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
Yearly Subscription: Waseca, Steele, and Freeborn counties: $52
Minnesota $57 • Out of state $64

Here we are, moving further and further into fall. Before we know it, we will be shoveling the white stuff once again. As I get ready to embrace the winter season, I have to wonder if the leaves will ever stop fluttering to the ground from the maples in my backyard. If I didn’t know that it was against natures plan, I’d swear that those trees are growing more leaves each and every day. The phrase “the gift that keeps on giving” — well this is the tree that keeps on giving.

This is the time of year when the hunters take to the woods and fields in search of deer. This year, the DNR predicted a very high deer population which should be good for those folks that hunt them. I have never been a deer hunter for whatever reason. But, I can definitely see why there are so many that do. For some, it’s about a trophy buck. For others, it’s all about the meat. Truthfully, I think the majority of the deer hunters hunt for tradition.

Deer hunting is a big part of our outdoor heritage in Minnesota. For many families, it has become a tradition that has been passed down for generations. I have witnessed first hand the camaraderie that exists among hunters in a deer camp. I don’t really think that there is another sport that bonds a group of sportsmen together like deer hunting.

A few years ago, I was lucky enough to go on the first Governor’s Deer Hunting opener and witness this first hand. Although I didn’t hunt, I rode along with some folks from the DNR when they checked deer camps to find out how hunters were faring. After talking to hunters of all ages, I came away with a new respect for these folks and what they enjoy about the sport. 

One 15-year old girl was walking out of the woods when we stopped to talk to her. She was pretty tired from walking, but was so proud that her family had brought her to her first ever deer camp.

There was another group of four hunters that had bagged three deer that day. They were in the process of dragging them out of the woods. They said that it was quite a thrill for the oldest member of the party, as he was the father of the three other hunters and had shot all three deer that day. They said that in past years, they had all shot deer, but their Dad had never gotten one while hunting with them. They seemed happier for him than if they’d gotten them themselves.

Another sight that I witnessed was a young father with his two small sons walking a trail on the edge of a woods, hoping for a deer to be scared out into the open. He was indeed in the process of starting his own family tradition.

Whether you hunt, fish or just enjoy spending time in the outdoors, sharing the experience with our youth is important to the preservation of the future of our outdoors. Preserving our Minnesota heritage through wildlife management and creating more habitat is important to the future generations. We need to get our youth interested in the outdoors now because they are the future of our outdoors.

I am glad that my grandsons have a real interest in the outdoors, whether it be hunting or fishing. I don’t think I’ll ever forget the smile on each of their faces when they caught their first fish.

One of the most positive things that we as citizens of this state have done to help preserve our outdoors heritage is voting for the Lessard-Sams bill. This has done much to help assure that there will be public land for us to enjoy for years to come.

With good news comes some bad news. There are always some folks out there that feel it is their “right” to take game out of season or take more than their limit. 

This past summer, I was fishing on a lake and noticed two guys casting which is not unusual, but I also noticed that they had bobbers floating not too far from their boat. I went close enough to them to make them feel uncomfortable. They soon laid their casting poles down in the boat. I’m sure only long enough for me to go past them and out of sight.

There are seemingly more and more people getting fined for fishing without a license. Is this just a slap on the hand or are they denied fishing privileges for a period of time? Then there are the over the limit guys or the taking game out of season guys that get fined and lose privileges for a time. All this is good when they are caught, but it doesn’t replace the game that they have taken. I would like to think that the money collected would be used for restocking or go to creating habitat. 

The following news release from the Minnesota DNR is just one story of hunting infractions that occur in our state.

Three cited for illegal hunting

Three individuals face multiple charges for allegedly illegally taking deer, according to the Minnesota Department of Natural Resources (DNR).

A DNR conservation officer (CO) and an 1854 Tribal Band game warden were contacted shortly after two men and a woman registered a deer at a convenience store in Virginia Oct. 12. The caller noticed a large amount of blood in the back of a vehicle owned by one of the suspects. One of the individuals was overheard bragging about shooting the deer from the truck with a crossbow.

“The caller thought that the amount of blood in the truck’s box could not have possibly come from one deer, so we started our investigation,” said CO Matt Frericks of Virginia.

The investigation uncovered illegal party hunting, lending/borrowing licenses, failure to register big game animals, and illegal taking of three deer. Fine and restitution amount total nearly $2,800 with other charges possible.

Formal charges will be filed against the three suspects shortly with the St. Louis County Attorney’s Office. The woman is an 1854 Tribal Band member who will face charges through the Band’s legal system.

Anyone witnessing wildlife or fishing law violations is encouraged to contact the nearest conservation officer or law enforcement agency, or call the toll-free Turn-In-Poachers (TIP) hotline at 800-652-9093. Also, #TIP is available to most cell phone users in Minnesota.


You have no rights to post comments