Recreation
- Details
- Written by: California Department of Fish and Wildlife
Throughout the state, many nonprofit organizations and other groups are offering special hunting and fishing opportunities for veterans this fall.
Please visit the following links to view some of these specific opportunities for veterans:
– California Waterfowl.
– Coastside Fishing Club.
– Field of Dreams.
– Make a Difference Outdoors.
– Purple Heart Anglers.
(Please note, this is not a complete list, and these opportunities are not endorsed by CDFW.)
CDFW also offers reduced-fee hunting and fishing licenses to both resident and nonresident disabled veterans, as per Fish and Game Code, section 7150.
Any honorably discharged, disabled veteran with a 50 percent or greater service-connected disability who wants to hunt birds or mammals or go fishing in California is eligible.
The 2018 Disabled Veteran or Recovering Service Member Sport Fishing License or Disabled Veteran or Recovering Service Member Hunting License cost only $7.21 when purchased at CDFW license counters.
To prequalify for a disabled veterans hunting or fishing license, customers must submit a letter from the Veteran's Administration to a CDFW license sales office. Subsequent licenses may be purchased online or from a license sales agent.
Annual California sport fishing licenses are valid Jan. 1 through Dec. 31 each year, and make excellent holiday gifts for veterans. Annual hunting licenses are valid July 1 through June 30.
Fishing and hunting regulations and more information about licenses are available on the CDFW Web site.
- Details
- Written by: California Department of Fish and Wildlife
This year’s contest invites entrants to share their thoughts about how hunting has positively influenced or affected their life.
“Today’s youth hunters are the conservationists of the future,” said CDFW Hunter Education Program Administrator Capt. Robert Pelzman. “We are looking forward to hearing about the lessons they’ve learned in the field that have made the strongest impressions upon them, and in what ways hunting has benefited them.”
The contest is open to all junior hunting license holders, as well as youths under 18 who have earned a hunter education certificate. Entrants should submit an essay of 500 words or less.
The California Wildlife Officer Foundation will recognize one grand prize winner with a lifetime California hunting license. Second and third place winners will also be selected and prize packages will be awarded.
Entries should be submitted via email to Capt. Robert Pelzman at
Essays will be reviewed and scored by CDFW wildlife officers and other CDFW representatives. The winners will be notified by telephone.
For additional information, please contact Capt. Pelzman at 916-653-9727.
The grand prize will be awarded during a special ceremony at the International Sportsmen’s Exposition in Sacramento, Jan. 17 to 20, 2019.
To find a hunter education course or information about becoming a hunter education instructor, please visit www.wildlife.ca.gov/hunter-education .
- Details
- Written by: Anderson Marsh State Historic Park
LOWER LAKE, Calif. – Anderson Marsh State Historic Park will hold its final guided nature walk of the year on Saturday morning, Nov. 10.
Bring binoculars and meet in the ranch house parking lot at 8:15 a.m. for time to experience the early morning wildlife to be found in the ranch house and barn complex yard – the walk begins at 8:30 a.m.
Park Docent Roberta Lyons will lead a leisurely walk to discover what autumn continues to bring to the Park.
The walk will begin on the Cache Creek Nature Trail, pausing at the deck on Cache Creek at the end of the Cache Creek Trail boardwalk.
The walk will then continue across the grasslands of the Anderson Flats and through the oak woodland habitat of the Marsh trail, ending back at the ranch house.
The entire walk should take about 2 hours.
This time of year, many mammals and birds are attracted to the park because of the abundance of wild blackberries, grapes, rose hips and mistletoe berries available for food.
Fall also brings many migrating birds to the park, some to eat the autumn fruits and some to rest in the waters of Cache Creek and Anderson Marsh, or in the nearby trees.
The shiny black phainopepla have returned for the mistletoe berries, wintering eared grebes are beginning to arrive and the white-tailed kites and other raptors have returned to the grasslands.
There is no charge for those attending the event and parking is free. Rain will cancel the walk.
Anderson Marsh State Historic Park is located on Highway 53, between Lower Lake and Clearlake.
For more information about the guided walk, email AMIA at
- Details
- Written by: California Department of Fish and Wildlife
Combined with hunting seasons already open for quail, chukar, snipe, waterfowl, tree squirrel and rabbits, California hunters have plenty of options to pursue some spectacular game species and equally stellar table fare. Few states can match the sheer variety of hunting opportunities available to California hunters in the fall.
Both a valid hunting license and upland game bird stamp/validation are needed to hunt pheasant, turkey and dove. An upland stamp/validation is not required for junior license holders but all hunters are required to have a Harvest Information Program (HIP) validation when hunting migratory game birds.
Ring-necked pheasant
Since 2012, CDFW has funded scientific research into California's wild pheasant decline using money from the purchase of upland game bird stamps/validations. The latest findings point to a combination of factors that include changing agricultural crops, upland habitat loss, predation, competition from other species, warming temperatures and pesticides as contributing to the pheasant decline in recent years.
Still, the wild pheasant opener on the second weekend of November remains a popular tradition for many families and an important economic event for some rural communities.
The good news is that some of the best remaining wild pheasant habitat in California is found on state wildlife areas and federal wildlife refuges open to public hunting. Bagging a wild rooster pheasant requires dedication, knowledge and skill, but the end reward makes unmatched table fare.
Several CDFW Type A wildlife areas are especially popular with wild pheasant hunters, including Upper Butte Basin, Gray Lodge, Grizzly Island, Yolo Bypass, Los Banos and North Grasslands.
These areas are all open to pheasant hunting on their normal Saturday, Sunday and Wednesday waterfowl hunt days. The Upper Butte Basin Wildlife Area and the Gray Lodge Wildlife Area will remain open the first Monday of the pheasant season -- Nov. 12 -- to provide additional hunter opportunities.
Type A wildlife areas in the San Joaquin Valley – Los Banos, Mendota, North Grasslands and the San Luis National Wildlife Refuge – will be open for pheasant hunting on Saturdays, Sundays and Wednesdays only during the pheasant season.
Three popular Northern California federal refuges – Colusa National Wildlife Refuge, Delevan National Wildlife Refuge and Sacramento National Wildlife Refuge – and one San Joaquin Valley federal refuge, Kesterson National Wildlife Refuge, will be open to pheasant hunting the first Monday of the season in addition to their normal Saturday, Sunday and Wednesday shoot days.
The Tule Lake National Wildlife Refuge and the Lower Klamath National Wildlife Refuge in northeastern California, home to some of the most robust wild pheasant populations in the state, are open daily to pheasant hunting throughout the season.
Please check with the individual property for specific details and regulations on each area.
The 2018 general pheasant season runs from Saturday, Nov. 10 through Sunday, Dec. 23. The daily bag limit is two males per day for the first two days of the season and three males per day thereafter. The possession limit is triple the daily bag limit. Shooting hours are from 8 a.m. to sunset.
Nonlead ammunition is required when hunting pheasants anywhere in the state, except on licensed game bird clubs.
Fall turkey
The chance to provide a wild turkey for Thanksgiving dinner is strong motivation for many fall turkey hunters. The fall season runs from Saturday Nov. 10 through Sunday, Dec. 9, and - unlike in the spring season - both males and females may be taken. The daily bag limit is one turkey of either sex with a season and possession limit of two birds.
Three subspecies of wild turkeys can be found in California – Rio Grande, Merriam's and eastern – with Rio Grande being the most widespread. Wild turkeys inhabit most counties in California. Shooting hours are from one-half hour before sunrise to sunset.
Nonlead ammunition is required when hunting turkeys anywhere in the state unless the turkey is taken on the grounds of a licensed game bird club.
Second dove season
California's second dove season runs from Saturday, Nov. 10 through Monday, Dec. 24. Although lacking the fanfare and tradition surrounding the Sept. 1 opener, the second season offers cooler weather, fewer crowds and the chance for a mixed bag of species - quail and rabbit, for example - that often share the same habitat.
Limits remain the same as the early season: Mourning dove and white-winged dove have a daily bag limit of 15, up to 10 of which may be white-winged dove. The possession limit is triple the daily bag limit. There are no limits on spotted dove and ringed turtle dove. Hunting for Eurasian collared dove is legal year-round and there is no limit. Shooting hours are from one-half hour before sunrise to sunset.
Lead ammunition is permitted for hunting doves in 2018. Nonlead ammunition, however, is required when hunting on all CDFW lands. For more information please see the CDFW nonlead ammunition page.
In addition to public hunting opportunities available at CDFW state wildlife areas and federal wildlife refuges, CDFW offers special hunts at the Upland Game Wild Bird Hunts page and through the SHARE program, which provides public hunting access to private land or other landlocked properties. New hunters should visit CDFW's Apprentice Hunts Web page for additional pheasant hunting opportunities.
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