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Now that I have your attention let me say I am more qualified to write the previous ND hunter post than this one. I am currently an ex-ND living in Minnesota. I occasionally hunt geese and never ducks in MN. I have read quite a bit so I guess I am a library historian on this one.
Minnesota has a long tradition of waterfowl hunters. Historically MN hunters have harvested more birds than just about any other state in the MS flyway (except Louisiana). The total number of birds shot and birds per hunter often dwarfed the numbers posted each fall by North Dakota. These are not just a bunch of divers. I believe the numbers show about 30% of the ducks shot in MN are divers. Balance are mallards, wood ducks, and teal. MN often leads the nation in total number of Canada geese shot by hunters.
The quality of duck hunting in MN has really slipped in the past 5 years. Just like the snow geese in ND, many of the ducks that migrated through MN are either shifting flyways or sitting in Canada until freeze-up. They main migration of ducks through MN often happens during deer opener.
There is a lot of discussion about why the quality of hunting in MN has dropped.
More ducks are sitting in ND because the habitat is better.
Some believe that many of the MN nesting birds migrate to the Dakotas in August. Western MN is full of ducks in July - by mid September most have moved on. I have shot a banded Mallard in ND that was banded that summer in Ontario - so maybe they are right.
The water level of ponds in MN are too high and full of minnows which degrade the wetland habitat. Thus food source is poor. Plus ND has small grains that attract big flocks of mallards.
Many of the large shallow wetlands in MN have been degraded by silt intrusion to the point that ducks no longer find them attractive.
In the 1980s/early '90s (DROUGHT) I was a ND resident struggling to find any water for duck hunting (fantastic hunting when we found these ducks concentrated on the few remaining spots). Minnesotans on average where having consistent and exceptional hunting. The birds could not go to ND. Birds from Canada over flew ND. Small ponds, marshes, and big lakes all produced ducks in MN.
Thus a MN hunter did not need to travel to ND for ducks. I bet most of the MN hunters in ND in 1990 were there to hunt SNOW GEESE.
Minnesota biologist are attempting to find a fix - if they are partially successful, less MN hunters will head to ND.
Many in MN are praying for a ND drought. Sure there will be less ducks overall, but they will all be in MN come October. Maybe just maybe I will try hunt ducks in MN then - no I doubt it.
Minnesota has a long tradition of waterfowl hunters. Historically MN hunters have harvested more birds than just about any other state in the MS flyway (except Louisiana). The total number of birds shot and birds per hunter often dwarfed the numbers posted each fall by North Dakota. These are not just a bunch of divers. I believe the numbers show about 30% of the ducks shot in MN are divers. Balance are mallards, wood ducks, and teal. MN often leads the nation in total number of Canada geese shot by hunters.
The quality of duck hunting in MN has really slipped in the past 5 years. Just like the snow geese in ND, many of the ducks that migrated through MN are either shifting flyways or sitting in Canada until freeze-up. They main migration of ducks through MN often happens during deer opener.
There is a lot of discussion about why the quality of hunting in MN has dropped.
More ducks are sitting in ND because the habitat is better.
Some believe that many of the MN nesting birds migrate to the Dakotas in August. Western MN is full of ducks in July - by mid September most have moved on. I have shot a banded Mallard in ND that was banded that summer in Ontario - so maybe they are right.
The water level of ponds in MN are too high and full of minnows which degrade the wetland habitat. Thus food source is poor. Plus ND has small grains that attract big flocks of mallards.
Many of the large shallow wetlands in MN have been degraded by silt intrusion to the point that ducks no longer find them attractive.
In the 1980s/early '90s (DROUGHT) I was a ND resident struggling to find any water for duck hunting (fantastic hunting when we found these ducks concentrated on the few remaining spots). Minnesotans on average where having consistent and exceptional hunting. The birds could not go to ND. Birds from Canada over flew ND. Small ponds, marshes, and big lakes all produced ducks in MN.
Thus a MN hunter did not need to travel to ND for ducks. I bet most of the MN hunters in ND in 1990 were there to hunt SNOW GEESE.
Minnesota biologist are attempting to find a fix - if they are partially successful, less MN hunters will head to ND.
Many in MN are praying for a ND drought. Sure there will be less ducks overall, but they will all be in MN come October. Maybe just maybe I will try hunt ducks in MN then - no I doubt it.