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    KANSAS STATE PARKS OFFER OFF-SEASON BARGAINS

    Courtesy of KDWP

    Cabins, reduced prices, uncrowded conditions make parks attractive in fall and winter
    PRATT — Summer is over, but for many outdoorsmen and women, that doesn’t mean the end of Kansas state park visitation. Many hunters and anglers — and even campers looking for a cool-season adventure — take advantage of the “off-season” in Kansas state parks. Lower prices during the off-season — Oct. 1-March 31 — make trips even more attractive.

    Hunters and anglers probably use parks more than other visitors, and the growing number of cabins in parks makes stays more inviting. Cabins provide all the amenities of home and proximity to popular outdoor activities. Cabin rental fees vary depending on size, days of the week, and time of year.

    Standard off-season state park permit fees are as follow:

    • Daily Vehicle permit — $3.70 (senior/disabled, $2.60);
    • Annual Vehicle permit — $19.70 (senior/disabled, $11.10);
    • additional Annual Vehicle permit — $12.20 (senior/disabled, $7.35):
    • Daily Camping permit — $7.50; and
    • 14-Day Camping permit — $87.50.

    Costs listed include applicable service fees, except online purchase convenience fee. Annual permits purchased in either the off-season or the prime season are valid for the remainder of the calendar year. 2009 permits go on sale Dec. 15.

    The Kansas Department of Wildlife and Parks’ (KDWP) Parks Division operates a system of 25 parks and the Prairie Spirit Rail-Trail. In addition to cabins, most state parks provide utilities and primitive camping and are located adjacent to lakes or reservoirs. Utility fees remain unchanged although some camping fees are cheaper if purchased in the off-season.

    In addition to camping facilities, parks offer boat ramps, courtesy docks, shelter houses, trails, and a variety of other amenities. Parks also host numerous special events, such as concerts and festivals, throughout the year.

    More information on state park fees is available at the KDWP website, www.kdwp.state.ks.us.

    Posted on 19th October 2008
    Under: Hunting, Hunting and Fishing, Kansas Trail Plans, hunters and anglers | No Comments »

    If they only would of listened to us……

    Courtesy of Hutchinson News

    Yeah if they only would of listened to us then maybe we wouldn’t of had to pay more for costs and specialists.  You know they will raise the prices somewhere in our fees to cover it!!!!

    Lore of the mountain lion

    Tests show Barber Co. cat likely was wild, not of captive line, but most reports are mistaken identity.

    By Amy Bickel - The Hutchinson News - abickel@hutchnews.com


    (Illustration by Jim Heck/The Hutchinson News)

    It’s as elusive as the Loch Ness monster. Or a yeti. Or whatever legendary creature stocks the globe.

    The mountain lion of Kansas. People claim to see them, take pictures of them. For years, officials followed leads but never found proof.

    Some proved to be bobcats. Other reports wound up being the domestic house cat. Still, many residents believed.

    Then someone shot one in Barber County, the first documented sighting since 1904.

    Kansas Department of Wildlife and Parks officials, who have been investigating the sighting since March, recently announced after months of testing that the animal possibly was wild.

    But are mountain lions - or cougars, pumas, panthers or painters, as they also are called - running rampant in the Sunflower State? While the number of calls coming in on any given month would suggest it, state officials and cougar experts say most likely not.

    For several years, Bob Wilson of Garden City has searched Kansas, placing trail cameras in areas where residents reported seeing cougars.

    “I would run out to an area where I received a phone call and set up a game camera,” said Wilson, who is part of the national Cougar Network. “I have literally thousands of pictures of deer, coyotes, bobcats, but not one mountain lion.”

    And as much as he would like to tell people there are mountain lions making their home in Kansas, Wilson’s definite answer usually is “probably not.”

    “If you have any established population, you have a road kill,” he said. “There’s road kill in the Black Hills, road kill in Florida. If cougars are there, you will eventually have road kills. Kansas doesn’t have a road kill.”

    There also are hundreds of trail cameras set up across the state, said Matt Peek, a furbearer biologist with KDWP. However, no one has captured an actual mountain lion. No one has trapped one, either.

    Still, the calls keeping coming in to Peek’s Emporia office.

    One of the most recent call sightings made the evening news - a security-camera picture of an animal lurking inside a fenced-in area. An investigation proved it was a housecat.

    Barber County’s lion

    The current case of a shot mountain lion started last spring.

    A Barber County man was chopping wood when he saw the animal in the grass. He retrieved a firearm from his truck and shot it.

    KDWP obtained the pelt in March. Biologists collected muscle tissue samples and sent them to a federal research laboratory in Montana.

    After several months of tests, researchers were able to determine the animal was not of the South American decent, from which most captive lines come.

    While the test doesn’t prove the animal was wild, Peek said officials believe it probably was wild.

    Meanwhile, tests are ongoing to determine the cougar’s footprinting - or to what population of lions it belongs, he said.

    No charges have been filed against the Barber County man as of Friday, according to Barber County Attorney Richard Raleigh’s office.

    There is no hunting season for mountain lions in Kansas. The man could be charged with killing a non-game animal for which there is not an established season and/or possessing a mountain lion.

    A few in Kansas

    While it has been more than 100 years since Kansas has had a true mountain lion sighting, states around Kansas have had a few reports.

    Their territory in Colorado and near the Oklahoma panhandle is fairly close to Kansas. Their territory has spread into Nebraska because of the growing populations in South Dakota, Garden City’s Wilson said.

    Both Oklahoma and Missouri have had about 10 confirmed sightings - a few not too far from Kansas.

    Peek said a mountain lion collared in South Dakota for tracking purposes, and that was hit by a train 40 miles south of Arkansas City, probably had passed through Kansas.

    Wilson said it was likely male cats had passed through Kansas. Most, however, aren’t staying.

    For a few of those who do report seeing a mountain lion in Kansas, well, they just might have seen one, Wilson said.

    “The people who call in, they are hard-working people,” Wilson said. “They know the difference between the mountain lion or bobcat. What they saw probably was the real McCoy. Young male cats, maybe in transit, might have just been passing through.”

    The mountain lion

    Diet: Elk, deer, domestic cattle, horses and sheep.

    Hunting: Mountain lions take their prey by ambush rather than a long pursuit. They usually kill with a powerful bite below the base of the skull, breaking the neck. Lions drag the carcass to a sheltered spot beneath a tree or overhang to feed on it. They cover the carcass with dirt, leaves or snow and may return to feed on it over the course of a few days. Generally, they move the carcass and re-cover it after each feeding. Lions feeding on a kill can be dangerous to people.

    Habitat: Prefers habitats with dense brush and rocky areas for stalking, but can live in open areas.

    Safety: Mountain lions occasionally attack humans and pets, although such incidents are rare. According to Colorado State University Cooperative Extension, fewer than a dozen fatalities have been reported in North America in the past 100 years.

    Sources: The Colorado Division of Wildlife, The Mountain Lion Foundation, Colorado State University Cooperative Extension

    Posted on 10th August 2008
    Under: Hunting, KDWP, Kansas Trail Plans | 2 Comments »

    KDWP REVEALS 5-YEAR TRAILS PLAN

    Study examines wealth of information to improve existing trails and plan future ones
    PRATT — The Kansas Department of Wildlife and Parks (KDWP) has announced guidelines for improvement of existing trails and development of more trails throughout the Sunflower State. Entitled Kansas State Trails Plan 2008 , the 103-page document will serve as the primary planning resource to guide those who build and maintain recreational trails, their partners, and other decision-makers in efforts to provide the public with high-quality trail-use experiences.

    The plan identifies needs for both existing and future trails based on review of existing plans from Kansas and across the nation, current trail facilities, as well as various studies on the subject. New reports were studied in depth and incorporated into the plan as they fit the need for better trails in Kansas. Multiple state agencies, foundations, and professional organizations were also consulted.

    Kansas State Trails Plan 2008 is also intended to bring Kansas into compliance with statewide planning requirements outlined in the Recreational Trails Program (RTP), administered by the Federal Highway Administration. In Kansas, the RTP is administered by KDWP’s Parks Division.

    The RTP uses federal transportation funds to develop and maintain recreational trails and trail-related facilities for both non-motorized and motorized recreational trail users. RTP funds are apportioned to states from motor fuel excise taxes collected on non-highway recreational fuel use, such as that used by a variety of off-highway recreation vehicles.

    To download a complete version of Kansas State Trails Plan 2008 , go the KDWP website, www.kdwp.state.ks.us, click on “State Parks” at the top of the page, then ” 2008 Trails Plan” in the left-hand column.
    -30-

    Posted on 13th May 2008
    Under: KDWP, Kansas Trail Plans | 1 Comment »