Hunt Lake Manitoba Narrows

Manitoba Canada – Lake Manitoba Narrows – Hunting Outdoors Blog Website


Changes for 2010

Changes in general regulations are indicated in the guide. Seasons and bag limits may change significantly from year to year. Please check all season dates and bag limits carefully. Some amendments may occur after the printing of this guide. We encourage hunters to check the amendments on the website at www.manitoba.ca/conservation/wildlife/hunting/index.html prior to going in the field.

Big Game

White-tailed Deer Seasons

A Third Deer Licence has been added in GHA 26.

Moose Seasons

In GHAs 18 to 18C the draw and non-draw moose seasons have been cancelled.

The GHA 26 moose season has been cancelled.

The non-draw archery moose season in GHA 14 and 14A has been cancelled.

The non-draw rifle moose season in GHA 19A is now a draw season.

The bag limit for moose in GHAs 27, 28, 29, 29A and 31A has been changed to one bull moose.

Gray Wolf Seasons

In GHAs 18 to 18C and GHA 26, the gray wolf bag limit has increased to two (2) wolves for all hunters (Resident, Non-resident and Foreign resident)

Caribou Seasons

All first and second resident GHA 1 caribou licences will now be sold on a first-come first-served basis until all licenses are sold with no provision for later purchase. The fall season will have 350 licenses available and the winter season will have 450 licenses available.

Game Birds

Migratory Game Bird Seasons

The Canada goose bag limit for residents and non-residents has been increased to 8 daily and 24 in possession.

The possession limits for ducks, cranes, coots and snipes has been increased to three times the daily limit for all hunters.

The foreign resident waterfowl opening date has now been standardized to September 24.

Upland Game Bird Seasons

The ptarmigan season in GBHZs 1 and 2 has been extended to February 28.

www.huntlakemanitobanarrows.com

Comfort Inn Winnipeg

Wpg Manitoba

Accurate hunter reports are vital Online survey helps set licence levels

Manitoba Conservation’s Wildlife and Ecosystem Protection Branch (WEPB) has conducted big game questionnaires for almost 50 years. This questionnaire is vital for the proper management and conservation of Manitoba’s big game species (white-tailed deer, elk, moose, barren-ground caribou, black bear and wolf). The main goal of the questionnaire is to estimate how many animals are harvested annually. This information is essential to determine the number of licenses available, set bag limits and maintain future hunting opportunities.

In the early days of the program, hunters submitted a questionnaire that was attached to their licenses. In other years, the program mailed questionnaires and did telephone interviews. More recently, a sample of non-draw license holders was randomly selected to receive questionnaires with postage-paid return envelopes. All draw license holders received a questionnaire. In 2009, the wildlife branch began collecting questionnaire responses online.

Under the previous, mail-based survey design, participants received paper questionnaires and postage-paid return envelopes. In the interests of efficiency, hunters now receive a postcard requesting that they complete the questionnaire online. As a result, WEPB can now survey every licensed hunter in the province as opposed to just a small sample. All hunters, including those who are not mailed a reminder postcard, are encouraged to go to the questionnaire website at the end of the hunting seasons and complete a questionnaire for each licence purchased. Hunters can receive multiple postcards that occurs when a hunter’s name appears in the database more than once.

Collecting questionnaire responses through the Internet is much faster. Once a response is submitted online, it is automatically put into a database. Receiving the responses sooner means faster reactions to the information. The new system also allows collection of more, and different, types of information.

For a variety of reasons, some hunters purchase a specific licence but do not hunt. Licence holders who did not hunt represent a cross-section of the entire hunting population. WEPB asks that you provide your information to ensure that we receive a representative sample of licensed hunters.

The basic questions asked are:

– How many days did you hunt?

– Where did you hunt?

– What type of animal was harvested, if any?

– How did the animal population in your hunting area compare to previous years? The answer to this question helps us estimate population trends since hunters are important “eyes and ears” in the field.

In addition to the web-based questionnaires, there is a toll-free number to collect hunter information. Call 1-877-892-7627, leave your name and phone number and someone will return your call and take your information.

All responses remain strictly confidential. Responses are used to estimate total harvest for each hunting season. Information is summarized and used by biologists and regional wildlife managers to establish bag limits, season dates and the number of licences available. These questionnaires are a very important part of big game management in Manitoba. Licensed hunters are the link between what happens during this year’s hunting season and how that will affect next year’s hunting season. Summary statistics are available on the WEPB website or by contacting the branch.

Furnasman Winnipeg

One Hour Canada

Furnasman New Homes

BBB Review of Furnasman

21 Degrees One Hour

Mr Furnaces One Hour

Boonstraonehour

Air Quality’s One Hour


Whitetails: common yet elusive

The moose may be our biggest land mammal, and our state mammal, but in Maine and across the country, there is no doubt that the white-tailed deer is king. In terms of time and money spent in their pursuit, whitetails exceed all other species combined. The mere sight of one quickens the pulse and dilates the pupils of hunter and nonhunter alike.

But why? At first glance, it seems something of a mystery. But as you study them and learn just how remarkable they are, it becomes clearer.

They are, arguably, the most adaptable species on earth. No land mammal has as wide a geographical range. Theirs spans from northeastern Quebec, west across Northern Ontario through central Manitoba, Alberta and Saskatchewan into eastern British Columbia, then south through the United States, Mexico and Central America into northern South America.

Within that range, the species occupies an extremely diverse array of habitats. From northern boreal forests to southern bottomland hardwoods, from the foothills of the Rockies to open grassland plains, from Pacific rain forests to southwestern desert, from the Midwestern grain belt to the Northeastern gridlock, the whitetail not only survives but thrives.

In order to do so, it has adapted both behaviorally and physically, in the latter case differentiating into some 30 subspecies. The largest whitetails are from the borealis or dacotensis subspecies, which occur in the extreme northern U.S. and Canada. Some weigh more than 300 pounds – my largest, from Saskatchewan, approached that mark in dressed weight.

At the opposite end of the spectrum are tiny Key deer from Florida and eight or 10 other recognized subspecies in Central and South America that top out at a live weight of about 50 pounds. My smallest, the weight of which I will not divulge, came from southeastern Alabama.

Whitetails also can display a great deal of variation in color. In general, the darker and more humid the habitat, the darker their coat. Meanwhile, deer in drier, more open habitat tend to be paler. Coat color also varies with season, at least for some races. In most areas, deer sport a light, reddish-brown coat in summer and a darker gray-brown coat in winter, the latter of which consist largely of hollow hairs that trap air, providing excellent insulation.

There even can be noticeable variations among individuals within the same herd, some being slightly lighter or darker brown or gray. Then there are the oddballs and the piebalds.

Although rare, all-white true albinos do occur and are distinguished by having light or pink-colored soft parts and eyes. Some deer can be all or mostly white, but are not true albinos if they have brown eyes or any dark patches of fur. More common are deer with a pied or mottled brown-and-white pelage – referred to as piebalds. Much rarer are melanistic deer, the coats of which are nearly black.

One of the whitetail’s most attractive features are its antlers. Lots of critters have horns – cows, sheep, goats, lizards – but only members of the deer family have antlers. Antlers are deciduous, which means that like the falling leaves, each winter they drop to the ground, and each spring, a buck must grow an entirely new set.

The antlers of young bucks are typically small because most of the mineral nutrition they take in goes toward skeletal growth. Once they reach maturity, however – at age 4 – excess nutrients can be redirected to antler growth, and under the right conditions, they can produce some truly magnificent examples.

Recent years have seen a proliferation of whitetails, the likes of which probably never occurred in North America. In some areas, they have reached what some refer to as “nuisance” levels. Yet unlike some other nuisance species – Canada geese, for instance – whitetails remain respected.

And even where they have become overabundant, they remain wary and elusive. When asked what is the most challenging big game animal, hunters who have pursued game around the world invariably give the same answer: white-tailed deer.

Bob Humphrey is a freelance writer and Registered Maine Guide who lives in Pownal. He can be contacted at:

sportventures@juno.com

http://maineoutdoorjournal.mainetoday.com/story.php?id=292802&ac=Outdoors