
20th Annual GooseFest
October 18-25, 2008
Kenmare GooseFest
Held during the latter part of October, what
is better than a day of goose hunting? How about eight days of goose hunting during
Kenmare, North Dakota's GooseFest?
During the latter part of October, Kenmare celebrates its GooseFest, an annual hunting
festival which falls during the peak migration of snow geese.
Kenmare lies along the Des Lacs National Wildlife Refuge and is also situated between the
Upper Souris Refuge and the Lostwood Refuge. Each year, the three refuges are hosts to
over 400,000 snow geese for several weeks during the fall migration.
Each fall the Kenmare area becomes the center of a true hunter's paradise. Besides the
snow geese, hunters will find abundant populations of Canada geese, Mallard ducks,
Hungarian partridge, sharptail grouse, and ringneck pheasant. After bagging a limit of
geese, the avid hunter can spend the afternoon flushing upland game.
The GooseFest celebration includes hunting contests as w ell as a week-long schedule of
entertainment. $34,000 worth of merchandise prizes are awarded to raffle winners and to
hunters bagging the largest bird in categories of Canada goose, Snow goose, and Greenhead
duck.
Special events and activities throughout the week include free feeds at local taverns, a
goose shoot calcutta, presentations by national shot-shell manufacturers, family oriented
activities, Goose Hunter's Hall of Fame induction and ending with an entertaining banquet
with presentation of prizes and awards.
Ducks and Geese -- North Dakota is known as the "duck factory" of the United
States and nowhere in the state is this more true than the Kenmare area. The numerous
small wetlands in this region produce more waterfowl than anywhere else in the county.
Waterfowl are abundant and are visible everywhere.
Duck migration begins in early September and will last into December. Large concentrations
of mallard, pintail, blue-winged teal, gadwall, shoveler, and wigeon occur throughout the
area, with lesser numbers of redhead, canvasback and lesser scaup. Much smaller numbers of
wood duck, green-winged teal, ring-necked duck, ruddy duck, bufflehead and common
goldeneye are also in the area.
Up to 400,000 snow geese can be found on the area Refuges and the surrounding area. Geese
begin to show up the end of September and stay on into November or until the water freezes
over. Canada geese numbers peak at 25,000-30,000 birds at the same time of the year, while
lesser numbers of white-fronted and Ross's geese can be found.
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