Check out these photos of a bobcat viciously attacking a mule deer fawn.
How to Protect the Prairie Duck hunters all seem to have an opinion about Ducks Unlimited. For every person who grouses about DU's emphasis on dollars, or that so much American-raised DU money goes north of the border, however, there's another who points out that three out of four North American ducks are hatched in the prairie pothole country, the great majority of which lies north of the 49th parallel. "Once I show U.S. visitors the lands we work on," says Dave Atamanchuk, a Ducks Unlimited Canada field representative in Saskatchewan, "and introduce them to the farmers we work with, they very easily understand how critical this region is to hunters across the entire continent." For a full week we drove past lands owned by Ducks Unlimited Canada, or leased by DUC, or managed for nesting cover by DUC and cooperating farmers. In Saskatchewan alone-which doesn't even employ a provincial waterfowl biologist-DUC works on 1.6 million acres. The first thing I did when I got home was send Ducks Unlimited a check for $100. -T.E.N.
There are lots of ways to catch walleyes that don't involve nasty rapids and remote country. But they're not nearly as much fun. WITH BONUS PHOTO GALLERY FROM DUSAN SMETANA
If you read our story "Walleye's Gone Wild" in the May 2006 issue, you might have noticed that we promised to run more of Dusan Smetana's photos from the trip on our web site. Well, here they are. Twenty-three outtakes not published in the magazine. Tight lines, everyone.
Saskatchewan: Where Tom McIntyre shoots the largest whitetail of his life. Here's the story.