CDFW Wildlife Areas Ready for Dove Hunters
Press release from CDFW:
With select fields plowed, planted, mowed or otherwise primed, the California Department of Fish and Wildlife (CDFW) is prepared to welcome dove hunters to many of its wildlife areas for the Sept. 1 season opener.
Mourning doves in Proctor Valley in San Diego County, California on June 10, 2024. (CDFW Photo/Travis VanZant)
“Doves key in on bare ground with seeds because 99 percent of their diet is seeds,” said Ian Dwight, an environmental scientist with CDFW’s Upland / Small Game Unit. “This is something our wildlife areas know very well and will often (conduct) mowing practices and grow food plots so that there are ample opportunities in the beginning of the season for dove.”
Safflower, sunflower, wheat, milo and millet are the most common grain crops planted at CDFW wildlife areas in preparation for the dove opener. The crop fields benefit many other wildlife species throughout the fall and winter.
“In September, after fields have been harvested in August by a lot of farmers, doves will be attracted to safflower and sunflower first before they feed out on the winter-planted cereal grains,” Dwight said.
Migratory mourning dove and white-winged dove populations concentrate in California’s agricultural areas in the late summer where seed crops are farmed and harvested in abundance. This makes CDFW wildlife areas in the Sacramento Valley, San Joaquin Valley, Imperial Valley and the Palo Verde Valley prime destinations for public land dove hunters.
Wildlife areas where habitat has been prepared to attract dove in 2024 include, but are not limited to, the Upper Butte Basin, Gray Lodge, Yolo Bypass, Oroville and Spenceville wildlife areas in the Sacramento Valley and the North Grasslands, Mendota and Los Banos wildlife areas in the San Joaquin Valley.
Southern California offers some of the best dove hunting anywhere in the nation. The top public land spots with prepared crop fields include CDFW’s Imperial Wildlife Area, the San Jacinto Wildlife Area, the Palo Verde Ecological Reserve with additional opportunities provided by CDFW and partners at the Imperial County Upland Game Fields.
Entry procedures can vary as do crop plantings from year to year. Hunters are advised to call ahead in preparing for their public land hunt. Not all CDFW wildlife areas are open to dove hunting Sept. 1. Many CDFW ecological reserves are closed to hunting altogether. To locate wildlife areas to hunt throughout the state, visit CDFW’s Places to Visit web page or Public Lands Viewer.
The Sunday, Sept. 1 dove opener falls on a weekend for the first time in five years, which means the single busiest hunting day of the year in California is likely to see even more kids, first-time hunters, families and groups of hunters afield compared to weekday openers in the recent past.
Hunters can target mourning dove and white-winged dove Sept. 1 through Sept. 15. Spotted doves and ringed turtle doves also become legal game. Mourning dove and white-winged dove have a daily bag limit of 15, up to 10 of which may be white-winged dove. The possession limit is triple the daily bag limit. There are no limits on spotted dove and ringed-turtle dove. The invasive Eurasian collared-dove is open year-round with no bag limits. Hunting of Eurasian collared-doves on CDFW Type A wildlife areas is limited to the mourning dove season. A dove identification guide (PDF) is available at CDFW’s website.
Hunters are strongly encouraged to review the dove hunting regulations and those governing CDFW lands available online: 2024-2025 California Waterfowl, Upland Game, and Public Use of Department Lands Regulations.
The second half of California’s dove season begins Nov. 9 and runs through Dec. 23. Many CDFW wildlife areas are open to dove hunting in the second half of the season on designated waterfowl shoot days when a Type A wildlife area pass will be required to enter.
Additional late-season dove hunts are offered through CDFW’s SHARE program, which provides public hunting opportunities on private farms and ranches throughout the state.
Minimum dove hunting requirements are a valid hunting license and upland game bird validation (validation not required for Junior Hunting License holders), good footwear, a shotgun of almost any gauge, nonlead shotgun shells, a cooler with ice to store birds, and plenty of water for the typically hot weather. Sunscreen and insect repellant are other must-have items for dove hunters.
For more information and resources on dove hunting, CDFW’s Advanced Hunter Education program has videos to help hunters. CDFW’s R3 program has additional resources and videos as well for newcomers to dove hunting.
Dove hunters may also encounter a banded dove. As of Aug. 27, CDFW staff and volunteers throughout the state had banded about 2,700 mourning dove and 127 white-winged dove. Hunters are asked to report their banded birds to the U.S. Geological Survey to help with further dove research.
Persons with disabilities needing reasonable accommodation to participate in public meetings or other CDFW activities are invited to contact CDFW’s Accessibility Coordinator in the CRO Office at (916) 902-5577, or send an email to [email protected]. Reasonable Accommodation requests for facility and/or meeting accessibility should be received at least 21 days prior to the event. Requests for American Sign Language Interpreters should be submitted at least two weeks prior to the event, and requests for Real-Time Captioning at least four weeks prior to the event. These timeframes are to help ensure that the requested accommodation is met. If a request for an accommodation has been submitted but due to circumstances is no longer needed, please contact the Accessibility Coordinator immediately.

Join the discussion! For rules visit: https://kymkemp.com/commenting-rules
Comments system how-to: https://wpdiscuz.com/community/postid/10599/
Can you actually eat a dove?! Or is this just about the thrill of destroying small birds while making big bang noise? I’m not anti-hunting but is this about putting food on the table or just about wanton killing and destruction of life? I mean really-turtle doves are very cool birds… You’re going to go out there and teach children how fun it is to kill stuff for no other reason than to kill it?!
They are a favorite with some folks: https://honest-food.net/wild-game/dove-pigeon-recipes/
Thanks! I had no idea. Guess I was ignorant and made some ignorant assumptions! I have no problem with hunters putting food on their tables.
So folks are worried about using guns to shoot game birds but are good with giant windmills shredding them into pieces of goo. Priorities I suppose. At least the hunters eat them versus having the vultures, maggots, fungi, bacteria, crabs, and worms slowly decompose the pieces littering the ground and ocean surface under the windmills. Just some food for thought when discussing ways to die. Dove, chukar, pheasant, quail, and duck are excellent sources of protein and tastier than domestic factory farmed chicken. It’s still better to grow and eat more Brussels sprouts though!
Ask folks who catch them in traps if it’s all about the bang, or if they’re just yummy.
We would be poisoning them in the name of agriculture if we weren’t eating them.
Farce, doves are quite tasty and considered a real treat by hunters and other folks. As a hunter I get no thrill making a big bang noise and harvesting these birds. I always give thanks to God for providing these birds as food. My children are grown now and continue to carry on the harvesting of these Doves. To teach your kids that it is just plain fun to “blast” a few just for the sake of killing is sick!
I was ignorant! Guess I need to expand my diet…and maybe not talk so much
Farce, you are not ignorant. Sounds like you have never eatin doves. I think you will really like the little birds. Try some and enjoy.