Montana: FWP Clarifies Changes to Wolf Hunting, Trapping Regulations

In August, the Fish and Wildlife Commission adopted several changes to the 2021/2022 wolf hunting and trapping regulations.

Changes include eliminating quotas, increasing the number of wolf trapping and hunting licenses allowed for individual hunters, extending wolf trapping seasons and the allowance of snares to harvest wolves.

The changes also specified that hunters are allowed to purchase and possess 10 wolf hunting licenses – a separate license for each wolf they harvest – and trappers are allowed a bag limit of 10 wolves. This means an individual who hunts and traps can take a total of 20 wolves in a license year.

The regulations initially said hunters and trappers could take 10 wolves total. The regulations will be corrected to align with the intent of the commission. Read more

Michigan: veterans preference hunts at managed waterfowl hunt areas on Veterans Day

Veterans preference drawings at Michigan’s Wetland Wonders will take place Nov. 11 for properly licensed resident active-duty U.S. military personnel and veterans.

Hunts will occur at Fish Point State Wildlife Area in Tuscola County, the Harsens Island Unit of the St. Clair Flats State Wildlife Area in St. Clair County, Muskegon County Wastewater, Nayanquing Point State Wildlife Area in Bay County, Pointe Mouillee State Game Area in Monroe and Wayne counties, Shiawassee River State Game Area in Saginaw County and Shiawassee National Wildlife Refuge in Saginaw County.

The following documentation, along with a valid Michigan driver’s license or voter registration card, will be accepted as proof of status: military ID, leave papers, duty papers, military orders, copy of DD Form 214, enhanced driver’s license or documentation from the Veterans Administration regarding disability status. If you were discharged from the Army or Air Force National Guard, you may provide a copy of NGB Form 22 or NGB Form 23. Read more

Whitetails Unlimited Offers Free Sight-In Targets

Rifle, shotgun, and muzzleloader deer seasons are fast approaching, but whatever firearm is used it is very important for the hunter to be confident with their abilities to hit a target accurately – every time. To help ensure that you and your firearm are shooting accurately, Whitetails Unlimited will ship a pad of 100-yard sight-in targets at no cost. The targets measure approximately 14 x 16 inches and has 1-inch grids with a 6-inch center highlight ring.

Whitetails Unlimited celebrates the American tradition of hunting deer, the most popular big-game animal in North America. WTU expects hunters to go afield on ethical, fair-chase hunts; part of that hunting ethic is to only take shots when the hunter is sure of the target, knows what is beyond the target, and is following all applicable hunting laws and regulations. For more information about hunting safely and legally, contact your state’s department of natural resources.

“These sight-in targets are a great way to confirm your firearm is accurate,” said Whitetails Unlimited Program Services Director Russ Austad. “An accurate firearm will ensure a clean, ethical kill.”

For individuals to receive their targets, just call Whitetails Unlimited National Headquarters at 1-800-274-5471. Read more

Don’t forget your Pure Michigan Hunt application when picking up your deer license

Buy your deer license over the counter at a DNR?license retailer or online at Michigan.gov/Deer.

Choose from a deer license or a deer combo license, which allows hunters the opportunity to harvest two bucks. Universal antlerless licenses are also available for purchase and can be used across deer management units in the Lower Peninsula and parts of the Upper Peninsula. Find season regulations and bag limits in the 2021 Hunting Digest.

Licenses purchased online will ship to you in seven to 10 business days.  You cannot hunt without a deer license in your possession. Read more

Michigan Pheasant Hunting Initiative receives private donation

The Michigan Department of Natural Resources thanks Alex Beachum for his donation of $25,000 to stock rooster pheasants on state game areas in memory of his mother, Kristine “Kris” Beachum.

The Beachum family moved from bustling Plymouth in 1978, to middle-of-nowhere Deerfield Township north of Howell. Moving away from their family and friends, the Beachums planted their roots in rural Livingston County with only a party phone line to connect them with the life they left behind.

“My dad needed to bird hunt,” Alex said. “And for my mom, as she had done throughout her life, she sacrificed her pleasantries and wants so that her family was happy and whole.”

Alex’s memory of his mother is best exemplified by her willingness and acceptance of his father’s obsession with pheasants and bird dogs. It was this sacrifice and selflessness that inspired Alex to donate money to the DNR to stock pheasants for hunting.

The Michigan Association of Gamebird Breeders and Hunting Preserves, through coordination with the DNR, will stock state game areas with rooster pheasants throughout southern Michigan. The stocking will take place on nine state game areas for the first pheasant season from Oct. 20 through Nov. 14.

Those state game areas include Cornish, Crow Island, Erie, Lapeer, Leidy Lake, Pinconning, Point Mouillee, Rose Lake and St. John’s Marsh.

Pheasant hunters, age 17 and older, will need a $25 pheasant license to pursue pheasants on public or Hunting Access Program lands in the Lower Peninsula. License sale revenue will be used to purchase and stock rooster pheasants during upcoming pheasant seasons.

Federal Announces Select Outfitter Program

ANOKA, Minnesota –– Federal Ammunition has chosen the inaugural class of hunting destinations that make up its Select outfitter program. Seven of the top wingshooting lodges in the nation will form the foundation for a program designed to showcase the best hunting destinations paired with the most effective ammunition available. These lodges will feature Federal ammunition and branding beginning this fall.

“Federal is proud to introduce this new partnership with hunting destinations,” stated Jason Nash, Federal’s Vice President of Marketing. “The partners we’ve aligned with are the definition of Premium when it comes to the experience of hunting with an outfitter” stated Nash. “Every aspect of the trip was considered when we looked at who best represents the Federal brand and its products from Premium to Custom Shop.”

When establishing this program, Federal looked at outfitters that offer the complete package when it comes to high-quality hunting and lodging experiences. From cuisine and lodging to game, guides, and dogs. Every aspect of the trip must be first-class to be part of the Select program.

For 2022, these fine locations will be featured in Select program marketing materials and offer Federal Ammunition to complement their exceptional hunting experiences. Federal will carefully curate additional partners for this program over the coming years.

Federal Select Outfitters 2021

Federal Ammunition can be found at dealers nationwide or purchased online direct from Federal. For more information on the Federal Select Outfitters Program, and all products from Federal, or to shop online, visit www.federalpremium.com.

FOXPRO’s New X-Decoy Released

Lewistown, PA — The X-Decoy from FOXPRO turns your X-Series game call into an all-inclusive and portable predator-calling machine. Attach the decoy to the top of your X-Series call (must use as a stand-alone if using with XWAVE) and connect the decoy to the call by using the supplied aux cable or wireless IR port connection (IR only available in later X-Series call models). The X-Decoy may also be used along with any other FOXPRO call (that has an aux jack) as a separate stand-alone decoy. Simply screw the included stake into the bottom of the decoy body and connect the decoy to your FOXPRO unit via the included aux cord and aux Jacks.

The X-Decoy gives predators the visual confirmation they’re looking for and listening for! It comes standard with a removable stake, Fuzzy Wuzzy topper, XHD speaker mounting hinge, and included allen wrench for assembly, stowed in the battery compartment. This decoy has a whisper quiet motor and Jacked Up Chaotic Motion for great action and realism.

The X-Decoy has a 3 position switch that features 2 speed selectable motion (Off, High Speed, and Slow Speed) and is powered by 4AA batteries (not included). The X-Decoy is backed by a 1 year limited warranty and FOXPRO’s unmatched customer support and is proudly made in the USA.

For news and information, visit www.gofoxpro.com or follow us on Instagram at https://www.instagram.com/foxpro_inc/ and Facebook at https://www.facebook.com/Foxpro.Furtakers/. Stream FOXPRO TV on YouTube at www.youtube.com/foxproinc

Whitetail Deer Shot Placement Aids Available from National Bowhunter Education Foundation

Improve accuracy and reduce game recovery time

RAPID CITY, SD – The National Bowhunter Education Foundation (NBEF) offers educational items to increase success and safety for bowhunters. Whitetail hunters can refer to these tools to improve shot accuracy for a quick harvest and game recovery.

The Advanced Whitetail Deer Anatomy and Shot Placement Guide is an informative shot placement training aid with full color 8.5″ x 11″ transparent overlays. Separate acrylic overlays feature the muscular system, skeletal system, circulatory system, and vital organs specific to a white-tailed deer. Accompanying text includes shot placement information and illustrations for both firearm hunters and bowhunters. Useful for hunting guides, hunter education instructors or today’s informed hunter. Responsible hunting includes knowledge of accurate shot placement for a quick kill and game recovery. This is part of the International Bowhunter Education Program Hunter Responsibility Series which includes anatomy and shot placement guides for bear, turkey and elk. Suggested retail $12.50. Read more

Ethics: We Owe it to the Hunted

By Glen Wunderlich

Charter Member Professional Outdoor Media Association (POMA)

Having read with great interest a thought-provoking excerpt from an article in Fair Chase magazine titled, “I’ve Walked the Line…Have You?” by Robert D. Brown on the subject of hunting ethics, I thought it would be worth sharing some of the concepts – both his and mine.  As a one-time head of the Wildlife and Fisheries Sciences Department at Texas A&M, he would lecture students and cited a list the potential advantages hunters could have over their prey.

Here are his listed aspects of giving hunters the advantage over the hunted:

  • Baiting with salt or molasses
  • Bows with laser sights
  • Camouflage clothes
  • Compound bows
  • Corn feeders
  • Food plots
  • Doe urine
  • Drones for scouting
  • Grunts/Calls
  • High-powered rifles
  • Hunting inside high fences
  • Hunting with dogs
  • Listening devices
  • Range finders
  • Remote live TV
  • Telescopic sights
  • Trail cameras
  • Tree stands/Blinds

To begin, we must understand that hunting rules vary from state to state and that a foundational principle of the issue is that whatever method we hunters employ must be legal to be ethical.  However, mere legality does not necessarily equate to ethical.

As a professional member of the highly respected Boone and Crockett Club, Mr. Brown defines its fair-chase doctrine which must provide the game with a reasonable chance to escape. So then, are the use of muzzleloaders or bow and arrow, while stalking our game on the ground, the only way to achieve that?

I certainly hope not, because who among us would qualify as a sportsman or woman?  I believe there are other important aspects of the issue and there’s one inescapable fact of reality often ignored:  the human brain.

Years ago, there was a certain woodchuck that I wanted to eliminate from a farmer’s alfalfa field.  Even though a high-powered rifle was legal to use, it made no sense.  Because of the relatively close proximity to a nearby residence, I did not want to alarm anyone in the early morning hours.  To complicate matters, the ‘chuck’s domain was positioned so that shooting from distance would mean shooting toward a highway.

I devised a plan whereby I would use my bicycle to get to the area, which had no place to park a motor vehicle without causing some type of interference with traffic; I would hide the two-wheeler in the roadside ditch and hunt close by toward the safe center of the field.

At dawn, I pedaled a few miles with my single-shot Thompson/Center Contender pistol chambered in .22 rimfire in a backpack.  The chosen ammunition was subsonic to avoid unnecessary noise and my practice sessions were done at the known yardage of the forthcoming sneak attack.  There I waited in camouflage clothing head to toe in the prone position, while the hay hog slumbered.  At last, one perfectly placed shot completed the mission’s purpose.

Was it fair?  That’s debatable depending on perspective, but in my book it was as ethical as possible.  Never having been one to sneak around in the woods with moccasins afoot, it fit my style of ensuring a quick and humane end to the dilemma.

I remained within my limitations to execute the perfect plan both legally and ethically.  Although there was little doubt that the woodchuck would escape its pending demise, I met the challenge of fair chase according to my own definition.

If we take only shots that we know we can make with at least a 9-out-of-10 chance, then we are head and shoulders above those that don’t.  We owe it to the hunted.

Hunter Nation Issues Statement on Wisconsin Wolf Hunt Court Decision

Hunter Nation released the following statement on a Dane County judge’s decision today to deny the organization’s request to join a lawsuit to protect the constitutional rights of Wisconsinites to hunt the gray wolf:

“Clearly, this was the plan of the Evers administration and Attorney General Kaul from the minute wolves were no longer under federal protection – follow the marching orders of the radical anti-hunting groups and trample the rights of Wisconsin hunters, farmers, pet owners, and families,” Hunter Nation President and CEO Luke Hilgemann said. “Hunter Nation will not sit by while the opponents of common sense predator management try to violate the constitutional rights of hunters in this state, and we are reviewing our options for how to best continue the fight.”

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