Contents to the Current Issue of the Alberta Game Warden Magazine Alberta Game Warden Online, wildlife, law enforcement, poaching, big game, fish, regulations, wildlife officers, firearms, guns, renewable resources, environment, habitat, sportsfishing, hunting, outdoors, nature, laws, bow hunting, rifle hunting, archery, photography, migratory birds, magazine, book, photography

Photo by: USDA Agricultural Services, Research Photo Unit

FORWARD MARCH: The next time you head for the great outdoors be on lookout for invasive plant species. Alberta's wildlife habitat is at risk.


CONSERVATION AWARDS: 
The WISE Foundation recognizes excellence in conservation.

BACK TO THE WATER ALIVE: 
The Camrose Fish and Game Association has developed a new fish measuring device that will help keep ‘em alive.

BEAST IN THE BASEMENT:
The flashlight beam pierced the dim confines of the basement. A pair of green eyes stared back.


DEATH IN THE DESERT:
Hundreds of Wyoming
elk were dying. 
Wildlife experts
teamed up to 
investigate 
the cause. 

 

 

 

 

Game Warden Notebook
HIGH PRAIRIE: 
Fish and Wildlife officers find illegal fish hidden in drawers.

HIGH RIVER:
A Calgary man is caught in the act after mistaking a grizzly for a black bear. 

HIGH RIVER:
Officers with a search warrant discover illegal wildlife parts.

EVANSBURG:
Fish poachers nabbed after officer looks under the hood.

FORT McMURRAY:
Investigators track down suspect in deer poaching case.

ON THE COVER: 
Bears beware: District Fish and Wildlife Officer Kirk Olchowy and Mica, his Karelian Bear Dog, team up for the Alberta Fish and Wildlife Division bear aversion program. 
Photo by Dennis Urban. 

INSET: Wyoming wildlife officials break the case that killed hundreds of elk on their winter range.
Departements
POINT BLANK
Teachers have a lot of clout. What are they telling your kids about hunting?
BY DANIEL BOYCO
COMMON LAWS
Get the point on barbless hooks
BY RICHARD LYONS
READERS WRITE
Letters to the editor
LOOKING BACK
By the book: The old Wildlife Act left us with some interesting questions.
BY J. B. STRUTHERS
HUNTING FOR TOMORROW
By the book: The old Wildlife Act left us with some interesting questions.
BY KELLY SEMPLE
UNDER FOOT
Yarrow: Alberta’s multi-purpose herb.
BY STEVE MACRAE
OUTFITTERS SOCIETY
Outfitters put their money where their mouth is. One million dollars to be invested in wildlife management. 
BY RYK VISSCHER
CASE IN POINT
Undercover operation reveals black market fish network in small town Alberta.
BY RICHARD SERVETNYK
WORKS QUIRKS
The quick and the dead: Things get ugly when a cow moose breaks from the bush and takes a run at a game warden.
BY STEVE WASYLIK

SUBSCRIBE TO THE ALBERTA GAME WARDEN

Receive four action packed issues per year, delivered right to your door! Enjoy amazing photographs and stories about wildlife and fisheries management. Discover the facts surrounding the most controversial environmental issues of the day. Read about the poachers who didn't get away. Get it all for only $12.00 CDN a year in Canada and $17.00 anywhere else in the world!

What you see here at The Alberta Game Warden web site is a small sample of what can be found in the current issue. If you want it all, subscribe today!

ADVERTISE

Here is a unique outdoor magazine that gets you behind the scenes on natural resource issues and conservation law enforcement. Find out how you can advertise your products or services in one of the hottest outdoor publications available today.

LETTERS

The Alberta Game Warden encourages the submission of letters, articles, and photographs from anyone interested in conservation. Check this section to see if your letter has been published.

GUEST BOOK

Please sign our guest book. Any comments you have about our magazine are appreciated.

GAME WARDEN ARCHIVES

Past issues have been placed in the Alberta Game Warden archives.

Spring 1996 to the fall of 2003