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July 13, 2007 - TOP STORIES
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New slot in effect on Mille Lacs Lake

Changes for 07 deer season

DNR accepting applications for Camp Ripley archery hunts

Apply now for prairie chicken, fall turkey hunts

Lindy’s big fish still loves angling

New slot in effect on Mille Lacs Lake
New regulation will reduce walleye harvest at Lake Mille Lacs

DNR News
Due to better-than-expected walleye fishing on Lake Mille Lacs, the Department of Natural Resources (DNR) will implement a new regulation to limit harvest so that the total walleye kill, including hooking mortality, stays within the allowable safe harvest level.
Effective July 9, anglers who fish Lake Mille Lacs will be able to keep only walleye that are at least 14 inches and no more than 16 inches in length, plus one walleye 28 inches or larger. The four-fish bag limit will remain the same. The regulations are slated to be relaxed on Dec. 1.
“The hot bite has been great,” said DNR Commissioner Mark Holsten, “but unprecedented fishing pressure, higher than anticipated catch rates and higher-than-normal hooking mortality due to unusually warm water temperatures compel us to take this conservation action.”
Lake Mille Lacs is managed differently than any other lake in Minnesota. Its safe harvest level is set following meetings between the DNR and Chippewa Indian bands that signed the 1837 Treaty. Fisheries biologists have estimated that 549,000 pounds of walleye can be safely harvested from Mille Lacs this year. The eight bands set their harvest at 100,000 pounds, leaving 449,000 pounds for nonband anglers.
As of June 30, the nonband walleye kill is estimated at 384,000 pounds. This number is based on daytime creel surveys. It includes the number of fish that angler’s keep plus those estimated to die after being released. Night harvest, which started June 11, and winter and summer tournament mortality are estimated separately. They add an estimated 50,000 pounds to that total. That puts the total kill at about 434,000 pounds, which is within 15,000 pounds of the nonband anglers’ 449,000-pound allocation.
“We hoped the hot bite would cool a bit but that hasn’t happened,” said Holsten. “In fact, fishing pressure in the last half of June was at 372,000 angler-hours, the highest level ever recorded for that period.” He said the agency considered many different regulation options before settling on the 14- to 16-inch harvest slot.
“Our options were limited,” said Holsten. “We are only 15,000 pounds below our allocation and 114,000 pounds below an agreed upon maximum allowable kill that would close walleye fishing. As such, we need to stretch the harvest out over the next five months of open water fishing or risk closing the fishery.”
Though Mille Lacs walleye fishing has never been closed due to high harvest, the DNR did make a similar mid-season regulation change in 2001 to avoid such a drastic action. The current regulation, which ends this Sunday at midnight, allows anglers to keep four walleye up to 20 inches in length, with not more than one over 28 inches.
Ron Payer, DNR fisheries chief, said a lot of what the DNR is seeing this year has never been seen before. Boat traffic and launch fishing pressure are about double the norm. Near shore water temperatures averaged 72 degrees in the last half of June, which is exceptionally warm.
“Water temperature is meaningful because higher temps translate into higher mortality, especially when fish are caught in deeper water,” said Payer. “We’ve had about 90,000 pounds of hooking mortality this year and most of those pounds came from fish between 20 and 28 inches in length.” Payer encouraged Mille Lacs anglers to exercise voluntary restraint, noting that even catch-and-release fishing has consequences to the fish numbers and regulations. He also encouraged anglers to take steps that help fish survive. These include setting the hook quickly, releasing fish quickly and cutting the line on deep-hooked fish.
“This is a good news, bad news story,” said Payer. “The good news is that fishing is great. The bad news is it’s too good.” Payer said he expects the fishing to continue to be good and encouraged anglers to keep Mille Lacs in their fishing plans. “Mille Lacs is a great destination regardless of the regulation,” he said. “In addition to walleye, it offers top-notch muskie, northern pike and smallmouth bass fishing.”
Statewide, walleye fishing has been good this year. Anglers have been doing well on big walleye lakes - Lake of the Woods, Cass, Winnibigoshish, Vermillion and Red, for example - though fishing pressure has been down in some places, especially Red Lake due to high winds and large waves. There is some speculation that higher gas prices have prompted Twin Cities anglers to fish closer to home, thereby favoring Mille Lacs over more distant walleye waters.
As required by state rule, the DNR has posted the new Mille Lacs regulation on its web site. The new regulations became effective at 12:01 a.m., July 9.

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Changes for 07 deer season
Minnesota DNR is changing all-season deer license

The Minnesota Department of Natural Resources (DNR) is changing the all-season deer license to reduce the harvest of antlerless deer in certain areas of the state.
Other changes for the upcoming season include simplification of deer bag limits, expanded early antlerless deer hunting, a bovine tuberculosis (TB) disease management area in the northwest, some permit area boundary changes, an opportunity to purchase leftover lottery permits, and expanded archery and muzzleloader seasons in the Arrowhead region.
For the first time, all-season license holders hunting in lottery areas during the late muzzleloader season will need antlerless permits to take antlerless deer. In 2006, more than 75,000 Minnesota deer hunters purchased an all-season deer license, which allows hunters to take up to three deer during the archery, regular firearms, and muzzleloader seasons. The rapid increase in popularity of the all-season license and its use during the muzzleloader season has led to tremendous increases in unregulated antlerless deer harvest. In lottery areas where antlerless deer harvest must be closely managed, this additional unregulated antlerless harvest is pushing populations below goal levels.
“While deer populations throughout much of Minnesota are at historic highs, we are seeing declines in some farmland areas despite the lottery system and reductions in firearm either-sex permits,” said Lou Cornicelli, big game program coordinator. “As an agency, we’ve promoted the all-season license and fully support the flexibility it gives our hunters. However, in some areas of the state we are seeing harvest rates on antlerless deer that just can’t be sustained.”
Consequently, the DNR will adopt regulations that limit the number and type of deer all-season license holders can take. Cornicelli added,
“The alternative in lottery areas would have been bucks only for all hunters and given our emphasis on youth recruitment, we are trying to avoid that situation.” A bucks-only regulation would curtail all antlerless harvest for everyone hunting in the area, including youth. Bringing the bulk of the antlerless deer harvest back under the control of a lottery permitting system is also a less restrictive way to accomplish management goals than bucks-only hunting.
This year, all-season license holders who hunt in lottery areas during either the regular firearms or the muzzleloader season must apply for an either-sex permit by Sept. 6 if they wish to harvest an antlerless deer in either season. Successful applicants can use the permit to take an antlerless deer during any of the open seasons. Unsuccessful all-season license holder applicants and those who purchase their all-season license after the application deadline will be restricted to bucks only during the firearm and muzzleloader seasons within lottery areas.
Hunters who purchase the regular muzzleloader season license (license code 212-ML) can still take a deer of either-sex without participating in the lottery. Cornicelli added, “regular muzzleloader hunters account for a very small percentage of overall antlerless harvest and at this time do not need to be included in the lottery. However, we will be closely monitoring all antlerless harvest and may need to impose further restrictions in lottery areas in the future if these measures are unsuccessful.”
The regulation should result in improved management of antlerless deer taken in lottery areas and lead to increases in the deer population in those areas. All-season hunters can still take an antlerless deer during the archery season without applying; however, the total bag limit is one deer per year in lottery areas.
The following additional changes begin to take effect with the Sept. 15 opening of archery deer hunting. Firearms deer hunting begins statewide on Nov. 3 and the muzzleloader season starts Nov. 24.

BAG LIMITS
Minnesota has three tiers for managing deer areas: lottery, managed, and intensive. This year, the bag limits have been simplified and there will be no deviations based on license types. In lottery areas, the bag limit will be one deer per year, managed areas will have a bag limit of two, and intensive areas will have a bag limit of five. These bag limits are the total allowed per individual hunter per year, and apply regardless of the season or method of take - whether by regular firearms, muzzleloader or archery.

MUZZLELOADER SEASON
All-season license holders will need to apply by Sept. 6 if they wish to take an antlerless deer during the muzzleloader season. However, regular muzzleloader hunters (license code 212-ML) will not need to apply because their license will remain either sex. The two license types are being differentiated because hunters licensed for just the muzzleloader season kill only one-tenth of the deer that are taken by all-season hunters in the muzzleloader season. Limiting the type of deer that could be taken by regular muzzleloader license holders would not result in significantly decreased antlerless deer harvest rates, so they will not be included in the lottery process at this time.

LEFTOVER LOTTERY PERMITS
In some areas there are leftover lottery permits after the drawing. This year, remaining permits will be available for purchase at 5 p.m. on Monday, Oct. 15 to all hunters. The permits will be available on a first come, first served basis. Hunters will need to have a valid license or purchase one at the time.

NEW BOVINE TB AREA, SEASON AND ANTERLESS PERMIT
For 2007, a new deer area (area 101) has been created in northwest Minnesota based on the proximity of deer identified with bovine TB. The boundary is defined by roads and inclusive of all bovine TB positive animals identified to date. The area will be in the Zone 1 season framework (16 days) and will also be included in the two day early antlerless season. A special antlerless permit, valid in the bovine TB area, will also be available. This disease management permit will be antlerless only and available for the cost of issuance ($2.50). An unlimited number of deer can be taken in this area but hunters are limited to the statewide regulation of one buck per year. All deer taken in the area must be registered prior to leaving the area. Additional information will be in the 2007 hunting synopsis and a map will be posted on the DNR Web site.

DEER AREA BOUNDARY CHANGES
Boundaries of some deer areas in northwestern Minnesota have been changed. The change does not affect hunting opportunity because all the areas will remain in Zone 2. These changes were made to better align the areas with habitat type and deer management objectives. The changed areas have been renumbered so prior to buying a license, hunters are advised to consult the map so they know which number to indicate.

EARLY ANTERLESS FIREARM DEER SEASON
This year, the early antlerless season has been expanded to include 22 deer areas (up from eight). The two-day October antlerless only firearms hunt will be open in deer areas 101 (except Hayes Lake State Park), 105, 157, 184 (except the Bemidji State Game Refuge), 209, 210, 214, 221, 222, 225, 227, 236, 241 243, 244, 256, 257, 260, 261, 265, 346, 349, and 601. The hunt will be held Oct. 13-14.
Hunters need a valid firearms license for the zone and may purchase up to two early antlerless deer permits for use only during the special antlerless season. Two deer may be taken in the special antlerless season and are in addition to the statewide bag limit of five. The price of the early antlerless permit is $6.50 (plus a $1 issuing fee). Last year, 6,300 hunters harvested 2,300 antlerless deer in eight early antlerless deer areas.

METRO DEER ZONE
Deer areas 228 and 337 have been combined and renumbered as deer area 601, also known as the Metro Deer Zone. Like last year, any deer license is valid in this area. Hunters who typically purchase a Zone 2 license for deer area 228 should continue to buy a Zone 2 license. They would simply indicate 601 as the permit area hunted most often. Similarly, hunters who traditionally purchased either a Zone 3A or 3B license to hunt area 337 should continue to purchase their traditional license and indicate 601 as their primary deer area.

ARROWHEAD DEER HUNTING
This year, deer areas 116, 126, and 127 will be open to late season archery and muzzleloader hunting. Previously, these areas have been closed before the end of the statewide seasons to protect wintering deer. The results of DNR’s deer population goal setting project indicated an interest in reducing these deer populations below current levels. DNR will continue to use hunting as the primary tool to manage deer populations within goal ranges. Putting these areas into the statewide archery and muzzleloader season framework should result in additional deer harvest and increases in local hunting opportunity.
This year’s deer regulation changes, which primarily affect hunters whose licenses allow the most hunting opportunity, are part of an effort to manage deer within goal population levels that have been established through an extensive public process. Long-term, the DNR aims to simplify deer hunting regulations. This year’s bag limit change is an example of simplifying regulations based on the type of deer management area.
“For hunters, this year’s changes mean more opportunity to harvest antlerless deer in some areas, such as the early antlerless hunting season, and some restrictions on antlerless harvest in other areas, such as lottery areas,” Cornicelli said. “Across Minnesota, hunting is the primary tool for managing deer population. Regulation changes and refinements allow for varying hunting opportunities and sustainable deer populations.”

All of the changes will be in the 2007 hunting synopsis, which will be available at all 1,800 businesses that sell hunting and fishing licenses across Minnesota.

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DNR accepting applications for Camp Ripley archery hunts

The Minnesota Department of Natural Resources (DNR) has begun accepting applications for the 2007 regular archery deer hunts at Camp Ripley near Little Falls. Hunters may pick from only one of two hunting seasons, Oct. 18-19 (code 668) or Oct. 27-28 (code 669). A total of 5,000 permits, 2,500 per two-day hunt, will be made available.
Hunters may apply for the Camp Ripley deer hunts at any of the 1,700 businesses that sell fishing and hunting licenses across Minnesota, online at www.dnr.state.mn.us or by calling toll-free 1-888-665-4236. Applications may also be made at the DNR License Center in St. Paul. The application fee for the hunt is $8 per applicant. The deadline to apply is Aug. 17. Those who apply by phone or Internet will be charged an additional convenience fee of $3.50 per transaction. This year, participants will be allowed to use bonus permits and take up to two deer during their hunt.
To apply, resident and nonresident hunters will need one of the following: a valid state driver’s license or state issued identification card with current address, a firearms safety certificate number, or a MDNR number found on a recent Minnesota fishing and hunting license. It is important the identification card used reflects the current mailing address; this is where your winning notification will be sent if you are successful in the computer preference drawing. Applicants must be at least 12 years of age prior to Oct. 18, 2007. In addition, anyone born on or after January 1, 1980, must have a firearms safety certificate, a previous hunting license, or other evidence of successfully completing a hunter safety course to obtain a license to hunt or trap in Minnesota.
Hunters applying for a permit will be asked a series of questions. It is recommended that they prepare for these questions by completing a worksheet prior to making an application. Hunt Application Worksheets are available on the DNR’s Web site, from the DNR License Center or from an ELS agent. Hunters may apply as individuals or as a group, up to four individuals. Group members may only apply for the same two-day season.
The archery hunt at Camp Ripley is an annual event. The DNR coordinates the hunt with the Department of Military Affairs, which manages the 53,000-acre military reservation.

Apply now for archery deer hunt at new wildlife management area
The Minnesota Department of Natural Resources (DNR) is accepting applications from archery hunters who wish to hunt the newly established Vermillion Highlands Research Recreation and Wildlife Management Area (WMA) in Dakota County.
Thirty permits will be drawn for the archery hunt, which will be held Sept. 15-Nov. 2 on portions of the 2,840-acre WMA. This multi-use WMA being managed in cooperation with the University of Minnesota and Dakota County.
Application forms are available by calling (651) 772-7983 or online at www.dnr.state.mn.us/hunting/deer/index.html
Completed application should be mailed by Aug. 17 to: Vermillion Highlands Archery Hunt, DNR Regional Wildlife Office, 1200 Warner Road, St. Paul, MN 55106.
Successful hunters will be drawn at random and notified by mail. All successful hunters must attend a mandatory orientation session and additional details will be sent with notification.

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Apply now for prairie chicken, fall turkey hunts

Hunters who wish to apply for one of 182 permits for the 2007 Minnesota prairie chicken season or for one of 4,490 permits for the fall turkey hunt must do so by July 27. Applications are available wherever hunting and fishing licenses are sold.

PRAIRIE CHICKEN SEASON
The five-day prairie chicken season, which will begin on Oct. 20, is open to Minnesota residents only. Hunters will be charged a $4 application fee and may apply individually or in groups up to four. Prairie chicken licenses cost $20.
The hunt will be held in 11 prairie chicken quota areas in west-central Minnesota between Warren to the north and Breckenridge to the south. Up to 20 percent of the permits in each area will be issued to landowners or tenants of 40 acres or more of prairie or grassland property within the permit area for which they applied.
The season bag limit is two prairie chickens per hunter. Licensed prairie chicken hunters will also be allowed to take sharp-tailed grouse while legally hunting prairie chickens. Sharptails and prairie chickens are similar looking species and the general closure on taking sharp-tailed grouse by small game hunters in this area is to protect prairie chickens. Licensed prairie chicken hunters who wish to take sharptails must meet all regulations and licensing requirements for taking sharp-tailed grouse.
Minnesota’s prairie chicken population has increased substantially and now stands at more than 1,760 adult males. The DNR expects more than four times that number of birds in the fall population. Prairie restoration and protection programs have helped stabilize the bird’s population in recent years. The restoration of a regulated prairie chicken hunting season has helped build awareness and support for protecting and enhancing prairie and grassland habitats, according to the DNR.

FALL TURKEY SEASON
Applications for this year’s fall turkey hunt are also being accepted at ELS vendors across Minnesota. Fall turkey hunters may apply for one of 4,490 permits to hunt in one of 33 permit areas from Oct. 17-21 or Oct. 24-28. The application fee is $3. The license costs $18 for residents and $73 for nonresidents. A $5 stamp validation is also required for turkey hunters 18 years of age or older.
The deadline for applications for both the prairie chicken and fall turkey hunts is July 27. Application worksheets and maps of permit areas for both hunts are available on the DNR Web site at www.dnr.state.mn.us. Successful applicants will be notified by mail and must purchase their permit at an ELS vendor.

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Lindy’s big fish still loves angling

By Dennis Anderson
Star Tribune of Minneapolis

GARRISON, Minn. (AP) – Ted Takasaki didn’t grow up in Minnesota and didn’t fish much as a kid. His family didn’t even own a boat.
“When we fished, we fished from shore,” he said. Not so anymore.
Late the other afternoon, Takasaki headed onto Mille Lacs in a craft that could compete with the space shuttle for its complexity.
A large-screen GPS and a similarly outsized electronic fish locator vied for Takasaki’s attention from the captain’s chair, while in the bow were more gizmos still, including a motor-operated underwater camera.
The platform – a 21-foot Ranger powered by a big Merc – was even more dazzling.
All to catch a walleye or two.
“The competition is getting better all the time,” Takasaki said, referring to anglers he fishes against on a professional walleye circuit. “The young guys really know their electronics.”
Takasaki, 49, isn’t just any pro bait-dragger. He’s president of Lindy Little Joe, the storied Minnesota lure manufacturer whose namesake product – the Lindy Rig – has been wildly popular among freshwater anglers since its development in the 1960s.
The Lindner brothers, Al and Ron, often are given credit for creating the sliding-sinker outfit that came to be known as the Lindy Rig. But by their own admission, it wasn’t their idea.
The Lindners did, however, refine, distribute and promote the Lindy Rig – a job these many years later that has fallen to Takasaki.
How that happened – how a Japanese-American born in California who moved to Minnesota by way of Chicago could become one of the nation’s top competitive walleye anglers and head up Lindy Little Joe, a Minnesota original – is a story in itself.
But before Takasaki could tell it, he dropped his big boat off plane, settling along the edge of an underwater point. Affixing a leech to a hook, and using a “No Snagg” Lindy Little Joe sinker, Takasaki quickly lowered his line into the water.
Soon, Takasaki fed monofilament to something that took his bait. Then, tightening the line, he set the hook, and ... had one on.
A minute or so later, a walleye, a 24-incher, was netted, measured and released.
Just another day on the water, and another fish, for Ted Takasaki.
“I had a fraternity brother in college,” Takasaki said. “After we graduated, we both moved to Chicago to work for Hewlett-Packard. That’s when my interest in fishing took off.”
Noted angler Spence Petros was teaching fishing classes in Chicago at the time, and Takasaki and his friend signed up.
“The class met every week,” he said. “We took it for seven years.”
In 1988, the two intrepid anglers entered their first fishing tournament, in Illinois. Takasaki didn’t catch a fish. In fact, a full year passed before he placed in a tournament.
“We won fourth place,” Takasaki said. “There were about 2,000 people at the weigh-in, cheering. I remember saying to myself, ‘I have to figure out a way to make a living in the fishing business.’ “
That would take a while.
In 1998, with his competitive fishing career on an upswing, Takasaki captured the biggest prize of all: the first $100,000 check issued to a tournament walleye angler.
Among those he called to tell the news was Nick Adams, then president (and a founder) of Lindy Little Joe.
Lindy Little Joe was Takasaki’s first tournament sponsor.
“During that phone call, Nick told me he was retiring and was in the process of interviewing candidates to take over Lindy Little Joe,” Takasaki said. “I thought about that and said, ‘Why not me?”’
A veteran salesman for Hewlett-Packard, Takasaki in time convinced Adams and the handful of shareholders who control Lindy Little Joe that he was the man for the job.
Which he has been since 1999 – arriving just in time to oversee a relatively small (45 employees) though inveterate Minnesota company hoping to survive, and thrive, in an industry whose customer base is stable, at best.
“The fishing industry is consolidating and has been for some time,” Takasaki said.
Big box retailers such as Cabela’s, Gander Mountain, Dick’s and Sportsman’s Warehouse have gobbled up most of the retail sporting-goods business, replacing many of the smaller mom-and-pop shops of yesteryear.
This in turn has required manufacturers such as Lindy Little Joe to develop ordering and distribution systems that integrate seamlessly with the big retailers.
All of which costs money, and favors bigger businesses over smaller ones.
To that end, Takasaki has helped lead a Lindy Little Joe acquisition program that will grow revenue this year to about $10 million, about a 15 percent uptick from a year ago.
No less important might be Takasaki’s role as a promoter of Lindy Little Joe’s thousands of fishing products; everything from drift socks (to slow boats) to fishing nets, bobbers and, of course, Lindy Rigs of various kinds and sizes.
Competing in tournaments, Takasaki said, is a big part of that promotion.
“They help get our name in the marketplace,” he said.
Also important, he said, are the public appearances he does for various tournament sponsors and the scores of walleye-fishing seminars he offers each year.
All to help broadcast Lindy Little Joe’s name and products.
Moving to another spot on Mille Lacs, Takasaki soon had a second fish on, this one a 26-inch walleye.
True or not, anglers like Takasaki – who eat, drink and think walleyes – enjoy an advantage.
“People look at me and say, ‘Man, what a job! You fish for a living!”’ Takasaki said. “Well, I do. But it’s work, too.”

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