NRHEG Star Eagle

137 Years Serving the New Richland-Hartland-Ellendale-Geneva Area
Newspaper of Record for NRHEG School District
Newspaper of Record for Waseca County, MN
PO Box 248 • New Richland, MN 56072

507-463-8112
email: steagle@hickorytech.net
Published every Thursday
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(Editor’s note: Star Eagle Outdoors Writer Dick Herfindahl has chosen to forgo this week’s column and let a guest columnist take his place)


By KEVIN AUSLUND

Minnesota hunters are for the most part, homeless people. Those  who cherish pheasant, duck, turkey and deer hunting in agricultural areas are seeing fewer opportunities for access each year. Our land-owning relatives are getting older or dying, lands are going on auction blocks, CRP is being pulled out for row cropping and what habitat is left (private and public) is hit hard by hunters looking for a place to call home.

However, some hope was seen last fall with the opening of Minnesota’s first Walk-In Access program with about 9,000 acres and 90 new properties available for public hunting.

The goal of the DNR had been to enroll 10,000 acres of walk-in access during the summer of 2011 but with a month-long legislative shutdown of the agency, just reaching 9,000 acres was quite an accomplishment. Even more encouraging was that 75% of the enrolled landowners opted for multi-year signups, so the DNR already has 6,000 acres pre-enrolled for 2012. 

Funding for 2012 has already been received by the DNR from the 2008 Federal Farm Bill and will provide 25,000 acres with about 250 more public hunting areas averaging 100 acres apiece in southwest Minnesota.

Now for the bad news, Minnesota’s walk-in access program comes to a screeching halt for year 2013 since the third year of Federal funding has been eliminated in Washington, D.C. by the U.S. House and Senate. Consequently, unless Minnesota comes up with its own funding of roughly $1 million, the 2013 DNR goal of 50,000 acres will not be met.  At a time when participation in the outdoors is being challenged by mind-entranced youth huddled over their Smart Phones, X-Boxes, Wii, and assorted computer games, it is up to us adults to work with legislators to see if this access program for the public’s benefit will continue.

Some of Minnesota’s sportsmen would rather fall on their swords than have any state lease program with landowners.  Their rationale is, “It’s better for the state to buy and own every acre rather than put money in a yearly lease.” However, prices often exceed $5,000 per acre for agricultural land, compared to $20 per acre (including signage and administration costs) for a yearly walk-in access lease. You have to scratch your head and rethink this all-or-nothing fee-title approach. Quite frankly, $1million doesn’t go that far nowadays when talking about land acquisition.

For the sake of comparison, let’s take an ultra-conservative view and say the poorest of the poor land that might be available for purchase is $3,000 per acre of rocky, sandy, hilly land that probably is better for pasture than farming.  You are looking at about $500,000 for a 160-acre parcel when you include miscellaneous expenses, such as appraisal, legal and site preparation fees.

Compare this purchase price of just one parcel of 160 acres to the same cost of leasing 250 parcels covering 25,000 acres of walk-in access and you have to wonder if there isn’t room for a modest walk-in program to complement ongoing fee-title purchases. While walk-in access is an annual lease program, it does provide a large amount of land to be signed up in a very short amount of time to service a very large number of hunters.  A walk-in property can be signed up in a matter or weeks, while the outright purchase of land often takes years.

In 2011, Minnesota saw 95,000 acres of CRP habitat lost because it was not reenrolled during the spring’s CRP signup. These acres will undoubtedly go under the plow in 2012.  That’s 95,000 acres fewer for hunting and wildlife production. In 2012, there are about 300,000 acres of CRP ready to expire.

We need to continue a walk-in program and keep what lands we can in habitat with those landowners that are willing to do so.  But we need to offset higher taxes with something— namely, public walk-in compensation.  Whether it is a robust $1-million-per year, ongoing program providing 50,000 acres and 500 walk-in areas, or a more modest $500,000-a-year providing 25,000 acres and 250 hunting areas, we need to continue the WIA program.

While the continued acquisition of land open to public hunting for wildlife management areas and waterfowl production areas should continue since it offers permanence on the landscape, we can’t ignore the sheer number of acres made available for public hunting in farmland areas via a state-leased WIA program. There is no reason we can’t have both. 

With the Legislature’s help, it may boil down to creating a new stamp for the price of a $10 or $12 box of shells in order to keep 25,000 acres and 250 new public hunting areas in the growing black desert of our farmland areas. This stamp would be optional; only those who want access to these walk-in areas would pay for the stamp in order to hunt these lands.

There are positive opportunities for Minnesota’s hunters in having a WIA program. Think it over. Is it worth a box of shells?

The author hosts the show Conservation Sportsman News seen on Metro Cable Television Channel 6. Readers may email him at This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it..

The show’s Web site is www.conservationsportsman.org.

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