ThermaCELL ProFlex Heated Insoles with Bluetooth Control

Featuring Bluetooth Operation and Tested to One Million Footsteps

Burlington, Mass. – With the introduction of ThermaCELL Heated Insoles ProFLEX Heavy Duty, ThermaCELL has gone one step further with their innovative personal warming products. When ThermaCELL released its original remote-controlled Heated Insoles, it was revolutionary for outdoor lovers. Then the company took the product to the next level with its ProFLEX Heated Insoles, which featured increased flexibility and interchangeable cushioned batteries. Now, these new insoles feature Bluetooth® Technology so you can control the temperature of your insoles via a smartphone, and a 30% longer life battery.

“By using Bluetooth technology, the insoles can be paired with smartphones, completely eliminating the need to keep track of a remote,” said Josh Silvia, marketing manager for ThermaCELL Heated Products. “By using ThermaCELL’s free app that is available for both iPhone® and Android®, users can set the temperature for individual insoles, view battery life, and pair as many insoles as they’d like to their device.” Read more

Online Video Shows A Perfect Strategy for Tagging a Big Buck

Hunting strategies for the rut! Click here to watch the newest video on GrowingDeer.tv where Lindsey tags a mature buck on the family farm. It’s a top hit list buck that’s a real stud for that part of Arkansas! Then Adam and Matt are back in Kansas where they let the arrows fly. Plus, they’ve got the details of the hunt for a mind blowing 260″ buck! The episode wraps up with some solid tips and “how to” on trapping nest predators. Visit www.GrowingDeer.tv today! Read more

Prime Time for Muzzleloaders

By Glen Wunderlich

With a week remaining in muzzleloading deer season in Michigan’s southern zone (Zone III), the harsh wintry weather upon us can provide some of the hottest hunting of the season.  Food sources become magnets of opportunities for hunters prepared to brave the elements, as deer travel farther to feed.  Not only are more deer concentrated in feeding areas, but they tend to move more freely during available hunting light.  Accordingly, hunters able to withstand harsh conditions actually have some advantages that only late-season muzzleloading can provide.

The first advantage realized in late season hunting is the lack of other hunters.  During the regular season, smart hunters rely on the fact that other hunters will be moving about and pushing deer from cover.  During December, however, deer are not being pressured as much and will move to feed on their own accord, and they’ll do it before darkness descends in afternoon sessions. 

Another advantage is gained with snow on the ground.  Although a deer’s keen eyesight will spot a hunter’s movement more readily, a wise hunter can turn the tables by stand hunting.  Sitting still can be a challenge in trying conditions, but modern portable blinds or fixed shacks with heaters can translate into success with your being in position before deer arrive.

While on the subject of stand hunting, fidgety youngsters can join the excitement – either as company or participants – as long as they can stay warm and comfortable.  And, with the versatility offered by downloading muzzleloader powder charges and using lighter bullets, kids can hunt, too, without fear of excessive recoil, yet with enough energy to get the job done.  To custom load for youngsters or those of slight build, it is necessary to power a given load with loose powder, rather than using convenient pellets.  It’s really no big deal insofar as the loading is performed before heading afield.  Just make sure to pack some extra loads beforehand, which brings us to the next point for consideration.

If a hunter is fortunate enough to get a shot, it’s important to do two things immediately afterward:  1)  Watch the deer as long as possible to gain an understanding of its path, and 2)  Reload immediately thereafter.  Even if the deer is down, an experienced hunter will be ready for the unexpected by dutifully preparing a follow-up shot.  Many deer have been lost, because muzzleloader hunters assumed the hunt was over.

There is one final word of caution for the successful hunter:  Keep your deer from freezing.  A month ago, hunters were faced with warm weather and the task of cooling off the meat.  Now, however, cold weather presents a challenge to keep the deer from freezing.  With temperatures well below freezing, deer cannot be hung outdoors for extended periods of time without the meat being negatively affected.  Because the deer must be thawed to butcher it and then frozen again for storage, it won’t taste good; therefore, have a plan.

With a bit of luck, proper planning, and some “bad” weather, the coming week can be the best opportunity for deer-hunting success and bagging a good buck all season.

Michigan Predator Hunting Updates

Senate Bill 1187 (Sen. Tom Casperson, R-Escanaba) was advanced to the full House of Representatives for a possible vote next week. The Scientific Fish and Wildlife Conservation Act was overturned by the Michigan Court of Appeals last month on a technicality, as the court ruled that the provision to allow free licenses for active military members was not closely-enough related to the rest of the initiative. SB 1187 simply reinstates the remaining provisions of the SFWCA – namely the authority of the Natural Resources Commission to name game species and issue fisheries orders, the $1 million appropriation for Asian carp response, and the addition of wolves to the game species list. It has passed the Senate 27-10.

At the Natural Resources Commission, a MUCC 2016 resolution to allow centerfire rifles at night for certain predators, like coyotes, was approved by the Natural Resources Commission, but with restrictions. The order allows centerfire calibers up to .269, except not in state park and recreation areas statewide and limited to private land only in the southern limited firearm deer hunting zone. This measure was spearheaded by the grassroots group Predator Hunters for Centerfire at Night and supported by the Michigan Trappers and Predator Callers Association, which sponsored our supporting resolution this summer at the MUCC Annual Convention. Also at the NRC, former MUCC Executive Director Dennis Muchmore was awarded the Thomas L. Washington Lifetime Conservation Award, named after our other longtime former Executive Director!

Wednesday, the Michigan Natural Resources Trust Fund Board recommended $47.6 million in grants for public outdoor recreation land and development, including the 680-acre Crystal Waters State Game Area project in Monroe County, which was endorsed by MUCC and championed by MUCC Board Member Kris Matthew of Ann Arbor, Sen. Dale Zorn (R-Monroe) and Rep. Bill LaVoy (D-Monroe). Trust Fund grants are funded by the development of state-owned oil, gas and minerals through the landmark compromise between conservationists and the energy industry in 1976.

Additionally, the following legislation was addressed this week:

  • SB 800: Includes a supplemental appropriation for $1M General Fund for the DNR Wildlife Division to backfill some of what they spent on CWD (Passed by both chambers, heading to the Governor for signing). (MUCC supported)
  • HB 5215: Penalizes the unauthorized removal of a dog collar (such as from a hunting dog). Passed both chambers and headed to the Governor for signing. (Began as an MUCC resolution)
  • HB 5868: A bill that would exempt recreational gold panners from having to get a DEQ permit, even if they were using motorized dredges in trout streams. This did not get a vote out of committee either and is dead for this year. (MUCC opposed)
  • HB 5702: Clarify some language on deer damage and disease control permits. Passed Senate, and should head to Governor.  (MUCC supported).

Unfortunately, SB 570 was not advanced past the House Committee on Tax Policy. After a committee hearing last week, there was not enough support on the committee to vote it to the full house in its current form. The bill would have exempted charitable sportsmen’s clubs from local property taxes, if they met specific community service requirements.

It was quite a week! Please support our work to conserve natural resources and protect your rights to hunt, fish and trap by making a tax-deductible donation at www.mucc.org/donate!

How’s HSUS Faring Post-Election?

With the nomination of Oklahoma Attorney General Scott Pruitt to run the EPA must have the execs at the Humane Society of the United States fuming. Pruitt was no fan of HSUS, putting out a public consumer alert against HSUS and opening a well-deserved inquiry into HSUS’s deceptive fundraising. Pruitt’s inquiry was also the subject of some tough questions HSUS CEO Wayne Pacelle received from US Senator James Inhofe at a hearing last year. While the EPA and HSUS won’t cross paths too much, Pruitt’s going to have a nice, direct line to a President and other cabinet members.

Overall, election night was a big “L” for HSUS. HSUS’s political arm went in heavily against Donald Trump, calling him essentially the worst threat that could possibly happen to HSUS’s agenda. And he won.

The HSUS world generally supported Democrats. According to FEC filings, HSUS employees spent about $14,000 personally, 100% of which went to Democrats. HSUS’s political action committee made $370,000 in contributions, of which 67% went to Democrats. And HSUS’s legislative fund made about $1.1 million in independent expenditures, with 77% going to Democrats. Democrats are out of power. And of the few Republicans that the HSUS PAC did support, a number lost their bids, such as US Sens. Kelly Ayotte (NH) and Mark Kirk (IL). Read more

Feral Hogs Are Spreading, But You Can Help Stop Them

 

Feral hog distribution 2015 qdma

There’s a wildlife disaster walking your way. Or, instead of walking, it may have wheels under it. I’m talking about feral hogs, and if you don’t have them where you hunt, give it time. Hogs are gradually expanding their range, as you can see in the map above released this summer by the Southeast Cooperative Wildlife Disease Study (SCWDS).

The map shows counties with established feral hog populations reported in 1982 (blue) and more recently 2015 (red). Notice how hogs have completely filled in almost all Deep South states in that time, and they’ve made much progress in their steady march northward. Notice also the outlier populations like those in Michigan, Virginia, Pennsylvania and other states. Populations like these were not established through natural hog movements but through transportation and release of feral hogs, most likely deliberate.

“Urge your state wildlife agency and your state legislators to ban transport and release of live feral hogs in your state – if it’s not already illegal.”

Why should you care? If you love to hunt and manage whitetails, you cannot also love feral hogs. They directly compete with deer for food like acorns and soft mast. Research even shows that deer avoid hogs, so it’s not even a competition: Hogs control the best food sources, and deer get the table scraps later. Hogs uproot food plots, sometimes raiding them for the seeds you just planted. They dig craters that are large enough to damage farm equipment. Hogs ruin forest roads, steal bait intended to attract deer to your trail-cameras, raid turkey nests, and generally destroy the deer habitat you’ve worked to build. They even foul the water in small ponds and wetlands, creating the kind of low-quality mudhole that is ideal breeding habitat for the flying gnats that spread the EHD virus among deer. Read more

Anchoring a Whitetail

By Glen Wunderlich

With only three days remaining in the regular firearms deer season, the cold rain was irrelevant.  The southeast wind, on the other hand, meant the majority of my hunting-stand options would be out of play.  However, a turkey hunting blind intentionally left in place all year for just such conditions would be my destination for an afternoon whitetail rendezvous.

Over the past two weeks, several opportunities had arisen to refill the freezer, but being a practitioner of quality deer management principles, young bucks were granted renewed leases to grow; antlerless deer had also been ignored based on faith that other chances loomed.

Last weekend, my great grandson accompanied me on a half-mile walk in the early morning darkness to a roomy blind with swampland to the east and a food plot to the west.  My six year-old companion has the eyes and ears for which an old-timer like me was once familiar, and this day, he’d be my assistant. 

After hours on stand, the youngster spotted a deer, which turned out to be a button buck fawn that had a hankering for turnips.  We were content to watch him devour the still-lusciously green brassica leaves and called it a morning shortly thereafter.  Our last chance together in the afternoon proved just how fickle opportunities can be and we headed home empty handed without seeing another deer.

Two days later and now alone, with wind and rain in my face, I settled into a portable ground blind that would shelter me from the cruel, persistent elements.  My Burris binocular, Bushnell rangefinder, and Leupold rifle scope could be counted on, if a situation needed clarification – or, so I thought.

Before 5pm, a pair of whitetail deer appeared from a neighbor’s woodlot at approximately 100 yards from me.  I deliberately pulled the binocular to my eyes and saw nothing but fog, courtesy of the heavy air.  I dabbed the moisture from the lenses with my undershirt, being careful not to smear the water and scratch the glass and discovered the duo to be a button buck and mature doe.

While the young buck threw caution to the wind and began chomping turnip leaves, the long-nosed antlerless bodyguard stayed put.  Fifteen minutes passed and the doe had not moved anything but its head and eyes during its surveillance operation.

Patience would be the key, because I knew from past experience that the deer would eventually migrate into the field.  And, that’s what I needed so that it couldn’t bolt onto another’s land, if it didn’t drop quickly from a shot.

Finally, the adult doe edged close enough for me to be comfortable with a shot.  But, not just any kill shot would suffice.  I would attempt to anchor the deer on the spot with a high-shoulder shot, so that any dispute with a neighbor would be avoided.

The NEF 12-gauge Ultra Slug single-shot boomed, as the Federal Premium load launched a 325-grain Barnes tipped bullet to the mark and the hunt was over with one perfectly placed shot.  The Rose Lake deer check station

Rose Lake deer check station

Rose Lake deer check station

confirmed it to be 5 ½ years old, before sawing off its head and shipping it to Ames, Iowa for Chronic Wasting Disease testing.

With a month of various deer hunting seasons left, opportunities abound.  Here are the muzzleloading seasons by zones:

o  Zone 1: Dec. 2-11, 2016

o  Zone 2: Dec. 2-11, 2016

o  Zone 3: Dec. 2-18, 2016

Late antlerless season begins December 19 and runs through January 1, 2017 on private land in select Deer Management Units.  Archery season is open now through January 1, 2017, as well.

MI DNR offers introductory upland game bird hunting clinic


The pro-staff at the Department of Natural Resources Outdoor Skills Academy will team up with the National Wild Turkey Federation, Pheasants Forever and Tails-a-Waggin’ guide service for the academy’s first-ever upland game bird hunting clinic Saturday, Dec. 17.This class will take place at Tails-a-Waggin’ Acres game bird preserve in Marion, Michigan. DNR Outdoor Skills Academy instructors will offer an “A to Z” introduction on how to hunt upland birds such as pheasants. Following the instructional portion of the class, the National Wild Turkey Federation, Pheasants Forever and Tails-a-Waggin’ will provide guided pheasant hunts. Read more

HSS Instructional Video Shows How To Properly Hang A Ladder Stand


Danville, AL – Hanging a ladder stand sounds pretty simple. But doing it properly by keeping safety first and foremost isn’t always the way it is done. That’s why Hunter Safety System, the company dedicated to saving hunters’ lives, has launched a new instructional video specifically on this topic on the popular video-sharing website, YouTube.This new 7-minute, 30-second video addresses every detail of hanging a ladder stand and how to be safe the entire time. Staying connected 100-percent of the time is of paramount importance. You can’t fall but so far if you are connected at all times. In fact, during the course of the video, the HSS staff demonstrates various obstacles that could occur while setting up the stand that leads people to unconnect themselves. The video shows the safe and proper way to address these obstacles should you encounter them.

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