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Archive for the ‘HUNTING’ Category

Missoula Trapper Education Class Set For March 6

15 Feb

Missoula Trapper Education Class Set For March 6

The Montana Trappers Association (MTA) will offer a trapper education course Saturday, March 6 in Missoula. This will be the only trapper education course held in west-central Montana this year.

The free course will run 8:30 a.m. to 5 p.m. at the Missoula FWP office, 3201 Spurgin Road. To register, stop by the FWP office, or call 406-542-5500.

MTA instructors will emphasize trapper ethics, trapping heritage, and trap sets. Instructors will show actual trap sets and techniques.

People of all ages are invited to attend, but students under 10 must be accompanied by an adult. All participants should bring a lunch and note-taking materials. Students who complete the course receive a certification card. The course is not mandatory for trappers but strongly recommended.

 
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Online Hunter Education Available to Adults

15 Feb

Online Hunter Education Available to Adults – MFWP

Montana Fish, Wildlife and Parks now offers hunter education on the Internet to anyone 18 years and older.

State law says everyone born after Jan. 1, 1985 must take hunter education before he, or she, can hunt in Montana. The course, which costs $15, is a chance for an adult to take the course at his or her convenience.

Though the coursework is completed online, students born after Jan. 1, 1985, must also take a short field course to receive their certification card. Students born before this date are not required to take the field course for certification.

At FWP’s Region 4 in Great Falls, there are several field course dates available this year for online students. Those dates are: Feb. 20, March 13, April 3, June 8, July 21, and Sept. 18. Other field days may be available elsewhere around the state.

Registration is only available on the Internet to those who successfully complete the online course, and space is limited. For more information on the online course and field course times and locations, go to the FWP website, www.fwp.mt.gov, and click on Education.

 
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Online Bowhunter Education Available to Adults

15 Feb

Online Bowhunter Education Available to Adults – MFWP

Montana Fish, Wildlife and Parks now offers bowhunter education on the Internet to anyone 18 years and older.

State law says all first time bowhunters must take a bowhunter education course. The online course, which costs $20, is a chance for an adult to take the course at his, or her, convenience.

All students, whether taking the course in a classroom setting or online, must take a field course to receive their certification card.

For online students in FWP’s Region 4, three field days have been set: May 1, June 19 and July31.

Registration is only available on the Internet to those who successfully complete the online course, and space is limited. For more information on the online course and field course times and locations, go to the FWP website, www.fwp.mt.gov, and click on Education

 
 

Spring Turkey Hunting Season Begins Soon

15 Feb

Spring Turkey Hunting Season Begins Soon
Friday, February 12, 2010
Hunting
Hunters anxious to prepare for Montana’s spring turkey gobbler season can obtain an application for the special spring turkey permit drawing by going on the Montana Fish, Wildlife & Parks Web site at fwp.mt.gov beginning Feb. 16.

Spring turkey season begins April 10. Residents must have a 2010 conservation and upland game bird license and nonresidents will need a conservation license to purchase a turkey license.

In addition to opportunities to hunt male turkey in most of eastern Montana’s general turkey hunting areas, spring male turkey permits are available through special drawings in areas of western Montana.

Details on spring turkey hunting in the general hunting areas and special permit areas and how to apply are available in the 2010 Spring Turkey Hunting Regulations, found on the FWP Web site at fwp.mt.gov beginning Feb 24.

 
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Spring Black Bear Hunting Begins April 15

15 Feb

Spring Black Bear Hunting Begins April 15 – MFWP

Montana’s spring black bear season doesn’t begin until April 15, but hunters will be able to access the 2010 black bear hunting regulations on the Montana Fish, Wildlife & Parks Web site at fwp.mt.gov beginning Feb. 25.

Licenses purchased after April 15 may only be purchased over the counter at a Montana Fish, Wildlife & Parks office and can not be used for five days after the purchase.

Bear hunters must have successfully completed FWP’s bear ID training at least once in order to purchase a black bear license.

Black bear hunters are urged to annually refresh their bear identification skills, including the ability to distinguish a black bear from a grizzly. Grizzly bears, a federally protected, threatened species, are not hunted in Montana.

To take the bear ID test, go to http://fwp.mt.gov/education/hunter/bearID/default.

 
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Time To Apply For Nonresident Big Game Licenses

15 Feb

Time To Apply For Nonresident Big Game Licenses – MFWP
Friday, February 12, 2010
Hunting
Montana Fish, Wildlife & Parks reminds hunters that applications for the Nonresident General Big Game Combination Licenses and Landowner Sponsored Licenses, which are sold through a drawing process, are due soon. To apply for these and other nonresident licenses and for more information, go to the FWP Web page at fwp.mt.gov under For Hunters and select Nonresident Deer and Elk Licenses .

Applications for these licenses and for the new Come Home To Hunt licenses, must be postmarked by the U.S. Postal Service on or before March 15 and addressed to: Montana Fish, Wildlife & Parks, Attn: Nonresident Big Game Drawing, 1420 East Sixth Ave., P.O. Box 8012, Helena, MT 59604-8012.

Applications for outfitter sponsored licenses must be filed in FWP’s Helena licensing bureau on or before March 15. Postmark dates are not taken into account for these licenses.

For more information, contact FWP at 406-444-2950.

 
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Shot Show Live Chat Set For Wednesday – POSTPONED

08 Feb

SHOT SHOW LIVE CHAT SET FOR WEDNESDAY . . . NSSF will be holding a live chat on Wednesday from 2 to 2:30 p.m. EST. During the live chat, NSSF Senior Vice President Chris Dolnack will answer questions related to the 2010 SHOT Show as well as the upcoming 2011 show. Visit nssf.org/shotshowchat to take part.

 
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Montana Fish, Wildlife & Parks Commission To Meet Feb. 11 In Helena

07 Feb

Montana Fish, Wildlife & Parks Commission To Meet Feb. 11 In Helena

Montana’s Fish, Wildlife & Parks Commission will meet Feb. 11 at the State Capitol Old Supreme Court Chambers beginning at 8:30 a.m.

The commission will make final decisions on 2010-2011 hunting seasons, including the:

deer, elk and antelope license and permit allocation process,
deer, elk, antelope hunting seasons and HD boundaries,
moose, sheep, goat hunting seasons and HD boundaries,
black bear hunting seasons and HD boundaries,
biennial quota ranges,
bison hunting seasons and HD boundaries,
lion hunting seasons and HD boundaries,
upland game bird regulations and turkey quotas,
hunting season dates,
game damage management season quota authorizations.
The commission will also decide on the proposed commercial fishing regulations for Canyon Ferry Lake and Lake Helena.

FWP ensures its meetings are fully accessible to those with a disability. Individuals with special needs may request arrangements by contacting FWP at: 406-444-3186.

The full agenda and additional information on the topics to be discussed may be found on the FWP Web site at fwp.mt.gov under the FWP Commission icon.

 
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Predator Classic Tournament – February 18 thru 20th

28 Jan

Predator Hunting Tournament – February 18th thru February 20th. It will include outdoorsmen from all over the state and is being primarily sponsored by Sportsman’s Warehouse in Billings. We are really trying to get kids involved in this year’s Predator Classic by allowing 17 year olds and younger to join the two-man adult teams for free. This tournament will be the largest hunting tournament in montana with tons of big prizes including two rifles,hunting gear, cash, a calcutta auction, and a catered closing ceremony. The opening ceremony is being held at Sportsman’s Warehouse in Billings on Thursday February 18th at 6:00 pm. Contestants may sign up at the opening ceremony or pre-register @ www.obsessedoutdoors.com

 
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Winter Survival – Bruce Auchly, FWP

17 Jan

Winter Survival – MFWP
Bruce Auchly, FWP Region 4 Information Officer
Friday, January 15, 2010
Headlines – Region 4
Subzero temperatures and snowstorms are good excuses to stay inside and turn up the heat.

Wildlife, however, doesn’t have that option. Antelope and members of the deer family in Montana have to tough it out. Most do through a variety of methods. But severe winter weather can tax even the hardiest critters.

Big game survive winter through four main adaptations: an insulated coat, reducing their metabolism (up to one-third of what they need to meet basic life functions), remaining bedded for long periods during bad weather and relying on stored body fat.

Up to 30 percent of a deer’s winter energy requirements can be met through body fat. By the way, don’t believe the old hunter’s tale of predicting a winter’s severity by the amount of body fat on a deer, or elk. The amount of fat says more about the animal’s ability to find adequate food in the late summer and fall than the upcoming winter.

“For deer, their condition going into winter is important,” says Tom Stivers, Fish, Wildlife and Parks wildlife biologist. “East of the Divide, elk will go to where ever they can find some grass. And antelope, if it gets really tough, they’ll move to try to find sage and forbs.”

Both mule deer and whitetails will move to find food, too, often to winter habitats the species has used for a millennium. When winter hits the Rocky Mountain Front, for example, mule deer will move down in elevation to ridges and foothills along the front.

The same holds true in the Missouri River Breaks, Stivers says.

Winter represents a downhill slide for big game, even with migrational movements.

“Mule deer on core winter range and habitat will do okay,” Stivers says, “but deer have evolved to lose weight in the winter.”

One scientist likened a deer’s year to sledding on a brushy hill. Through summer and fall the animal climbs the hill, adding body fat. The winter and early spring are the downhill slide. Grass, shrubs and plants can slow the descent, but if the bottom of the hill is reached before spring plant growth starts, the animal dies.

“Elk are big body animals,” Stivers says. “They can eat grass in the winter and get that internal engine running and produce a lot of heat, like cattle. But deer have to process higher nutritional food. So they seek tips of browse.”

Of course plants need to be in good shape going into winter, too, or browse, like willows and chokecherry, won’t have the necessary nutrition.

Deer and antelope and elk do die each winter. Sometimes it’s from age, sometimes it’s malnutrition, and sometimes it’s predators. More than likely death comes from stress caused by a combination of factors rather than just weather.

In fact, an early winter may have little consequence on animals because most have fat reserves to draw on. But as an animal’s energy supply dwindles, usually later in winter, stress factors will start to kill the young, the old and the weak.

One remedy suggested periodically is to feed the deer or elk. It almost always doesn’t work for several reasons. But that’s a topic for another day.

Now it’s time to put another log on the fire.