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For northern forest whitetails, the going this winter has gotten tougher

March 12, 2013

The winter of 2012-13 has abruptly changed since the last Winter Severity Index report in early February. Over 30 inches of snow has fallen in the last month in Northern St Louis County, with three storms in the 6-inch-plus category.

For northern forest whitetails, the going has gotten tougher.  All snow measurement stations are currently over the 15 inch threshold.

(Editors note: The Minnesota Department of Natural Resources measures the Winter Severity Index (WSI) by applying a point for everyday the temperature is below zero and applying a point for every day the snow is 15-inches or deeper. A typical Minnesota winter scores a WSI of about 120. Once the WSI begins to rise above that point, a winter is considered harsh, particularly if it reaches the 140 or 150 range.)

Winter severity, specifically snow depth and duration of snow cover, is the most critical factor affecting white-tailed deer survival in the northern forest.  Deer movement is now heavily restricted, especially up in the border country.  Deer are in heavy conifer cover.  With restricted mobility, wolf predation will increase as the tables have now turned against deer.  Until mid-February, deer had excellent mobility, and wolves were at a disadvantage, in all but the northern most parts of St Louis County. 

At this point, the WSI is still below average for our area (northern Minnesota). Because December and January were very open, with snow depths less than 6 inches (except north of Orr) winter’s effect on deer is still minimal at this juncture. This winter is going to end up a bit below average (WSI=120) in the Tower area and milder on the Iron Range.  With longer days and higher sun angle, south aspects will soon begin to open up and provide improved mobility and forage.

If winter and snow pack fade in late March, the 2013 fawn crop should still be a good one in most of northern St. Louis County.  And, last year’s (2012) fawns, the most vulnerable segment of the herd, should come through okay. Time will tell, but the prospects for this winter appear to be short, with warming temperatures and longer days on the horizon as March progresses into April.

By April 1 we will have a firm grasp the effects of this winter on our white-tailed deer population.  Antlerless permit area designation for the 2013 deer season will be made in mid-April. 
 

A wildlife manager's perspective of Minnesota's first gray wolf hunting season

December 20, 2012
With the inaugural 2012 Minnesota wolf season now closed in the Northeast, I thought I would give you my impression of how it went, from the wildlife manager’s perspective. 

Although the season has been surrounded with emotion, controversy and rhetoric on all sides, it has been much more routine in “the trenches.”  The Tower Area wildlife staff has registered and done necropsies on about 25 wolves over the past month, pretty much without fanfare. 
 

We have registered thousands ...
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It has been an excellent fall for hunters so far; numbers are up everywhere and signs point to an excellent firearms deer season

October 18, 2012

An excellent Fall continues to go by way too fast! Bear and moose seasons are now finished.  Bear harvest was up over 2011 in the Tower area. Moose harvest  was down a bit, but so were permit numbers.  Those lucky moose hunting parties who were selected in the lottery enjoyed a high quality hunt and shot some really nice bulls.

The duck hunting continues to be good.  Most hunters are saying it’s the best around here in many years.  The weather has been ideal, thus far, for moving  ducks ...


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Don't let this time of year pass you by - get out there and enjoy the seasons while you can

October 4, 2012

It’s that time of the year!  If you are not getting out there you are missing the boat!  The big boys are starting to rub.  The bulls are rutting hard and on the move in search of receptive cows.  The grouse hunting is way better than predicted.  The bears are getting ready to go down and they have the feedbag on.  Fall color is absolutely fabulous and it is now coming down.  

Find a way to get out there.  Even if it is just for an hour.  Go!  Skip out of your commitments early.  Apologize i...


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Finding a place to hunt in northern Minnesota is easier than ever with the internet at your fingertips

September 20, 2012

    The smell of Fall is in the air!  Fall colors are turning fast up on the Canadian Shield.  We had our first hard frost this week and overnight temps in the 30s have been common throughout September. With bear, goose, archery deer and ruffed grouse seasons open, hunters are heading out to their familiar haunts. A common question I often hear is “where can I find a good place to hunt?”

    With the internet exploding with new information every year, the answer to that question is lit...


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Welcome to the Wildlife Manager's Corner

September 10, 2012

In this first edition, I would like to just familiarize you with our neck of the woods and give you an idea of what a Department of Natural Resources wildlife manager does in northeast Minnesota. 

As summer transitions to fall and the hunting seasons, we are working on a wide variety of wildlife management tasks and field activities up here on the Canadian border, such as:
  • Mowing 85 miles of hunter walking trails for ruffed grouse hunting.
  • Preparing a newly acquired 750 acre Wildlife Manageme...

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The Wildlife Manager's Corner


Tom Rusch Tom Rusch is the Tower Area Wildlife Manager for the Minnesota Department of Natural Resources' Division of Fish and Wildlife headquartered at Tower, MN in northern St Louis County. His dedicated 4 person staff covers 3.1 million acres of State, County, National and private forest land in northern St. Louis and northern Lake Counties. He hunts, fishes, camps, traps, bikes, hikes, snowshoes and shed hunts year round in the swamps, forests, wetlands and lakes of the northwoods of Minnesota, Wisconsin and Ontario. He is a 24-year veteran of the Minnesota DNR and has worked in the wildlife management field for 30 years in Minnesota, Wisconsin and Missouri. He has lived on the Iron Range with his wife, Deb, since 1991. Tom can be reached by phone at 218-753-2580 ext. 240 or by email at tom.rusch@state.mn.us.
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