For about 560,000 Minnesotans, fall means reconnecting with rich hunting traditions that lure them outdoors into woods, fields and sloughs.
For some of the other 5 million Minnesotans who don't hunt, it's likely all a mystery. They may assume the goal is simply procuring wild game.
But for many hunters, me included, heading afield means much more than just bagging a pheasant, duck or ruffed grouse.
There's the camaraderie of hunting camps; the renewal of friendships; the bonding with hunting dogs.
Hunting provides a window to the outdoors, and experiences that we likely wouldn't have if not lured outside by the hunt. Some of my most memorable moments had nothing to do with pulling the trigger.
Late last fall, just as my Labrador retriever and I started hiking across a field of prairie grasses searching for pheasants, we stopped in our tracks. Above us, endless skeins of mallards, snow geese, Canada geese and other waterfowl filled the sky, heading south with urgency and a cacophony of quacks and honks.
So thick were the clouds of birds that even the dog stopped and looked skyward in wonderment at the commotion. I stood in awe for several minutes, witnessing an annual event that has been occurring for eons.
It was a powerful moment.