Small Game Hunts

- Willow Creek Wildlife strives to provide hunters with excellent hunting opportunities while maintaining the wildlife and natural resources the land provides. We offer 13,000 acres of crop, sorghum, corn, millet and wheat fields along with native prairie grass and CRP. Our farming practices are designed to offer wildlife food, shelter and nesting habitat to sustain populations.
- As a family we have been farming and ranching in Stanley County since 1912. Over the years watching the wildlife, we grew a deep respect but could never afford to keep the ground idle for habitat.
- In 1983 we established Willow Creek Wildlife so hunters could help offset the costs of maintaining crucial habitat. We are a family owned business and enjoy making it possible for you to enjoy the wildlife as we have. We concentrate on keeping prices affordable making it possible for all hunters to be able to experience the beauty of the great outdoors.
- Our staff is here to help make this hunt you’re most memorable!
- Whether you feel like a day of hunting pheasant or deer, trying your luck pass shooting and decoying for geese, field hunting for grouse, or prairie chicken, or simply brushing up on your skills on the sporting clay course, we are here to accommodate you!
About this hunt
| Hunting season: | Jan 1, 2025 - Dec 31, 2025 |
Where you will hunt
Territory
| Fence type: | Not fenced |
| Territory size: | 13,000 acres |
| Languages spoken by staff: | English |
| Operating since: | 1983 year |
Entertainment services
Where you will stay
South Dakota Hunting Lodge
How to get there
Navigation guidelines
| Transfer from airport: | No |
| Transfer from railway: | No |
Other information
| Gun rental: | No |
| Vaccination required: | No |
Terms
Price includes
- Accommodation
- Transport on territory
- Transfer from/to airport
- Guiding by PH
- Field trophy preparation
- Breakfast
- Lunch
- Dinner
- Snacks
- Beverages/soft drinks
- Sporting Clays (1 round/day), Skeet (1 round/day)
Price does NOT include
- Alcoholic drinks
- Gratuities
Cancellation
Deposits are non refundableWounding
All efforts will be made to find any wounded animalsPayment
Deposit
Final payment
Paid onsiteTAGs & licenses
Big Game
Most big game hunting in South Dakota is allocated through a drawing (lottery) system. Residents have the majority of tags, while non-residents have limited opportunities (no more than 8% of most firearm deer and antelope tags) mostly with leftover tags and archery hunts.
Deer: South Dakota offers multiple deer seasons by region, weapon and various controlled unit hunts. Residents apply in lotteries for each season/tag type and can generally get at least one deer tag per year. Non-residents are not eligible for drawing in some firearms areas and have limited opportunities in others. Non-resident Archery Deer licenses for public land are available via a draw and private land licenses via OTC.
Pronghorn: All pronghorn licenses are allocated by draw. Non-residents are capped at 8% of firearm antelope tags as well. There is a separate Archery Antelope license through a draw for public-land access (private-land archery antelope is unlimited).
Elk, Bighorn Sheep & Mountain Goat tags are extremely limited and resident-only.
Mountain Lion hunting is open-entry – residents can simply buy a Mountain Lion license OTC and hunt during the season (harvest is limited by a quota). Non-residents are not allowed to hunt mountain lions in South Dakota.
Wild Turkey: Spring Turkey tags are allocated by draw for residents first, with usually some leftover tags that non-residents can then purchase OTC with certain areas restrictions applied. There is also a separate Archery Spring Turkey license that is unrestricted (available OTC to residents, and to non-residents after April 1 in limited numbers). In Fall, a limited number of turkey licenses are available by draw mostly for residents. Overall, non-residents have opportunities mainly for Turkeys on private land with leftover tags or the statewide archery Turkey license.
Small Game
South Dakota is famous for Pheasant hunting, other small game includes Grouse, Partridge, Quail, Rabbits, Squirrels, and waterfowl (Ducks, Geese, Cranes) as well as fur-bearing animals. Hunters need a Small Game License or a Combination License to hunt small game.
Waterfowl for non-residents is restricted: they must apply for a limited number of Non-Resident Waterfowl Licenses (for Duck / Goose) by lottery. Residents can buy waterfowl privileges with their license OTC.
All hunters pursuing migratory birds need a free HIP registration. South Dakota also requires a State Migratory Bird Certification for hunting waterfowl together with a Federal Duck Stamp.
Coyotes, skunks, prairie dogs are unprotected and can be hunted year-round with just a basic license, trapping requires a separate license.
Documents Needed
- Small Game or Combination Hunting License
- Big Game License + Tag
- Habitat Stamp
- Migratory Bird Certification (HIP), State Waterfowl Stamp, Federal Duck Stamp
- Hunter Education Certificate
Minimum Hunter Age
South Dakota’s minimum age for firearm big game hunting is 12 years old. Youth ages 12–15 can take hunter safety courses and can obtain Youth Deer and Youth Antelope licenses (must be accompanied by an adult while hunting big game). For small game, youth as young as 10 can hunt under the Mentored Youth program
South Dakota also has an Apprentice Hunter License for those over 16 who haven’t taken hunter ed – allowing them to hunt small game under supervision of a licensed adult (this is for one year only).
More Information
- https://gfp.sd.gov/ (South Dakota Game, Fish & Parks)
This price includes:
trips worldwide
with no booking fees
from other hunters