DOUG LEIER
paddlefish seasons set a record..for violations
North Dakota game wardens issued a record number of citations during the recent paddlefish snagging season. From opening day May 1until the season closed May 19, wardens cited more than 170 individua...
Posted on 6/17/13 at 8:48 AM
Happy thoughts for fall
I learned two truly awesome things today, thanks a great deal to Doug Leier. 1. You can find out on N.D. Game & Fish's website if you have a deer tag coming your way. 2. There's an any a...
Posted on 7/2/10 at 11:13 AM
Concern for nongame wildlife
Biologists categorize more than 80 percent of North Dakota’s wildlife species as nongame, or those that don’t answer to the name of rooster, buck or sprig. And yet, the few species for which hunting or fishing is allowed attract the lion’s share of concerns from people who enjoy the outdoors.By Doug Leier , February 23, 2011
Bald eagles now in most regions of North Dakota
The recovery of the bald eagle is one of the most visible conservation recovery success stories for our nation.By Doug Leier , February 10, 2011
Game and Fish’s strong finances keeps fees down
Resident license fees haven’t increased since 1995A standard instructional segment of North Dakota’s hunter education course is an explanation of hunting and fishing license fees and excise taxes and how hunting and fishing have a strong history and tradition of financial self support.
By Doug Leier , January 13, 2011
Early outlook for hunting and fishing seasons looks good
Looking ahead to 2011 in the outdoors world is kind of like assessing the preseason prospects of your favorite sports team.By Doug Leier , January 06, 2011
Looking back for a New Year’s heads-up
The pheasant outlook for any year begins with winter, and the 2010 version was not as long or as snowy as 2009.By Doug Leier , December 30, 2010
State laws are strict on crossbow use
For most of us, crossbows are not a real common topic in hunting discussions.By Doug Leier , December 16, 2010
Pheasant hunting fun in North Dakota can go up to the New Year
For those of us who like to spend as much time as possible on the outside of the window, October is a sort of early Christmas present.By Doug Leier , December 09, 2010
Local wildlife clubs nuture love of hunting and fishing
Outdoors organizations outlasting traditional service clubs in some areasThe future of North Dakota’s outdoor and hunting heritage depends largely on habitat, access and other important variables such as weather and wildlife disease.
By Doug Leier , December 02, 2010
Decline in CRP, more corn can affect deer hunt
The 2010 deer gun season is now behind us and like most years, it had its own unique angle, from hunters out in short-sleeved shirts on opening weekend to much more winter-like conditions two weeks later.By Doug Leier , November 25, 2010
November doesn’t last long enough
November for most hunters never lasts long enough, but many look forward to the memories and taste of deer season until the following year as each hunting season yields an abundance of sausage, jerky, pepper sticks and other wild game delicacies that wind up in hunting lunches and on evening dinner tables.By Doug Leier , November 18, 2010
Numbers will vary with each North Dakota deer season
No two falls are the same. You could draw the same deer license for the same unit and head out at the exact same time as the previous year, and you will still have a different feeling.By Doug Leier , November 11, 2010
North Dakota Game and Fish ready and willing to help for deer season
For many North Dakota deer hunters, the opener is an “unofficial holiday,” a day that gets marked off as a vacation day as soon as the next year’s calendar comes out.By Doug Leier , November 04, 2010
Great time to review hunter safety with deer season approaching
Just weeks into the pheasant season, hunters in North Dakota have already exceeded last year’s total for accidents involving firearms and shooting for all hunting seasons combined.By Doug Leier , October 28, 2010
Drake mallards high on hunters’ late list
Large array of duck species in North DakotaNorth Dakota has such an array of duck species nesting in the state there’s a good chance most hunters will remember a teal, gadwall, pintail or shoveler as their first duck and instead of a mallard.
By Doug Leier , October 21, 2010
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