of spruce conifers – a strikingly different backdrop to the snow and ice with which they are normally associated – the bears migrate northwards, either to mate or await the colder weather and a return to their natural icy hunting ground. Our group of 11, plus four guides, had come to witness this migration, at spell-bindingly close range – which later in our trip would become closer still.

We were on the south-western shore of the bay, a short distance east of York Factory, formerly the headquarters of that Canadian commercial powerhouse, the Hudson’s Bay Company. Described as “a small pocket of civilisation at the edge of the world”, York Factory declined as the world’s appetite for fur dwindled in the late 19th century. Now restored, the whitewashed building is a Canadian National Historic Site, but remains uninhabited for much of the year. The 20th and early 21st centuries have, in fact, done little to alter the remoteness of this starkly beautiful region. Our base, Nanuk Lodge, a cluster of simple wooden cabins, lay 137 miles from the nearest paved road, accessible only by six-seater aircraft from Gillam, a settlement around a hydroelectric dam, or by a protracted, bumpy journey by four-wheel drive.

In Gillam we had our first sense of how much we were at the whim of this raw landscape. Stranded in the tiny airport lounge, our disparate group of Americans, Canadians and one “Brit” waited for fog to burn off at our destination. Like strangers on a broken-down train, we bonded over card games, amusement at the Gillam tourism brochure rack (gapingly empty) and frustration at our lack of movement – until the pilot came in, several hours later, to announce that the fog had lifted.

Transport came in ever diminishing forms: the transatlantic Boeing, then a smaller plane from Winnipeg, then the six-seater that eventually took off from Gillam, then Honda all-terrain tugging vehicles with seated trailers to the rear and, ultimately, Shank’s pony when movement needed to be quiet. The trailers were perhaps most memorable. At every dip of the land, every rock in the rivers we crossed, every mud-spattering wheel spin on the soft tidal flats, we roiled and rolled and slid in synchrony.

Few know these contours more intimately than our guides. Many, like Butch, are Canadian First Nations, from the Cree people, whose forefathers were among the trappers crucial to the success of York Factory. We would rely upon their knowledge of the land, good humour and unerring tracking skills.

At first, however, the bears were elusive. On an initial foray onto the expansive meadow-like grasses, we snatched a long-range glimpse of a lone “boar”– as males are known – lumbering toward the Hudson Bay with a brief backward glance toward us. But this was one only for those with mega-zooms and a steady hand – for the naked eye it was little more than a fuzzy white shape moving toward the horizon.

The bears’ coyness had an unexpected effect. Much of our talk had been of the creatures, fact blurring with legend as tales were swapped of their incredible olfactory feats, aggressive stalking – even, it was rumoured, of beluga whales – and characters (“scavengers, absolute scavengers”, according to one old hand). But, as we travelled a short distance from the Hudson Bay shore, with the grasslands giving way to lunar-like mudflats, our chance of a sighting that day faded.

Almost imperceptibly, other players on this sweeping stage began to make their presence felt. That guttural croak over there? Why, those are sandhill cranes, the monogamous birds that spend summer here. What’s that, flapping rapidly away from the mosquito-choked thicket? A short-eared owl. (“Didn’t you notice how short its ears were?”) And what’s that on the ground there? Huge paw prints pressed into the mud by wolves, interlaced with hoof marks of the caribou or moose they were stalking. Oh, and there’s a wild strawberry (deliciously sweet), and the striking purple flower of the Indian paintbrush. While we’re stopped here, would you like to hold this bald eagle feather we’ve just found?

Soon we took our first, faltering steps into deciphering some of the clues of the wilderness. “Look, I can tell that’s a moose track.” “No, that’s definitely caribou – look at the way it is cleft.” I hazarded a guess at the source of a small collection of bones: “Is it from a wolf cub?” No – one of our guides identified the skeleton as a goose backbone.

The polar bears, we realised, were merely playing a bit-part in this landscape’s drama, as they passed through on their way back to their natural icy stamping grounds. They might be the world’s largest carnivore, but here they were vulnerable – many do not eat for the entire summer, fasting until they return to their usual seal-rich diet. Indeed, here they are arguably not even top of the food chain, a spot fiercely guarded by the wolf.

Yet, the polar bears’ cameo was the one we were all here to see – and we had still not seen them close up. As the season advances, bears often come right up to the perimeter fence of the lodge. But that was later, and on the third day, our last full one, our guides had a sense of urgency as they prepared to take us out. It had not, however, permeated all the visitors – a couple lingered too long over the home-cooked breakfast of French toast and maple syrup, delaying our departure. And so, to our guides’ chagrin, the whole party found themselves cut off by the high tide of a nearby river delta, forced to while away time until the waters ebbed later that morning.

Some of the group went to inspect the remains of a beluga whale skeleton, beached and picked clean, a little way towards Hudson Bay. I trudged a little farther, pausing by a pool lapping a bank of gravelly sand before the bay. Idly, I scraped my wellington boots in the soft mud of the receding water, watching as bubbles filtered to the surface before noticing the brisk approach of the rotund shape of Gordy, one of our guides.

“You’re playing a very dangerous game, my friend,” he chided as he drew near. “If a bear was on the other side,” he said, gesturing towards the sand bank, “you wouldn’t even see him before he got you – they can run at 30 kilometres an hour.”

Chastened, although slightly disbelieving, I headed back to the vehicles (I later checked and they can actually run even faster – Usain Bolt would comfortably be reeled in by a polar bear at full tilt).

After I heard of the bears’ speed on dry land, we finally crossed the river – and Butch highlighted their prowess in the water, indicating a white speck moving swiftly through the bay (in addition to their land speed, polar bears have been known to swim more than 150 miles non-stop). As we sat watching on logs by the shore, we started to wonder if this was as close as we would get.

And then, a veritable bear bonanza was under way. Where most of us could just see endless tidal flats, Butch saw polar bears – and lots of them. Inching nearer on the all-terrain vehicles, we cut the engines – and, impatient to get closer, I volunteered to follow Butch on foot, along with a Californian student photojournalist. After that exhilarating first encounter less than a football pitch away, we thought perhaps that the best was over. It wasn’t. Later, the whole group dismounted the vehicles and we concealed ourselves in the foliage of a mosquito-infested ancient beach ridge. Gooseberry thorns pierced my legs; then a plaintive cry of “I’ve got a bug in my pants” rang out from nearby scrub – I wasn’t the only one in discomfort.

Neither insects nor prickly bushes could distract from the mesmerising scene that followed, however. On the far side of a rough meadow, a sow nosed out into a clearing, with two young cubs in tow. Tentatively, she edged forward, sniffing the air, anxious to steer clear of several nearby boars. Making her way around the edge, she turned towards us, head raised. Perhaps it was a superfluous rustle – a gooseberry thorn or bug too far – but something spooked her. Breaking into a run, she veered toward the tree cover, her offspring gambolling behind. In one unforgettable movement, she reared onto her hind legs, her white body framed by a spruce behind as she surveyed the area for threats. Then she dropped back onto all-fours and moved swiftly away through a shield of trees, her infants still on her tail.

The incident dominated the dinner-table talk that evening as we tucked into tender steaks and Norwegian apple pie. Later, we watched the aurora borealis flicker, then dance in the night sky. A proper description remained as nebulous as ever, so I took to outlining the shapes they formed. On the left, look that’s a brontosaurus, while on the right, yes, that’s definitely the subject from Munch’s The Scream.

Perhaps the last vestiges of that game were still drifting in my subconscious the next day, as I gazed out from the tiny plane at the lodge and its hospitable staff disappearing below. We stayed low at first, spotting a few polar bears and the rusting hulk of a centuries-old wreck on a final fly-by. Then, with the aircraft rising as the tidal flats ebbed into taiga forest, I began to trace the shapes of the boreal landscape below. That game, too, had to stop as the human-wrought forms of a giant hydroelectric project and the functional grey of the purpose-built surrounding town eventually shifted into view – man-made shapes re-emerging from the wild.

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Frogmore resident learns the Facts of Fishing

When Ryan Bonin goes to work, he always makes sure he packs his camera and fishing pole.

As a cameraman and editor for Dave Mercer Outdoors, the Frogmore resident has the type of job most anglers dream of. Not only is he traveling to some of the best fishing spots in North America, he is also learning to be a better angler with tips from television angler Dave Mercer.

Bonin came into the job in a roundabout manner. Originally from Sudbury, he followed his brother’s footsteps showing an interest in video.

“It was the only thing I really enjoyed in high school other than fishing, and there’s no courses in fishing,” he joked.

Although he did a co-op placement with a conservation officer and loved it, his mind was made up for a future career when he was told job prospects, as game wardens were thin. He attended Fanshawe College and took television and broadcasting. There, he met his wife Ginny, who was from the Langton area.

After graduating, Bonin was working at Technicolor in Toronto on commercials, when he chatted with Mercer through a message board on

OFN. At the time, Mercer had produced videos and was looking at starting a television show, which launched in June 2007.

“I was in the right place at the right time and was lucky,” he said. “He sent me a message on WFN and the rest is history. We worked well together so he asked me to come work full-time for Dave Mercer Outdoors.”

Mercer’s Facts of Fishing television show aims to be more entertaining then other fishing shows. It’s also unique it is shot in one location in one day.

Bonin is one of two full-time camera operators and the editor of all the footage.

The show has taken him to the west coast of Canada salmon fishing, to northern Manitoba fly-in fishing for pike and walleye, the east coast of Canada shark fishing and to the Bahamas bone fishing. He also fished for bass in Alabama and alligator gar in Texas.

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When the filming is taking place, Bonin is behind the camera and isn’t fishing. But, when the work, is done he can play – or in this case fish.

On Bonin’s first day fishing with Mercer, he caught two six-pound smallmouth.

“I’d never seen a six-pound bass before,” he admitted.

That trend continued, and he has set his personal best in every species fishing with Mercer.

“I learned more with Dave in the first month than in my entire life,” Bonin said. “He’s an endless pit of knowledge. Just when you think he can’t do anymore, he throws out something else.”

Asked if this was his life ambition, Bonin answered, “Always, in the back of mind, thought it would be great. My final project in college was a full half-hour fishing show.”

With today’s technology, the Internet allows Bonin to live wherever he desired. He and Ginny decided to buy a house in Frogmore, near her parents. Bonin does all the editing from his home office

Besides Facts of Fishing, Bonin is also kept busy editing Mercer’s tips and short video clips for the web site. http://www.tillsonburgnews.com/ArticleDisplay.aspx?e=1769772

Manitoba Bears – Northern Manitoba Polar Bears

Travel to Churchill and Northern Manitoba, Canada

Canada only has one place in the entire country that allows you to see uninhabited islands, beluga whales, and polar bears all in one trip. This place is also the only sub-Arctic seaport in the country. You can enjoy the Arctic tundra and tour the Eskimo Museum here before settling in for an amazing nighttime show staring Aurora Borealis. Do you know where you are?

If you guessed Northern Manitoba, Canada and the town of Churchill, you are right! This expansive region of Manitoba has a low population making it one of the wildest areas in the country that shows very little evidence of civilization outside of the small towns and villages.

Outdoor enthusiasts looking for adventure flock to Churchill, Manitoba for its rugged terrain and unusual wildlife. During the months of October and November, travel tours in a specialized tundra vehicle give visitors the chance to watch polar bears on their way back to Hudson Bay for the winter. Travelers can also get a closer look at the incoming floe ice and beluga whales by renting a see through kayak or going snorkeling.

The beautiful Wapusk National Park of Canada is also nearby. The park is certainly beautiful, but it is also the largest polar bear maternity den sites in the world. This being said, it’s not the best place to hike through, but if you would like to see the park, Hudson Bay Helicopters are a fun way to enjoy the park at a safe distance.

The little village of Hecla Island and Grindstone National Park is a haven for travelers looking for a taste of the true Canadian wild. Walking and bike trails are available for those looking for a more structured tour of the area, but for more grass roots hikers, the uninhabited Black Island is fantastic. You can wander through the area for days and not see another human being. Golfing and world-class fishing is also available in the area. Before you leave the island, be sure to ask the locals about the many mystical stories involving subjects such as sunken ship that give an entertaining history of the area.

If you would like more information on travel in the area or any other location in Manitoba, visit Travel Manitoba at http://www.travelmanitoba.com/.

http://traveltheprairies.wordpress.com/2008/07/07/polar-bears-beluga-whales-and-black-island-outdoor-adventures-in-manitoba

Polar Bear Pair, Churchill, Manitoba – Bears – Animals … – Webshots provides a stage for members to upload and share their personal photos, download member and professional photos for screensavers and wallpapers, order prints and custom photo gifts, and connect with each other..

Minnesota-trained biologist tracking polar bears by whisker – Researcher Jane Waterman is asking Minnesotans and other ecotourists who visit Churchill, Manitoba, to share digital photos of polar bears to help her expand her research. If you have some polar bear photos, take a closer look. …

Goose Eggs May Help Polar Bears Weather Climate Change | ok4me2 – As polar bears adapt to a warming Arctic—a frozen seascape that cleaves earlier each spring—they may find relief in an unlikely source: snow goose eggs. New calculations show that changes in the timing of sea-ice breakup and of snow …

Polar Bear Winter Snowfall Churchill Manitoba Canada – The tundra is frozen near the shores of the Hudson Bay in Churchill, Manitoba in Canada as a Polar Bear wanders by during a winter snowfall.

Polar Bear Family Closeness Hudson Bay Churchill Manitoba – A cute picture of the closeness this Polar Bear family shares in the wilderness of the Churchill Wildlife Management Area in the Hudson Bay in Churchill, Manitoba.

Bear Matters BC » Inuit Group Denounces EU Decision to Ban Import … – http://www.cbc.ca/canada/manitoba/story/2008/12/12/bear-ban.html. Last Updated: Friday, December 12, 2008. CBC News. Nunavut’s Inuit say Canada should have done more to fight a European import ban on polar bear trophies from animals …

Louisville Zoo – Media Advisory – “Project Polar Bear” – The website idea was formed after the Louisville Zoo selected Goldstein to be the Zoo’s first teen ambassador during a week-long Polar Bear International Leadership Camp in Churchill, Manitoba, Canada last year. …

Town of Churchill, Manitoba – Polar Bear Capital of the World … – The “Evening In” held on Wednesday Nights at the Families R Us Center will resume in January 2009. Should anyone have any suggestions for topics, please email Tzipporah Meijering at tmeijering@churchillrha.mb.

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