Supplementing the Family Table

Providing food for the family dinner table is a rewarding part of hunting for many outdoorsmen and women.

Alaska Native people have lived close to nature and off the land since time immemorial. The  of 1980, which established national wildlife refuges in Alaska, and the  ensure that rural Alaskans can continue to do so.

The program supports subsistence living by rural Alaskans on federal public lands and waters while maintaining healthy populations of fish and wildlife. Alaska鈥檚 rural residents harvest about 18,000 tons of wild foods each year 鈥� an average of 295 pounds per person. Nowhere else in the United States is there such a heavy reliance upon wild foods.

Hunting is allowed at all 16 national wildlife refuges in Alaska.

Members of the Warweg family have hunted for years at Tamarac National Wildlife Refuge in Minnesota.

Minnesotans Denise and Mike Warweg supplement their family table with deer and waterfowl harvested at nearby Tamarac National Wildlife Refuge. They hunt at the refuge with their sons and grandsons.

鈥淚t shows them all the way from the start what we are provided with by nature,鈥� says Mike Warweg. 鈥淲e harvest it. Then we clean it, explaining the anatomy. Then to have their mother make a delicious dinner out of it is rewarding. The kids see the benefit of what nature can provide for us.鈥�

Denise Warweg agrees. 鈥淚t鈥檚 a great lesson to teach our kids the food that we go out to get, we also eat,鈥� she says. For her, Tamarac Refuge is 鈥渏ust so peaceful and calming. It kind of renews your soul to be out in nature and spend time there. Even if we don鈥檛 get a deer, it鈥檚 still worth the time we spend out in nature.鈥�

Upstate New Yorkers Sarah Fleming and husband Mike Schummer regularly hunt waterfowl, deer, turkey, marsh birds, squirrel and upland game birds at or near Montezuma National Wildlife Refuge.

Fleming is a conservation program manager with Ducks Unlimited. Schummer is a professor of ecology.

鈥淥ur hunting trips are very much a part of who we are, and they help supplement our food supply,鈥� Fleming says. 鈥淗unting provides us with a healthy local option for meat. Hunting is not easy, and it鈥檚 not for everyone, but taking time to understand nature will make you a better hunter and give you a perspective of your place in the bigger picture 鈥� And we have been fortunate enough to stock our freezers with game only for the last nine years. We do not need to purchase meat from the grocery store.鈥�

Sarah Fleming, husband Mike Schummer and dog Molly hunt at and near Montezuma National Wildlife Refuge in New York.

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Hunting
Wildlife refuges
Wildlife viewing