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Increase in pheasant hunting expected in Minnesota

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Still, Kurt Haroldson, DNR regional wildlife manager for southwestern Minnesota, said it won’t necessarily be a slam-dunk for hunters.

“The birds aren’t going to be that vulnerable,” he said. “They can certainly use corn stubble fields.”

And weather could be a factor.

“The grass is dry — it snaps and cracks when you walk through it,” said Randy Markl, DNR area wildlife manager at Windom. Without moisture, hunting dogs will have difficulty scenting birds, he said. And grasslands could be vulnerable to fires.

Said Trauba: “I will warn hunters about the cattails: You will literally choke on the fluff. They are bone dry.”

Besides drought and harvested fields, hunters also could find some other changes to the landscape. Some grasslands enrolled in the federal Conservation Reserve Program were cut for hay this summer. And contracts on nearly 300,000 acres in Minnesota expired Sept. 30, meaning some of those lands already could be plowed by Saturday to prepare for spring planting.

“Your favorite CRP field may be hayed or expired and converted to cropland,” said Holland.

Hunters also could find up to 1,200 acres of the new Walk-In Access (WIA) program lands hayed or grazed, allowed because of the drought. Under that program, landowners are paid to provide public hunting access. The good news is that 6,000 acres have been added to the program, bringing the total this fall to 15,000 acres.

The parcels are scattered on 158 sites in 21 counties.

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