Illinois tenative
http://www.pjstar.com/stories/081905/JEF_B79R85F9.068.shtmlFriday, August 19, 2005
Waterfowlers finally can use ink pens to circle season dates on the calendar.
After weeks of speculation, Department of Natural Resources director Joel Brunsvold announced official season dates late Thursday afternoon.
Well, semi-official. The U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service still has to approve. But that's usually a rubber stamp.
So with no more delay, here are those dates:
- Central Zone: Duck - Oct. 29 to Dec. 27; Canada goose - Oct. 29 to Nov. 6, Nov. 16 to Jan. 31; Youth - Oct. 22-23; Canvasback - Nov. 12 to Dec. 11.
- North Zone: Duck - Oct. 15 to Dec. 13; Canada goose - Oct. 15 to Jan. 8; Youth - Oct. 7-8; Canvasback - Oct. 29 to Nov. 27.
- South Zone: Duck: Nov. 24 to Jan. 22.; Canada goose - Nov. 24-27, Dec. 10 to Jan. 31; Youth - Nov. 12-13; Canvasback - Nov. 24 to Dec. 23.
The only change from dates proposed by DNR's advisory board is in the South Zone. The board had proposed a Nov. 20 opener. Brunsvold changed that to Thanksgiving Day because of concerns about conflicts with shotgun deer season and possible law-enforcement difficulties.
That late opener will bring to a head divisions between hunters in the deep south and those in the zone's northern reaches. Actually, similar problems are brewing in the Central Zone, where many hunters from Hennepin and north argued for an earlier start.
A chance to appease some hunters comes next spring when the DNR can redraw zone lines. Look for lively discussion on that subject.
DUCK FOOD: Impacts of this summer's drought on duck hunting are still to be seen.
Will there be enough water to build blinds? Enough water to hunt? Will pumps at Rice Lake keep running?
Questions abound. One certain thing is that low water has allowed for plenty of duck food.
With no late-summer flood, duck clubs and even state sites had few problems planting crops in refuges. But stands of native food sprouted with no aid from man. Growth of moist-soil plants has been outstanding, according to Illinois Natural History Survey biologists.
Particularly lush is Quiver Lake near Havana, where grass, smartweed and sedges are almost solid across the entire lake. In places, pigweed stands 10 feet tall.
"I've been many places in the country looking at waterfowl habitat and this is far and away the best moist-soil I've ever seen," said Joshua Stafford of the Illinois Natural History Survey. "It might not make for good hunting, but it certainly (is) good waterfowl habitat."
There's a downside to all that greenery, at least for birdwatchers. Partly because of the growth of moist-soil plants at Chautauqua National Wildlife Refuge, the Illinois Ornithological Society canceled its Shorebird Spectacular, which had been scheduled for Aug. 27-28.