Whooping cranes will start showing up in North Dakota sometime in October and stay as long as the weather allows.
If you’re lucky enough to see a whooping crane in North Dakota, report it to the North Dakota Game and Fish Department at (701) 328-6300.
Even if you’ve never been a hunter, you’re likely familiar with the term poaching. Poaching is theft, plain and simple. It’s ...
For more information about ANS in North Dakota, options for disinfection, or to report a possible ANS, check out the Game and ...
The North Dakota Game and Fish Department is reminding hunters about the importance of ethics in the field as part of its new ...
Riverdale, North Dakota angler Lonnie Liebel has been fishing the Missouri River area below massive 307,000-acre Sakakawea Lake for 50 years. The 71-year-old veteran angler was fishing for walleyes in ...
The North Dakota Game and Fish Department has confirmed the presence of invasive zebra mussels in Smishek Lake, Burke County, after detecting zebra mussel veligers in routine plankton tow net samples, ...
In this week’s “North Dakota Outdoors” webcast, Education Supervisor Marty Egeland talks about shooting ranges managed by the Game and Fish Department and why it’s important to sight your rifle in ...