Megan Rhode is one of the most enthusiastic hunters you'll ever meet.
And she's never killed a thing in her life.
Rhode, 25, of Hastings, recently learned how to shoot a shotgun and hopes to harvest her first wild game this fall. She and four other first-time female Canada goose hunters hunkered in a blind Saturday near Chaska, partaking in a women's goose hunt, a new event sponsored by Delta Waterfowl, a waterfowl conservation group.
"Hunting already has changed my life," Rhode said. "I've met so many good people. I'm passionate about getting more women involved in hunting."
Rhode and her fellow female hunters are among a wave of women who are being recruited nationwide to fill the gap of a declining number of hunters. While hunter numbers are stable in Minnesota, the Department of Natural Resources and conservation groups are boosting efforts to target women -- long ignored by wildlife agencies, sportsman's clubs and conservation groups.
But not anymore.
Nationally, waterfowl hunter numbers dropped 27 percent from 2001 to 2006. In Minnesota, duck hunter numbers have fallen from 109,000 to 78,000 in the past 10 years, and the number of Canada goose hunters have declined from 76,000 to 56,000 in the same period. Lack of access, time constraints, urbanization, an aging Baby Boomer population and, in some areas, a lack of ducks all are blamed for the decline.
"They need us," Rhode said, who was introduced to hunting through a former boyfriend. She's been target shooting this summer and hopes to hunt ducks, geese and pheasants this fall. "We mean more money for conservation, through our hunting licenses and stamps."