When an organization like the Wisconsin Waterfowl Association (WWA) asks me to write an article or editorial, I rarely write it in first person. This topic, this goal, this commitment to the management of a species, is deeply personal to me.
More than a decade ago, when the feds approved a flyway plan for the hunting of sandhill cranes in Wisconsin, it collided with a young-ish legislator from Oconomowoc who had just been introduced to the world of hunting and conservation.
This content is restricted to subscribers of OutdoorNews.com. If you are already an OutdoorNews.com subscriber, you can log in here. If you are not and would like to read this and all the other great content OutdoorNews.com has to offer, click here.


