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Going with the flow: Mississippi River provides rich adventure

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As we weaved through channels and around islands, perhaps most noticeable of all were acre upon acre of wild rice beds.

The plants grew 4 to 6 feet above the water; many still had seeds on the stalks.

After a run on the main river Schultz turned down a curving side channel and beached the boat on an island.

Acorns littered the shore and shallows. Moments after we arrived a water snake crawled out of the river and onto a nearby log.

Overnight temperatures near freezing had dropped the water temperature into the 50s. The sunny, 60-something degree afternoon was just what the snake’s metabolism craved.

In a few minutes, John Wetzel of Holmen arrived, his boat carrying our canine corps for the day.

It would be a three-dog hunt: Gaia and Berlitz, black Labrador retrievers, and Allie, a German wire-haired pointer.

The dogs bounded out and explored the island. We hiked through the mixed river-bottom forest to the south.

After a quarter-mile, the trees ended and the wild rice began. An oval of open water, about the size of a basketball court, sat 30 yards to the south of the woods.

Wood ducks and teal had been using the opening for an overnight roost site.

We used no decoys.

“It’s patience and scouting,” Wetzel said. “And enjoying the day.”

We rested in the shade of silver maples, tossed sticks for the dogs and looked over the extensive wild rice beds.

“We’ve got rice on the river like we’ve never had it before,” said Wetzel, who has lived and worked along the river for over 30 years.

He retired in 2001 from the Wisconsin Department of Natural Resources, where he worked as the state waterfowl biologist and later as the Mississippi River wildlife biologist.

The rice is a boon to waterfowl and other wildlife, both for cover and food.

The afternoon breeze was punctuated by the calls of sora rails and Wilson’s snipe. Flocks of red-winged blackbirds swirled through the marsh.

And as the afternoon wore on, ducks began to take to the air.

A half dozen blue-winged teal screamed overhead, followed by a pair of wood ducks.

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