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

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“We know some of the barriers women are experiencing, and one is social networking,” said Wilkens, who has helped with the BOW program for years.

Her group hopes to tie together recruitment efforts of conservation groups, such as the National Wild Turkey Federation and Pheasants Forever, both of which offer women’s hunting opportunities, with the recruitment efforts of communities and governments, including the DNR.

“We can’t do this alone,” said Erika Rivers, an assistant DNR commissioner and hunter who recently took up bow hunting. And while offering individual courses is helpful, it will take the efforts of many to significantly boost female hunter and angler numbers.

Though the total number of hunters and anglers nationwide has fallen, their ranks have remained fairly stable in Minnesota. But officials have long been concerned that young people aren’t filling the gaps left behind as older hunters and anglers drop out.

The agency has tried to fight the trend with youth fishing and hunting programs, and programs for women. The DNR has a hunter recruitment and retention coordinator, Jay Johnson. To aid that effort, DNR Commissioner Tom Landwehr recently formed a Commissioner’s Council on Recruitment and Retention.

“We want them to take stock of where we’ve been and how to move forward,” Rivers said. The group is to make recommendations by early summer.

Increasing acceptance

Meanwhile, Wilkens examined numerous DNR publications last year and concluded that women were far underrepresented in agency photographs.

The DNR agreed, and as a result, the 2012 hunting and trapping regulation booklet included a photo of a family of hunters on the cover and two women archery hunters on the back. Photos of more female role models will be forthcoming, Rivers said.

“As a business, if you want to appeal to a customer, why wouldn’t you picture them so they can relate to you?” Wilkens asked.

Changing a culture takes time, Wilkens and Rivers agree. But they’ve seen more acceptance of women in deer camps, duck sloughs and fishing boats. Their goal is to push that trend harder.

Wood said her first attempt deer hunting was discouraging.

“I didn’t have a tree stand or blind, I just went out and sat in the woods,” she said.

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