a license with a daily limit. License is $14 for the year. tags are small so don't lose them as you don't want to get caught with a dead gopher and no tag. You might have to take a course or two in BC, not sure. The tags are for males only, the course is intended to help you identify the ### when on the run, the second part is for when they are stationary. The gait is different between the males and females, and they sit differently as well. Its a little hard to get close enough to see the bits, so you really have to study their characteristics to know the difference. Get your license early as they do go fast.
I can see two gophers through my office window right now! Wish I had drove to work today so I'd have a rifle for my lunch break!
The buggers are surprisingly fat, definitely had an easy winter so far. Could still have some nasty weather over the next couple of months though.
Where? I can be on the way in ten minutes.
You guys and your guns
![]()
![]()
![]()
![]()
This is the same one as above
![]()
There is a few I shot last year with the bow.
That's awesome! It's amazing the damage those tips will do. I found they break claws a lot, you have that problem?

Around 2006, people put out the call on Regina 980 AM radio to come down to the Mankota area. Being civic minded, I phoned the lady they interviewed. "Come on down", was her answer. She bought me lunch and gave me directions to her brother's farm. I have never seen such a mess! I had to ask a fellow who come out from his yard to visit, what was supposed to be in the fields I was shooting in. This was in July. I am a good SK farm boy, and I couldn't tell what the crop was supposed to be.
One day, I spent all afternoon walking back and forth along a mile of road, shooting first on one side for a while, then on the other. Every once in awhile, a pickup would come along, stop, blaze away for a while, then carry on. It was a disaster area. One field stunk from all the dead gophers laying around. The seagulls were having a feast. Those who think they should eat what they shoot needed to talk with those farmers for just a few minutes.
As an example of how clueless people can be, on the talk show on 980, one woman thought "they" should relocate the gophers, instead of shooting them.![]()
There doesn't seem to be as many gophers around in southern Manitoba, I think it's due to a lot of farmers poisoning them.
It's unfortunate because I'm sure a clean shot from a .22 or a .17hmr is a much more humane than the poison.
Some times I see a ridge in a field where the crop is completely eaten and there are gopher mounds everywhere, so I stop and watch for awhile but there are zero gophers. You can find this a lot actually, I don't know what the regs are on poisoning gophers but I'm fairly certain that's what is happening here.
If you don't want to hunt them or poison them I fill a water barrel in the loader of my tractor and empty it into the holes, they either come out or drown, coming out I use the firearm of choice that day to dispatch. I cleared out a bunch quickly this way so as to avoid poison, not good for other species or domestic animals.
whats all that brown stuff....
only way i'm shooting any little squeekers this weekend is if they have snow shovels.... but there is the odd brown patch starting to show.



























