Minnesota Ruffed Grouse “Split Color Phase” Sticker

$3.99

These Minnesota Ruffed Grouse matte finish vinyl stickers are 4″ tall and are tribute to the cornerstone species in which Project Upland was founded. Nothing speaks to the beauty of a ruffed grouse like the tail feathers of this king of the upland birds. This second edition features a split color phase ruffed grouse fan. Please email [email protected] if you want us to make your state next!

  • Get 20% OFF when you order 5 or more (can mix designs) 
  • Made in the USA
  • Weatherproof 

Great for trucks, kennels, gun cases, and random bathroom stalls…

Only 3 left in stock

SKU: MN-Grouse-Sticker Category: Tags: ,

Description

Thick, durable vinyl protects your matte circle stickers from scratching, rain & sunlight.

Additional information

Weight .1 oz

Reviews

  1. Robb

    outstanding article, Jesse. Thanks for lots of food for thought … and action

  2. Kyle

    This really may be the best article project upland has put out… and that is saying alot. I hope it inspires folks to take along someone new.

  3. Robert Milner

    Great article. As a semi-competent dog trainer of many years, I grew a few years ago into a conversion to positive training for dogs. I see a virtual absence of the positive training model in the hunting sector today. I surmise that most of the growth potential for hunting lies with women and children. I can tell you from a good bit of experience that women and children are much more likely to take to the outdoors with their dog if they have a positive training model. Where are the outdoor cheerleaders for positive training for gundogs?

    • A.J. DeRosa

      100% Robert! Gun dogs are such an important gateway into hunting.

    • Robb

      Agree! Add to your statement about women and children the soft-hearted dudes who worry about their dogs and their dog’s health and well-being perhaps more than their own. I count myself among them and want to always err on the side of positive and use positive reinforcement training methods first and whenever they are effective.

  4. jpassacantando

    Best piece yet. Inspiring. And you are right about the mentoring. The demographics of your following are encouraging but it takes a mentor to get you out in the field with a gun. Can you use your site and lists to connect people?

  5. bsatt

    In addition to PR, what do you think are the next biggest contributing factors to the decline? I would offer (with no empirical backup whatsoever) that access is a key problem. I love bird hunting here in Texas, and own a well-trained gun dog. But not being a landowner, that desire and dog don’t always translate into easy hunting opportunities. It is always a struggle to put hunts together, and they then can be relatively costly at that. Finding a lease is also a huge (and expensive) task. If I can’t find easy opportunities, then how can a new hunter? An intimidating prospect, I propose.

    • Jesse St. Andre

      You are absolutely correct about the access issue. That is certainly a top tier barriers for both new and existing hunters. Unfortunately, hunter access is dependent upon the state and federal governments and also the united voice of hunters (or lack thereof) putting pressure upon their politicians to maintain and/or increase access opportunities for hunters.

    • Mike Leedahl

      I agree with you there, access is a growing problem here in MN as well. Some of our state land has been sold to out of state potato producers. Decent quality mixed aspen/pine land is turned into potato farms. About 14,000 acres. This means people who hunted this land have 2 choices: quit hunting or go somewhere else. State land is sometimes sold out from underneath you without warning. This happened to us 6 years ago with our deer hunting land(which doubled as some great grouse woods). We are still looking for a permanent parcel of quality public land where we can camp and hunt…There’s a reason we hunt public land; purchasing and leasing are not possible. I live on the fringe of decent quality grouse habitat, and in the past a 45 minute drive would get me into good hunting. More recently, my drive time has doubled. The reason is these woods we bird hunt have been managed by the state and are regenerating; they are still 5-6 years away from being worth the effort.
      Another factor in the decline as I see as a recent former science teacher is social media technology(enough said), which leads to yet another issue: lack of physical activity. One example will suffice: at my former school we had a McDonald’s 200 yards from our building. Aside from being a major part of our student’s diet, most didn’t walk to get lunch, they drove their cars. Two hundred yards.
      One thing we do every October is host a rendezvous. It started as friends and family and has evolved into an educational weekend. We have blackpowder shooting, archery, camping, outdoor cooking. People can bring their own gear, but we also give anyone the oppurtunity to learn how to shoot a bow, load and shoot a muzzleloader,throw a tomahawk, and make friends. One of our successes is a young gal who learned how to shoot a bow at our event, then a few years later finished in the top third of her age group at the state high school league sanctioned archery tournment. She’s now beginning to bowhunt.
      I think for us old timers we need to weather the storm, and maybe at times go out of our way to introduce people first to the outdoors, then work on the hunting and fishing. And do this in a way the that the rookies determine the pace. Rookies, like many of us in the beginning were, are impatient, and want to be successful in the hunt, to bag something everytime(to make it worth their effort). As we get older and sometimes wiser we realize that while a bird or 2 in the bag is great, the time in the field is just as good, if not more important. Think about how much fun it is to work as a team with a dog, or to just look at the fall colors in a way nonhunters can’t, from inside the woods. Some of us are on top of the hill looking down. Rookies, today especially, are looking up at us, wondering how to get there and if the climb is worth it.

  6. Scott Barton

    Outstanding article. Thanks for the thoughtful share Jesse!

  7. Jon Freis

    Thank you Jesse. There’s an abundant native wild bird hard to kill, huntable in 29 states from ME to TX to CA to WI with a dog, farmers are glad to see us, easy on the pocketbook, with the most growth potential to get new hunters involved of anything, pursuing the grandest of all game birds, yet most people never heard of it. Call 920-776-1272 http://www.turkeydog.org/

  8. Jake Myers dvm

    Great article, great read. As a first generation hunter I have definitely been inspired by project upland and hope to find ways to contribute positively to the hunting community.

  9. Joe Genzel of Wildfowl Magazine – Podcast – Endless Migration

    […] hunting on the Illinois River with his dad. We also dive into the current state of outdoor media, new hunter recruitment, and discuss the younger generation of […]

  10. Andres

    Nice article! As a new hunter, coming from a non-hunter family, I think that maybe I can be part of the solution.
    I don’t see hunting as a sport, but as a cultural matter; as a kind of human heritage; as a real bond between mankind and dogs; a process in the evolution in the fight for survival. It’s also a social activity, it does friends, teaches about life, and helps in conservation; it also has a gastronomic value. It is a lot more than just hunting; not in the way the non-hunters’ sight at it.
    As a wingshooting lodge owner in Uruguay, I use to host US hunters who come to our lodge to experience our mixed-bag hunting outfitting, and I’ve seen a decrease in the number of hunters, because of their aging and there aren’t new ones coming.
    On the other hand, when I look at the metrics on Facebook and Instagram, I see a bigger interest in the 25 – 35 years old ones and at a rate of 83 % male 17 % female; it means that may change in the future.
    A few months ago, I’ve read an article about young people who are starting to think that game is quite better than processed food.

    So, I think we might have to work on a few things: make a better PR, mentor young hunters on the matter, talk about the ethics of process your own game, and about the conservation efforts hunters are already doing.
    People use to think that conservation means no killing. But we know increasing habitat is far more important than that. That’s why the amount of resources hunters are placing in habitat.
    Then we have the dogs. I was hooked into hunting because of the wonderful work birddogs perform.
    I think we should work to get Hunting to be listed as Human Heritage by the UN as falconry is.
    That way, I expect we can start to revert hunting decrease.

  11. John T

    One of the things we often talk about is access being a key, but I’d almost call that a half-truth. The key to access, is access to property _with birds_. Since I’m from IL I watch our numbers, and they look incredibly bad.
    https://www.dnr.illinois.gov/hunting/uplandgame/Documents/Pheasant%20Status%20Report%202019.pdf – I expect hunter numbers and harvest across most of the Eastern half of the country is much the same as IL which has seen pheasant hunters drop from 200,000+ to less than 15,000 in the last 40 years. The reason isn’t just access. The birds are not there because 90% of the farms have _zero_ habitat for wild creatures. As a libertarian it pains me to say it, but farm policies are going to have to change if we want to protect our birds, and the environment in general. I don’t pretend to have _the_ answer, but we need to start a conversation about it. For instance, if we are going to federally subsidize crop insurance how about requiring farmers to implement “best practices” such as buffer strips along waterways, grassed waterways. Maybe we need a national push away from monoculture farming, and toward things like cover crops. As a farm owner that directly affects my pocket book, but I’m not sure why farmers should expect handouts from the government and not be expected to be supported by tax dollars while destroying wildlife habitat and polluting waterways with chemical runoff. Surely some balance could be found? That balance is absent here in the corn belt

  12. A Deeper Look at Mentoring in Turkey Hunting – Project Upland Magazine

    […] an aspiring hunter was more critical than it is today with the current R3 movement. In the 2018 National Upland Hunting Survey, aspiring hunters ranked having a mentor as the number onecomponent they sought before going […]

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