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PROVIDENCE, R.I. (AP) - Turkey hunting season is underway in Rhode Island. That doesn’t mean turkey bagging season has started.

The wild turkey is known as a wily bird. The animal, once scarce in Rhode Island, figures to pose a real challenge to hunters.

The season began a half hour before sunrise yesterday.

The spring season runs through May 28th.

It’s the state’s 23rd spring season. The wild turkey was nearly extinct in state in the early 19th century. State wildlife officials revived the population in 1980 with 29 transplanted birds. At the same time, neighboring Connecticut stocked border forests.

Now, the state’s wild turkey population is estimated at 6,000.

Citations for illegal baiting for turkeys before and during the annual spring gobbler season may be on the increase this year, according to Col. David Murphy, Law Enforcement Section Chief of the West Virginia Division of Natural Resources.

“We receive numerous reports of baited areas just prior to and during the early days of the spring gobbler season,” Murphy said in a news release. “For the the past few years, it seems to be more widespread. We urge anyone who has any information about turkey hunting over bait to report it by calling the West Virginia DNR Law Enforcement Section’s hotline number at (800) 638-4263 or a local district office. Illegal activity can also be reported to the Law Enforcement Section’s e-mail address: Law@wvdnr.gov.”

West Virginia law prohibits hunting, trapping or taking turkey by the aid of baiting on or over any baited area. Baiting is the placing, exposing, depositing, distributing or scattering of corn, wheat or other grain, or other feed so as to constitute for turkeys a lure or attraction to, on, or over any areas where hunters are attempting to take them. A baited area shall remain a baited area for 10 days following complete removal of all the baited materials.

The penalty for conviction of illegal baiting of wild turkey is a $20-$300 fine and/or 10-100 days in jail, plus $160.50 court cost.

COLUMBUS - September 1 will again kick off the state’s fall hunting seasons - with the opening of the squirrel-hunting season that runs through January 31 - under regulations approved Wednesday by the Ohio Wildlife Council.

Fall turkey hunters will enjoy expanded opportunities. They will be able to hunt the entire season, from October 11 through November 30, with a shotgun, muzzleloading shotgun, bow or crossbow. This new rule adds 35 days to the previous season for fall turkey gun hunting. Nine additional northeast Ohio counties will also be open for fall turkey hunting, bringing the total to 46 counties statewide.

Deer hunters can again buy additional antlerless deer permits at reduced prices for hunting in an urban zone, participating in a controlled hunt, or hunting during the September 27 to November 30 portion of the archery season. Deer hunters with antlerless permits can hunt in Zone C until December 7. Cost of the antlerless deer permit remains at $15.

As was the requirement last year, hunters must purchase a regular deer permit before purchasing antlerless deer permits. The permit system remains otherwise unchanged from last year: hunters may still take up to one additional antlerless deer in Zone A, up to two additional antlerless deer in Zone B and up to three additional antlerless deer in Zone C.

However, use of the antlerless deer permit during the first part of the statewide archery season and during deer-gun week in Zone C will not count against the hunter’s season bag limit for that zone. The sale of these permits will cease after November 30, so hunters need to commit early to buying and using the extra reduced-cost permits.

Archery season will run from Saturday, September 27 through Sunday, February 1, 2009. The popular youth deer-gun season is Saturday and Sunday, November 22-23. Regular deer-gun season will run Monday, December 1 through Sunday, December 7. The additional deer-gun hunting weekend is set for Saturday and Sunday, December 20 -21. Statewide muzzleloader season will run Saturday, December 27 through Tuesday, December 30. Special area muzzleloader hunts will be open Monday, October 20 through Saturday, October 25 at Salt Fork, Shawnee and Wildcat Hollow. Muzzleloader hunts at these areas will no longer require a special permit and hunters may use either deer permit for this hunt. The bag limit remains at one deer of either sex with any antlered deer harvested counting toward the one-buck yearly limit for the year.

The state’s three deer-hunting zones remain in place. A three-deer limit (Zone C) will cover 38 central, south, southeastern, and southwestern counties. The 30 mid-state counties of Zone B will have a two-deer limit, and the 20 northwestern counties of Zone A will have a one-deer limit. A hunter may take only one buck in Ohio, regardless of zone, hunting method or season.

Hunting and trapping seasons for rabbits, pheasants, quail, squirrel, grouse, fox, raccoon, mink, muskrat, beaver, river otter, crow and falconry were approved as proposed.

Rules for dove, Canada goose, rail, moorhen, snipe, and migratory waterfowl hunting, as well as those season dates, will be set in August, in compliance with the U.S. Fish & Wildlife Service’s 2008-09 framework.

Aproposal to push opening day for goose hunting at the Allegan Goose Management Unit from November to December is among several proposed changes to be discussed at a public meeting Thursday at the DNR’s Plainwell Operations Center.

State wildlife officials say Canada geese are migrating later in the season and fewer now stop over at the popular hunting grounds. The hunting season would be consolidated to take advantage of that timing and better align hunters with their presence. It also means other hunters can use the areas in November.

“We’ve found the (goose) hunter harvest is not as great as it was, so we’ve decided to consolidate, said John Lerg, the wildlife biologist for the Allegan State Game Area. “The resource there is changing.”

Some hunters are not pleased with the idea. The proposed changes effectively cause it to become a winter hunt, they say, not a season for those with fair-weather tastes.

“It’s a horrible decision,” said Dave Engle of Saugatuck, owner of Hunt Best Chance, a commercial goose hunting guide service that takes clients to the Allegan GMU. “The old guys can’t go out in the blowing snow and the kids don’t like to do it. It really limits the season to only hard-core hunters.”

But Lerg said the number of goose hunters is declining. Meanwhile, other hunters and wildlife observers are finding opportunities there.

Goose hunting was permitted at Allegan GMU from Nov. 24-Dec. 2 and Dec. 27- Jan. 31 last season. The season would open seven days earlier in December under the new rule to account for lost November days.

“It’s become obvious to us that there are a great number of hunting pastimes that don’t relate to managed goose hunting,” Lerg said. “We see more duck hunting, especially mallards, and we want to recognize the opportunity there.

“People also enjoy rabbit and coyote hunting. And there are a whole lot of people who just want to come out and look at wildlife.”

Consolidation is one of several changes being proposed on a three-year trial basis. The new rules would run through 2010 and then be evaluated.

Consolidation may, or may not, occur depending on hunter feedback, Lerg said. Some hunters have already expressed their support.

One issue expected to cause a stir Thursday is a proposal to hold afternoon hunts on Tuesday and Thursday, eliminating the traditional morning hunts on those days.

“It’s going to throw a wrinkle in things for some of the hunters,” said Maria Albright, a wildlife staffer at the Allegan State Game Area. “They have their morning strategies and this is going to change how they hunt.”

The change is being recommended because Canada geese do not leave their roosts until later in day during the dead of winter. It can be one or two o’clock, according to Albright. The GMU closes at 2 p.m.

“Why have hunters sit out there at 8 o’clock if the birds don’t move until one,” Albright said.

Engle thinks that decision will be good for hunters.

“In the late season it would be a good way to kill birds,” he said.

Thursday’s meeting will also provide a chance for hunters to discuss a decision to discontinue the seven day hunting closure/quiet period for Zones 2-8 at the GMU. That rule is one of several that went into effect on a temporary basis in 2005. The idea was to give geese a chance to settle down before the normal season opened.

‘We didn’t find their (flight and feeding) patterns changed the way we were told, meanwhile people who rabbit hunt and do other things said we’d closed the door on them,” Lerg said.

Other topics for Thursday include four temporary rule changes for 2008-2010. They are:

Reduce hunting pressure adjacent to the refuge by eliminating every other hunting area in the Zone portions adjacent to the refuge except Zone 6.

Reduce check station staff to 2 employees

Limit deer hunting on the refuge only to when the deer population warrants hunting

Stop assigning hunting blinds at the Bravo Unit.

If you go

Allegan Goose Management Unit Public Meeting

When: 7 p.m. Thursday, March 13

Time: 7 p.m.

Where: Plainwell Operations Service Center, 621 N. 10th St. Plainwell, MI

HELENA, Mont. (AP) - Archery hunting in Montana’s Missouri Breaks area will be limited under a regulation adopted today by state wildlife commissioners.

The Breaks area is renowned for trophy elk.

Archery hunting there was a leading issue as the Montana Fish, Wildlife and Parks Commission took up regulations for hunting an array of wildlife species statewide.

In some of the Breaks hunting districts, archery by Montana residents and nonresidents has been unlimited even though the Department of Fish, Wildlife and Parks limits rifle hunting there.

Although the number of elk permits issued this year will be 100% of the previous three years’ average, the availability of permits for nonresidents could decrease, depending on resident demand. In 2009, the total number of permits will be 75% of the previous three years’ average.

Suitable duck hunting gun

In order to choose the most suitable duck hunting gun hunters must take many aspects into consideration like: functionality, durability, technology and of course, price. In this article we will make brief reviews about 5 guns recommended for duck hunting, we will order them by popularity.

The most popular duck hunting gun is the Remington 870 Pump Shotgun. The reason why this gun is so popular among hunting enthusiasts all over the world is because its ability to withstand some of the most harsh weather conditions. This weapon is considered to be the workhorse of the shotguns compartment. We will offer you specifications about one of the 870 models available on the market, the 870 Wingmaster:

Designation: Model 870 Wingmaster
Type: Autoloading Shotgun
Manufacturer: Remington – USA
Country of Origin: United States
Operation: Autoloading Shotgun
Caliber: 12 / 16 / 20 gauge
Service Year: 1950
Weight (Empty): 7 lbs (3.2 kg)
Magazine: 5-Round Tubular Magazine

Second place: the Beretta 391 Shotgun which is one of the most reliable shotguns available on the market; it cycles very fast making it very recommended for duck hunting. All Beretta’s gas operated semi-automatic shotguns are based on the same action, the 391 model. Built in a wide variety of variations, including one that handles the blonky 12 gauge 3.5″ magnum shells, this action is remarkably versatile. Add to this the good looks and the reliability that Beretta weapons are famous for, you know have the almost perfect choice. We will offer you specifications about one of the 391 models available on the market, the AL 391:

Distributor: Beretta
Model: AL 391
Operation: Gas Operated Autoloader
Gauge: 12 or 20
Barrel Length: 24. 26. 28, 30, 32 in.
Overall Length: 51 in. (28-inch barrel)
Weight: 5.9 pounds (20 gauge); 7.8 (12 gauge Xtrema2
Safety: Crossbolt
Sights: Vent rib with TruGlo
Stock: Walnut, synthetic, or X-tra Wood
Length of Pull: 14.7 inches
Magazine Capacity: 2 (plugged), 3 (unplugged) rounds
Finish: Blued, matte black, camo metal; black, camo, semigloss, oil stock

Third place: the Browning Citori Shotgun, one of the most beautiful shotguns out there. This gun swings like no other gun can and based on what we have read about it but also practiced around with, is a wise choice for duck hunting the next year. If you have the possibility give it a try, we assure you that you won’t regret. We will offer you specifications about one of the Browning Citori models, the XT Trap:

Model: Citori XT Trap with Adjustable Comb
Gauge: 12
Barrel Length: 32”
Nominal Overall Length: 49”
Nominal Length of Pull: 14 3/8”
Nominal Drop at Comb: 1 11/16”
Nominal Drop at Heel: 1 15/16”Nominal Weight: 8lbs. 13 oz.
Chokes Included: Improved Modified, Full
Chamber Size: 2 3/4”
Rib Width: 1/4 – 3/8” Tapered
Wood Finish: Gloss Finish
Stock / Grip: Walnut
Additional Description: Adjustable Comb, Two Full Chokes

Fourth place: the Benelli Super Black Eagle II, according to Benelli the all new trademarked Comforttech system reduces recoil up to 48% better than other competitive systems. The Super Black Eagle II model uses the proven Benelli Inertia Driven bolt mechanism that allows the weapon to shoot 2 ¾”, 3″ and even 3½” magnum ammunition without adjustments. In addition, the Super Black Eagle II incorporates some basic improvements like a drilled and tapped receiver. We will offer you specifications about the standard Super Black Eagle II model:

Mechanics: Inertial semi-automatic Benelli with variable geometry trigger release unit
Gauge: 12
Receiver Finish: Ergal, black anodised
Stock and Fore-End: Selected walnut
Stock Length Trigger Measured / Deviation: 360mm / rh and lh adjustable
Drop At Heel: 55 mm adjustable to 50, 60 and 64 on request
Drop At Comb: 36,5 mm
Recoil Pad: Rubber
Magazine Capacity: 3 Magnum cartr., 4 standard cartr., with 2-rounds plug on request
Safety: Larger, transversal with red “ arm ready for shooting “ signal
Weight: 3,000 gr approx

Last place: the Browning BPS Stalker which gets rid of those annoying spent shells in a way that make sense to all respectable water fowlers. This is a rugged machine created to shoot at any visible waterfowl. Some of the features of this shotgun include: receiver, forged and machined steel, barrel – ventilated rib, dual steel action bars, matte black finish and others as well. We will offer you specifications about the regular BPS Stalker:

Model: BPS Stalker
Gauge: 12
Magazine Capacity: 4
Barrel Length: 28”
Nominal Overall Length: 49 ¼”
Nominal Length of Pull: 14 ¼”
Nominal Drop at Comb: 1 ½”
Nominal Drop at Heel: 2 ½”
Nominal Weight: 8 lbs. 5 oz.
Chokes Included: Full, modified, improved cylinder
Chamber Size: 3 ½”
Wood Finish: Matte Black
Stock/Grip: Composite

We have offered you 5 weapon models that are recommended by both amateur and professional hunters all around the world. The choice is up to you, with a little bit of research you can find the most suitable duck hunting gun for you.

Ohio’s deer hunters performed surprisingly well during the first seven days of the gun-deer season, which ended Sunday, checking in a statewide bag of 103,195 whitetails.

While that tally shows some slippage from the 111,672 from the same period in 2006, it is almost remarkable given a week of some of the worst possible hunting conditions. Cold steady rain marked the beginning and ending days of the period, and three of the middle days were marked by woods carpeted with noisy Frosted Flakes and Corn Flakes.

The latter terms are explained thusly: Heavy overnight frosts and freezing temperatures left the leave layers crunchy and hard to tread upon stealthily until midday, then after a brief thaw and leaves quickly turned crackly after being wind and sun-dried. Either way, unless hunters moved with the speed of molasses in January, with frequent stops, deer were certain to pick up on their tromping long before detection by hunter eyes or ears.

In any case, most observers and participants expected a much lower bag. Among them was Mike Tonkovich, state deer biologist.

“I was pleased, to say the least,” he said, noting many comments to his office about seemingly nonexistent hunting pressure. Some staffers had expected a statewide bag as low as 80,000 to 90,000 deer because of the weather.

Actually, because of record bags in the first six weeks of archery season and the record gun-deer kill in the youth weekend, last week’s take has led to an all-seasons running total on deer that is about 1,800 ahead of last year’s record pace at 167,965.

“I think we’ll be 4,000 to 5,000 ahead when we see the interim archery harvest between the first six weeks and Thanksgiving,” Tonkovich said. He has said that one of the changes in Ohio deer hunting over recent years is a redistribution of hunting effort to archery and other special seasons rather than reliance solely on the “shotgun” week.

With another weekend of deer-gun hunting in store for Dec. 15 and 16, archery season continuing through Feb. 3, and statewide muzzleloader season to run Dec. 27-30, the biologist is optimistic that a forecast all-seasons bag of 240,000 to 250,000 deer still is possible. That would exceed last year’s record total of 237,316.

Tonkovich said that with ideal weather, the Dec. 15-16 bag could easily be 25,000 to 40,000 deer. A county-by-county listing of the gun week bag is available on-line at www.ohiodnr.com. The totals in most northwest Ohio counties ended up exceeding the 2006 figures.

The season was marred by 11 shooting incidents, one of them fatal, five of them self-inflicted including the fatality. The latter occurred in Coshocton County opening day. That total compares with nine incidents, four of them self-inflicted and one of them a fatality, in 2006. Each year more than 400,000 hunters participate in the deer-gun season.

JEFFERSON CITY-Hunters checked 10,857 turkeys during Missouri’s 2007 fall firearms turkey season, the lowest number in more than 20 years.

This was the third year that Missouri’s fall firearms turkey hunt spanned the entire month of October. The harvest fell 1,070 or 9 percent short of last year’s.

Top harvest counties were Laclede with 252 turkeys checked, Franklin with 247 and Wright with 224. The Missouri Department of Conservation recorded one firearms-related fall turkey hunting accident.

Unregulated hunting nearly wiped out wild turkeys in Missouri by the 1930s. Missouri citizens put their foot down in 1936, when they voted to amend the state constitution and give sole authority for game management to a four-person Conservation Commission. Well-enforced, science-based game laws were among the citizen commission’s first priorities.

Also high on the new Conservation Department to-do list was restoration of game animals. The agency brought back the wild turkey by trapping birds in isolated pockets where they had survived and releasing them in areas where citizens promised to protect them from poaching. By 1960 the flock had grown large enough to sustain a spring hunt in some areas. The first fall hunt came in 1978.

Participation in the spring and fall seasons grew as the state’s turkey flock burgeoned. However, interest in fall hunting reached a plateau in the late 1980s and then began to wane. The fall turkey harvest peaked in 1987, when hunters harvested 28,139 turkeys in two weeks of hunting. Sales of fall turkey permits also peaked that year, at 52,922. Hunters killed approximately one bird for every two permits sold that year. This 50-percent success rate is slightly inflated, since an undetermined number of landowners hunted legally on their property without permits.

Resident and nonresident fall turkey hunting permit sales totaled a little more than 20,000 this year. Hunters had a full month to pursue turkeys with guns. The success rate, again not counting those who hunted with free landowner permits, was about 58 percent.

The novelty of fall turkey hunting boosted the season’s early popularity. The newness gradually wore off, however, and liberalization of other October hunting seasons lured hunters into other pursuits. Fall firearms turkey hunting permit sales have declined by 62 percent since 1987.

For Houston waterfowl hunters, the adults anyway, there is no special season or managed lands permit or other means by which to get an early start. Kids got a crack at the quacks this weekend, but for the rest of us, duck and geese seasons open simultaneously at precisely 30 minutes before sunrise Saturday.

The resultant rush, both to public and private hunting areas, is understandable. Regardless of general prospects — better for ducks this year than for geese — there is something legitimately special about hearing and seeing waterfowl in the air on the first morning that really counts. Even that first Sunday, 24 hours removed from the tipoff, is not the same.

But don’t count your ducks before they decoy because opening day is not in any way synonymous with a heavy strap.

Rain or shine, the first Saturday of the season always is crowded. Small-town coffee shops and breakfast houses on the prairies east and west of Houston will be jammed. It is in those places that hunters meet their guides, earlier in some cases than either of them has risen since January. Once bellies are filled and balances paid, the groups caravan in all directions.

And as light gathers in the east, many of those folks will discover that for all the driving they did, they’re not a whole lot farther from the next group than they were at breakfast.

Still popular in area
Waterfowl hunting around Houston snowballed in popularity through the final quarter of the 20th century. It peaked at some point in the 1990s, just before pintail numbers dropped through the floor, rice prices did the same and developers began pouring slabs across one of North America’s most finest wintering areas.

The prairie continues to be divided and subdivided, but most of the birds find their way here — and will until their genetic compasses can be rewired.

Despite setbacks, the sport remains extremely popular and even marginally profitable here for those whose livelihoods depend on it. Most every available acre of legitimate waterfowl habitat is leased or subleased by folks who appreciate wild wings, and they’ll all be out for opening day.

Similar situations can occur also on public hunting areas, such as the state’s Wildlife Management Areas and federally managed refuges, but those areas are monitored carefully to minimize overlaps.

Public ground or private, it isn’t uncommon on the opener and again at major holidays for hunting parties to suffer “waterfowler’s claustrophobia,” the sensation that other groups are uncomfortably close.

Phone calls, handshakes and common courtesy can reduce risk of two groups essentially working the same flights of ducks or geese, but any time hunting groups can wave at each other and be acknowledged, things can go awry.

Patience a must
On opening day, should you find yourself close enough to hear distinctly the calling (or worse, conversation) from nearby spreads or blinds, expect and accept some missed opportunities. Know that those other guys are going to wind up shooting a couple of times just as you’re working birds close — and that they’ll get burned equally when floaters hang over your decoys.

Solitude in duck blinds and grain fields within a two-hour drive of Houston is available, but only on freezing Tuesdays in January. Prime ground on the prairies is like favored tables in popular restaurants: always full.

Rather than curse their neighbors, veteran waterfowl hunters learn they can be used to advantage.

Unless I knew the guys next door were led by an ace caller whose hunters went statue-still as he worked incoming flights, company seldom bothered me through 14 years as a professional guide.

I had confidence in my ability to set a good spread and conceal my crew. That is critical in a crowded area.

Around here, for November duck hunts, stack your rig with more teal, wigeon and gadwall decoys — you do own gadwall decoys, don’t you? Dust off the mallards and full-plumed pintails, but don’t add many of them to the spread until mid-December.

A proper goose spread before Thanksgiving should include a high percentage of dark decoys, perhaps more of them than white ones until snow geese show in appreciable numbers. Even the light geese that are here know they’re in the minority. Specklebellies dominate now, and Canadas will be last to arrive.

Limiting calls good strategy
A setup of 500 new snow goose decoys and six dozen plastic greenheads might look good to you or me, but it wouldn’t fool many early-season birds on the Texas coast. They’d likely lock a wing and head your way for a closer look, but chances are good under decent light the birds never would fly into shooting range.

Another pro trick that works almost any time or anywhere that several groups of hunters are within earshot of each other is to minimize calling. David Lobpries, one of the Texas Parks and Wildlife Department’s most respected waterfowl biologists for decades, described duck calls to me years ago as the “greatest conservation tool ever.”

When artificial quacks and honks rip the air all around you, consider letting your calls hang quietly. Nervous birds don’t “talk” much, but they pay attention to realistic spreads.

Make sure everyone is hidden, something else with which many opening-day hunters have trouble, and let birds work at their pace.

If you must call, do so sparingly. Better to say nothing at all than to scream the wrong message.

There has to be an opening day, and it’s going to be crowded.

Like the same-day opening of deer season, this is a major event. Make the most of it.

Duck season begins in the Texas North and South Duck Zones on Nov. 3. Duck hunters have just one weekend in which to scout for an opening day hot spot.

Texas Parks and Wildlife waterfowl biologist Kevin Kraai says scouting is particularly important this year. A soggy spring and summer dramatically changed the landscape around Dallas. Before the rains, many lake levels had dropped to historic lows.

Those lakes are now full, but so is every stock tank and private lake from the Rolling Plains northwest of Dallas to the brush country of deep South Texas. Kraai said the only region of Texas experiencing problems with surface water is the Panhandle, where shallow playa lakes are drying up.

“It’s been at least a decade since we’ve seen the water situation this good in Texas,” Kraai said. “I was in Canada two weeks ago, and I can tell you that the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service count is correct – there are lots of ducks headed this way.

“Not only was there a good overall duck hatch, the species that had the best production are those species particularly important to Texas hunters. Shovelers are at a record high. Gadwalls, widgeons, blue-winged teal and green-winged teal are near record numbers. There are plenty of mallards in the migration.”

Kraai, himself a serious duck hunter, is concerned with how warm the weather has been in Canada. If Canada isn’t bitter cold by Halloween, duck hunters there get the early-season treats and U.S. hunters can consider themselves tricked by Mother Nature.

The other concern for Dallas-area hunters is excellent habitat conditions in the Rolling Plains. Kraai considers that region to be the nation’s largest waterfowl refuge. It has plenty of high-quality waterfowl habitat and little human intrusion. The same could be said for South Texas, where most fall hunting pressure is directed toward deer and quail.

Where should Dallas hunters scout for an opening day hot spot? I asked Kraai to rank public lakes and wildlife management areas within a 100-mile radius of the city. Here are his top picks:

■ Lake Texoma. This huge lake on the Red River flyway is a perennial favorite for ducks and duck hunters. Kraai said the Red River itself is one of the most productive duck magnets in the entire state. At Texoma, the primary hunting occurs on the mud flats at the upper end of the lake.

■ Cooper Lake. After the lake level dropped so low that boat ramps were unusable last year, Cooper is again full. Thousands of acres of flooded vegetation could make this lake east of Dallas the area’s best hunting spot. Alas, Kraai expects the high water to be temporary as Cooper is stressed by urban water demands.

■ White Oak Creek Wildlife Management Area. This one may be slightly outside the 100-mile radius, but it’s worth the drive. The 25,777-acre WMA has both the Sulphur River and White Oak Creek and lies between Cooper Lake and Wright Patman Lake.

■ Richland Creek Wildlife Management Area. Kraai credits WMA manager Jeff Gunnels and his staff with creating one of the region’s top duck hunting spots near Richland Chamber Lake. The bad news is that Richland Creek gets uncomfortably crowded with hunters, creating a potentially frustrating experience.

■ Lake Tawakoni, near Wills Point, is a perennial favorite for Dallas-area duck hunters. It, too, has been helped by high water levels, as has Lake Ray Roberts, north of Denton. Ray Roberts has crowding issues, but it’s a big lake and holds plenty of ducks.

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