Delta Waterfowl Expands Hen House Program to Record Levels to Produce More Ducks

The Duck Hunters Organization is adding more than 2,000 nest structures in key duck breeding areas this winter

By late spring, more Delta Waterfowl Hen Houses than ever before will be in place to provide safer nest sites for mallards.

Delta’s ever-growing team of 30 Hen House delivery specialists is expected to install 2,218 new nesting structures during the next couple months, while also performing annual maintenance on the existing fleet of 10,775 duck-producing houses. With the latest additions, Delta’s Hen House Program will have nearly 13,000 nest structures in place for the 2024 nesting season in key breeding areas for mallards, including Alberta, Saskatchewan, Manitoba, Ontario, North Dakota, South Dakota, Minnesota, Iowa, Pennsylvania, and Colorado.

“We’re setting another Delta program record this winter by adding 2,218 new Hen Houses,” said Matt Chouinard, waterfowl programs director for Delta Waterfowl. “It’s exciting. Our Hen House program growth is expanding duck production capacity across the U.S. and Canadian prairies.”

Delta’s Hen House program began on the Canadian prairie in 1991, when the first structures were installed on Manitoba wetlands.

Hen Houses are placed strategically, focusing on areas of the breeding that attract high densities of nesting ducks but where grassland nesting cover is relatively scarce. Read more

“WildTail: America’s Wildest Conservation Success Story” Documentary Available for Free Viewing

The National Deer Association and the Southeast Deer Partnership announce the premiere of “WildTail: America’s Wildest Conservation Success Story.” Narrated by country music star Dustin Lynch and featuring Steve Rinella from MeatEater, the documentary takes viewers on the incredible journey of white-tailed deer from near extinction back to an ecological and economic hero of America’s native landscapes.

WildTail can be viewed on YouTube at https://youtu.be/aFJUBJ1-89M?si=U3GhvJKEXM_XEIg1

“The white-tailed deer population is an incredible asset and supports economic development, outdoor recreation, and diverse ecosystems,” said Nick Pinizzotto, president and CEO of the National Deer Association. “The population recovery shown in “WildTail” is a testament to the power of conservation efforts and a call to action to protect our native wildlife for generations to come.”

The film was created in partnership with all Southeastern State Fish and Wildlife Agencies with the goal of educating hunters and non-hunters alike. Read more

Bighorn Sheep Capture Effort Scheduled in Salmon Region

Idaho Department of Fish and Game is working with the Idaho Wild Sheep Foundation on its third year of a research program in the Salmon Region to improve bighorn sheep populations.

In early February, Fish and Game will capture and radio-collar bighorn sheep from the Lower Panther-Main Salmon River population in addition to other areas in the region. Bighorns will be captured, sampled for disease, biological data collected, and fitted with a radio collar for tracking. For safety, the public is encouraged to avoid areas if they encounter capture work crews.

Each collar is fitted with a drop-off mechanism that will cause it to fall off the animal in three to four years. This will allow Fish and Game biologists to track individual health status and their interaction with the rest of the population. Throughout the year, lamb surveys will be conducted, and survival will be monitored. Read more

Conservationist Organizations and Youngsters Join Forces

DALLAS, TEXAS – , 2024 – Outdoors Foundation, the leading provider of outdoor skill, safety and conservation curriculum to schools nationwide, has received a $100,000 grant from the International Order of T. Roosevelt to fund a partnership aimed at raising youth awareness and education about wildlife conservation.

“This dynamic partnership between two leading conservation organizations is an ideal match. Through it, we’ll work together to engage youth in outdoor education across the country. OTF’s Outdoor Adventures curriculum is used in schools in 48 states, making it a perfect partner for IOTR to achieve its goal of furthering wildlife conservation.” Read more

DNR announces $100,000 available for UP Deer Habitat Improvement Partnership Initiative grants

The application period for the Upper Peninsula’s Deer Habitat Improvement Partnership Initiative competitive grant program is now open.

The Michigan Department of Natural Resources initiative is a cooperative grant program designed to enhance deer habitat on private lands in the U.P.

“There are three primary goals applicants should strive to meet,” said Bill Scullon, DNR field operations manager and administrator for the grant initiative. “The projects should produce tangible deer habitat improvements, build long-term partnerships between the DNR and outside organizations and showcase the benefits to the public.”

Now in its 16th year, the initiative is supported by the state’s Deer Range Improvement Program, which is funded by a portion of deer hunting license revenue. More than 132 projects in nearly all U.P. counties have improved thousands of acres of deer habitat.

The DNR has announced a total of $100,000 in U.P. deer habitat improvement grant funding for 2024. Scullon said the maximum amount of individual grants is $15,000 and the minimum is $2,000. Read more

Europeans Approve of Trophy Hunting

By Glen Wunderlich

Charter Member Professional Outdoor Media Association (POMA)

In a survey published in 2021 by the Humane Society International (HSI), it was claimed that Europe-wide opposition to “trophy” hunting existed based on its own study.  Given an obvious emphasis on any negative aspects of big game hunting in the survey, there was concern that public opinion would be shaped by a limited understanding of hunting related beneficial activities.

Consequently, a coalition of international sustainable-use organizations has commissioned a recent survey by YouGov that has unveiled a significant acceptance of international hunting, as evidenced by the 77 percent approval or neutrality of more than 7,000 Europeans from five countries on the matter. Therefore, a closer look into the various aspects of hunting big game in Europe is necessary to fully understand its impact, because there is quite a discrepancy in the two surveys.

From the Humane Society of the U.S. (HSUS), the picture is painted, as follows based on its website language:  The hunters’ primary motivation is not to get food, but simply to obtain animal parts (heads, hides or claws and even the whole animal) for display.

For the sake of argument, let’s assume HSUS is correct.

But, what about the undisclosed consequences apart from any primary motives?

The International Union for Conservation of Nature (IUCN) briefing paper, states that “trophy hunting…can and does generate critically needed incentives and revenue for government, private and community landowners to maintain and restore wildlife as a land use and to carry out conservation actions”

The survey, conducted in November 2023, aimed to determine unbiased public opinion on the social acceptance of domestic and international hunting.  A focus was on the retention of animal parts (e.g. horns, antlers, etc.), as well as the acceptance of hunting that benefits conservation.

These findings challenge a narrow perception of hunting as solely targeting “trophies” of charismatic species often propagated by animal-rights organizations.

The promotion of bans or restrictions on the movement of legally obtained “trophies” are not supported by society, and doing so negatively impacts local communities, economies, and biodiversity.

One representative example demonstrates the disparity between HSI-think and the opinions of the combined countries of Italy, Denmark, Poland, Spain and Germany from the YouGov survey:   whether it is acceptable for parts of legally hunted animals to be kept and imported, if legal and regulated. YouGov acceptance was 53.2 percent compared to HSI at 7.4 percent.  YouGov opposition came in at 22.8 percent yet HSI opposed the same question at the rate of 84.4 percent.

In conclusion, well-managed trophy hunting can bring in much needed income, jobs, and other economic and social benefits to indigenous and local communities in places where these benefits are often scarce.  The injection of cash to these poor people is welcome relief and is used to further conservation of their wildlife and to improve sustainable livelihoods.

Often it is pointed out that tourism can also provide income apart from hunting; however, it is quite limited because access is needed along with supporting infrastructure. It also requires guaranteed wildlife viewing opportunities, which are often complicated with a lack of political stability – all conditions where trophy hunting takes place.  By partnering hunting with viewing, the puzzle pieces begin to fit into place.

Nowhere is there mention of a single species worldwide that has become unsustainable as part of well-regulated and managed hunting for one simple reason:  It has never happened.

The nature of humans behooves them to manage any business to ensure its long-term survival.  Comprehensive wildlife management is no different no matter where one looks.

Chris Dorsey’s Outdoor World Shatters YouTube Growth Records

Denver, Colorado

Dorsey Pictures announces the hit YouTube Channel @chrisdorseysoutdoorworld has reached 50,000 subscriber and 20 million view milestones in just 11 months, making it the fastest-growing YouTube channel in the outdoor space. The channel launched in mid-February of 2023, and with minimal marketing and advertising has rapidly grown into the premier destination on YouTube for high production value hunting and fishing content. Read more

Forbes: Dorsey Discusses New IMAX Film & Theater

Utah’s iconic Great Salt Lake is drying up which will have catastrophic consequences if something isn’t done soon, so state officials are taking unprecedented steps to head off what some are calling an environmental disaster on the order of the Dust Bowl of the 1930s.

Since Brigham Young and early Latter-day Saint pioneers first arrived at Great Salt Lake, the natural wonder that once spanned 1,700-square miles has dropped nearly 50 percent. The largest saline lake in the Western Hemisphere is in steady decline and on the brink of disappearing. Read more

Sportsmen’s Alliance: Washington Sportsmen Have Had Enough

The Southwestern Washington Fairgrounds in Centralia, Washington was the scene of an amazing turnout of sportsmen last week. From all over the region, hundreds of hunters came together and showed that they will no longer stand idly by as animal extremists try to shutter them off the landscape.

“It was awesome to see a huge crowd of sportsmen heed the call and join us to raise money to put an end to the madness that is taking over Washington fish and wildlife management,” said Todd Adkins, vice president of government affairs at the Sportsmen’s Alliance. “Everyone in that room was of a single mind and one simple message: enough is enough, it’s time for us to take things back!” Read more

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