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Women in the wild: New group seeks to boost hunters, anglers

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(MCT) — MINNEAPOLIS — As a kid, Katrina Wood never got a chance to go hunting.

“My dad quit hunting when I was born, so he never took me,” said the 25-year-old Duluth woman.

But her passion for the outdoors bubbled to the surface recently, she took a series of archery courses through the Department of Natural Resources’ Becoming an Outdoor Woman (BOW) program, and she’s now an avid bow hunter, bagging four deer and a turkey in the past seven months.

“It’s been awesome,” she said. “I’m so fortunate — I’ve had incredible mentors.”

The added treat: Her dad has resumed hunting, with her.

Wood reflects the successes of a BOW program that has grown from about 150 participants in 2004 to 800 last year.

That’s great, says Betty Wilkens, 70, of rural Mora, a lifelong hunter and angler. But women make up 50 percent of the population, yet still represent only 10 percent of Minnesota hunters and about 35 percent of anglers.

Wilkens is one of the leaders of a new group of female hunters and anglers that hopes to build on the success of the BOW program and other hunter and angler recruitment efforts by creating a statewide social network where women and girls can learn more about hunting and fishing — and how to find people to get them started.

“We want other women to experience all the fun, enjoyment and satisfaction we have experienced” hunting and fishing, said Wilkens.

Wilkens said getting more women into the outdoors also will bring more kids outside.

“If you bring in women, you often bring children in, too,” she said. “I think you’ll see a snowball effect.”

The new group, Women Hunting and Fishing in All Seasons, recently launched a website, www.womenhfs.org, that they hope will foster that social network. Besides contacts and other information, eventually it will include a video library showing women how to do everything from stream fishing to archery hunting for turkeys.

The group’s goal is ambitious: to double the number of Minnesota’s female hunters and increase the percentage of female anglers by 50 percent by 2021. That would mean adding some 62,000 female hunters and 200,000 female anglers.

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