Why do ruffed grouse hunters hunt?
Well, yes, to shoot birds.
But a first-ever scientific survey of Minnesota grouse hunters, done by the University of Minnesota, shows that enjoying nature and getting away from crowds is far more important to grouse hunters than bagging birds or shooting limits.
About 97 percent said enjoying nature was very or extremely important, while 25 percent cited bagging grouse as that important. Just 4 percent said shooting a limit was important.
Hunters generally are satisfied with their experiences as well as the regulations and bag limits. But ATV conflicts -- long a sore point -- remain for a significant number of hunters.
Twenty-five percent said other recreational users had interfered with their grouse hunting over the past five years, and 61 percent of those cited ATV riders as the offenders.
The survey showed metro-area hunters are bothered by ATVs more than outstate hunters. Almost 39 percent of Twin Cities hunters say their grouse hunting is disrupted by ATV users, while 25 percent of outstate hunters agree. And almost 36 percent of Twin Cities hunters say there are too many ATV users where they hunt, but just 24.4 percent of outstate hunters agree.
Still, 49 percent of Twin Cities hunters say ATV users don't bother them when they are hunting; nearly 58 percent of outstate hunters say they aren't bothered.