Gun Digest’s Competitive Pistol Book


Iola, Wisconsin – Find expert advice, tips and techniques to get started and hone your skills in the most popular pistol shooting events in the nation today, with Gun Digest Shooter’s Guide to Competitive Pistol Shooting, authored by Steve Sieberts. The latest publication from Gun Digest Books’ Shooter’s Guide series is a crash course in competitive pistol events, with information on everything from selecting a firearm to fine-tuning your skills. The book will be available starting June 21 at www.gundigeststore.com, Amazon, Barnes & Noble and other major and specialty retailers. Read more

Century Arms Announces Limited Edition AK-47


Delray Beach, Fla. –– Century Arms, North America’s premier manufacturer of the AK-47 rifle, has announced a limited edition of their new, 100% American Made, AK-47 semi-automatic sporting rifle, the RAS47. The limited edition model includes the premium features of the standard model RAS47, but features lustrous, high-quality walnut wood furniture. The rifle was unveiled at this year’s NRA’s Annual Meetings in Louisville, Kentucky on May 20th as a summer special limited edition.The lustrous, oil finished walnut stocks give the rifles an enhanced look while still providing a traditional feel. Each unit comes equipped with the smooth, crisp RAK-1 Enhanced Trigger Group, a chrome moly 4150 nitride-treated barrel for durability and weather resistance, larger T-shaped magazine catch, and are compatible with standard AKM furniture, which allows users to easily drop-in any standard AKM stocks. Read more

?ZEISS Offers Father’s Day Savings


NORTH CHESTERFIELD, VA. – Carl Zeiss Sports Optics, the world’s leading manufacturer of high performance sports optics, is pleased to announce their annual Father’s Day savings promotion. Father’s Day is a time to celebrate, so if you are searching for that perfect gift for dad this year, why not avoid the standard gift options and consider a great gift from ZEISS.”Spending time outdoors with your Dad is one of those magical activities that creates incredible memories,” said Tom Andrews, Vice President of Carl Zeiss Sports Optics. “With Father’s Day approaching, ZEISS has decided to honor that special Dad with special savings.”

In celebration of Father’s Day ZEISS is offering a $50 instant savings on the award winning TERRA ED 32mm & 42mm Binoculars during the period May 31st through June 19th, 2016. Simply purchase one of the qualifying TERRA ED Binoculars from any participating authorized ZEISS dealer during the promotional period and get $50 instant saving at checkout. Full terms and conditions of the Father’s Day promotion and a list of ZEISS authorized dealers can be found at www.zeiss.com/us/sports-optics or call us at (800) 441-3005.

SIG SAUER OSCAR7 20-60x82mm Spotting Scope


With the OSCAR7 20-60x82mm Spotting Scope from SIG SAUER
The SIG SAUER® OSCAR7 Premium Spotting Scope Features SIG’s Industry-Leading HDX Optical DesignNEWINGTON, N.H. – SIG SAUER, Inc. is pleased to introduce the OSCAR7 spotting scope from the company’s Electro-Optics division. This product joins the widely successful OSCAR3 and OSCAR5 spotting scopes, expanding the category’s capabilities in intermediate and long-range observation.

The SIG Electro-Optics OSCAR7 premium spotting scope offers an industry leading HDX optical design that combines extra-low dispersion (ED) glass with high light transmittance (HT) glass to provide the maximum in color clarity and image brightness, creating unmatched resolution and image contrast. Read more

Kahr® Arms Partners with Sports South to Introduce Gold .380 ACP


Greeley, PA – Kahr Arms is proud to announce that they have partnered with Sports South to offer a limited edition exclusive double-action semi-auto micro-compact pistol in .380 ACP. The CT3833CG is offered in an attractive Cerakote Gold finish and can only be purchased through Sports South for a limited time.The CT3833CG features a 3 inch conventional rifled barrel, an overall length of 5.5 inches, a height of 4.4 inches and weighs just 11.4 ounces. The pistol has a black polymer frame and a stainless steel slide. The attractive gold features can be found in the slide, trigger, and the slide stop lever giving it an opulent appearance.

The pistol features a lock breech, modified Browning type recoil lug, a passive striker block, and utilizes Kahr’s seven patents including the “safe cam” action found in all Kahr pistols. The result is a micro-compact pistol with very little recoil and quick follow-up shots. The pistol also has a drift adjustable white bar-dot combat rear sight and a pinned-in polymer front sight. It has a 7+1 capacity. The high temperature gold Cerakote coating is a multi-step process which results in a durable finish that holds up well under normal use. Read more

New ELITE IMPULSE 34


Speed without Compromise; “Shootability” without SacrificeHenrietta, NY – Smart sportsmen know the value of “versatile” gear that allows exceptional performance in wide-ranging conditions, a great example being ELITE’s new speedy-yet-forgiving Impulse 34.

As one of ELITE’s “next-generation” bows, the Impulse 34 is one of few models that can literally do it all, whether the goal is top-level competition or a trusted companion on the hunt of a lifetime, shooting spots or dots or weekend 3-D tournament –the Impulse 34 stands rock-solid and ready, delivering steady, flat-shooting accuracy at speeds up to 340 fps.

No matter if you’re prepping for a fall filled with roaming the wide-open west for elk, mule deer, and pronghorns or peak-of-the-rut Midwest treestanding it’s easy to lean on the extra-stable platform of the Impulse 34 to deliver at crunch time. The new open-geometry 6061 T6 aluminum riser is designed to distribute load over a greater surface area and improve torsional rigidity for more accurate shooting at all distances. Read more

MI DNR: It’s time to spray trees to combat spruce budworm defoliation

Spruce budworm caterpillars, like the one shown here, feed on new growth of balsam fir and spruce trees, causing defoliation.

Michigan Department of Natural Resources forest health experts anticipate widespread defoliation from spruce budworms to continue across much of the Upper Peninsula in the weeks to come.Spruce budworm caterpillars, like the one shown here, feed on new growth of balsam fir and spruce trees, causing defoliation.

Robert Heyd, DNR Forest Health Management Program leader, toured the region this past week. He said the trees have shed their bud caps and spruce budworm larvae are feeding on the young spruce and fir shoots.

“Homeowners interested in protecting landscape spruce or fir from defoliation this year should spray their trees now,” Heyd said.

Products with Bt, a safe, soil-dwelling bacterium that is toxic to many insect pests, are recommended for spraying. Only one application is necessary.

“As the budworm larvae grow, they will cause increasing levels of defoliation,” Heyd said. “Clipped needles will turn brown later in June, showing this year’s affected areas.”

Targeted trees

Balsam fir is most severely damaged by budworms. During Michigan’s last outbreak, two-thirds of the balsam fir and roughly four in 10 white spruces were killed.

Budworms also feed on black spruce, tamarack, pine and hemlock trees when they are in stands with balsam fir or white spruce, but these species generally suffer less damage. Read more

GLOCK Launches Firearms Safety Pledge Drive

SMYRNA, Ga. – Today, GLOCK, Inc. launched the annual GLOCK Safety Pledge Drive with the chance to win a 30thAnniversary pistol by helping to spread the word about firearms safety.

Make the pledge on the GLOCK Safety page and earn an entry for a custom engraved 30th Anniversary Pistol. Earn more entries by sharing and spreading the word about firearms safety on the GLOCK Safety Pledge page here https://us.glock.com/safetypledge/. Read more

A Legal Double Standard?

By Jim Shepherd

It’s becoming more and more apparent that when it comes to guns- and especially gun rights- there’s a legal double standard.

For instance, if you’re an “average” Washington, DC resident who happens to own a “high capacity” magazine for a modern sporting rifle, you can expect to find yourself in legal trouble. If, however, you’re an NBC news reporter trying to make a point – on television- by having the exact same object with you while you’re live on national TV, the same illegal object apparently morphs into an “illustration of an illegal object” and the old “No harm, no foul” law comes into play.

Over the past week, I’ve done my best to keep my opinions to myself regarding Katie Couric’s involvement in – and defense of- a so-called gun documentary “Under the Gun”. There are several reasons why I’ve done that.

Most importantly, I haven’t seen it. And I don’t plan to. I’ve been around enough to know that documentaries -especially when they’re hot-button issues- will always be seen as having an innate bias. Which brings me to a second reason why it wasn’t on my viewing list: it’s not exactly a secret where either the producer or the host stand on guns. They don’t like them.

To me, that’s the end of objectivity in journalism. Having seen promising reporters’ careers ended because they monkeyed with the facts in “investigations” it’s a point where I don’t grant leeway. Facts aren’t pro or con; that’s why they’re called “facts”.

Facts simply are .

Now, however, there’s a troubling fact coming out about the documentary. It seems that Stephanie Soechtig, the film’s director, knowingly sent a producer to Arizona for the specific purpose of purchasing firearms illegally. It seems he achieved the goal – and in the process committed as many as four felonies.

If that’s the case- and it’s pursued as it would be if it were a pro-gun “documentary” Ms. Soechtig is guilty of conspiracy to commit felonious acts. Either that or she’s guilty of “embellishment” of her story. To me, either are punishable acts.

The gun purchase is punishable under federal firearms laws. The act of “embellishment” should get her banished from any future work in journalism.

Having been a street reporter, producer and investigative reporter, I know there are times when you skirt the edges of the law in order to do your job. As a journalist, you try to protect your confidential sources. But you can’t hide under the protection of the so-called shield laws if you know a crime’s going to be committed, especially if you -acting in your role as producer- are responsible for initiating the act.

Here’s now the NSSF’s explains the problem:
“Journalists and filmmakers investigating what they see as shortcomings in laws are not absolved of their responsibility both to gain the requisite understanding of how those laws work and to abide by them.”

That’s why the NSSF and most other Second Amendment-conscious groups are so inflamed at an interview Soechtig gave where she acknowledged sending a producer to Arizona to purchase firearms. As a non-resident, those purchases were illegal.

Now, the NSSF is calling for- justifiably, it would appear to me- for a federal investigation into the matter.

The NSSF’s call for an investigation isn’t based on fairness in the documentary, it’s based on the fact that laws are supposed to apply -equally- to all citizens.

It’s no secret that several of the “celebrities’ in the outdoor industry have been burned because of stupid things they did in the making of their TV shows. Granted, their explanations have at times been on the far side of lame, but they have all generally taken their medicine and owned up to their acts.

It’s the same point federal officials roll out at every opportunity, if there’s a pro-gun person involved in anything that even hints of a conspiracy. “The law,” we’re reminded, “is the law- and it’s supposed to apply to everyone equally.”

And it’s true. That’s the reason the lady holding the scales of justice is wearing a blindfold.

The NSSF’s right when they write that the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives (ATF) should open a criminal investigation into the whole matter.

If they don’t, the case could be made -again- that there are two classes of citizens.

Read more

HSS Introduces New Safety Harness Specifically for Crossbow Hunters


DANVILLE, AL. (June 6, 2016) – As crossbow hunting continues to gain popularity across the country, today Hunter Safety System announced the introduction of a new harness specifically designed to address the unique set of challenges that are associated with safely hunting with a crossbow from a treestand. The new HSS Crossbow Harness answers all those challenges in a stylish, comfortable and affordable harness.Unlike traditional bows, crossbows have issues related to cocking the crossbow while hunting from an elevated position. When the crossbow is cocked, the treestand safety harnesses’ tether strap tends to fall in front of the hunter, which not only is frustrating but also can tangle with the crossbow and knock off or damage the scope. To eliminate this problem, HSS has added a Tether Stow Strap to the new Crossbow Harness that will safely secure the tether when cocking the bow. Read more
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