Anti-Hunters to Sing Their Song

From Brian Lynn, Vice President of Marketing and Communications for the Sportsmen’s Alliance

The Wildlife Society to allow Humane Society of United States, Center for Biological Diversity, Defenders of Wildlife, Wildlife For All and Others to Host Panel Discussion at National Convention Nov. 5-10

About 20 years ago Spokane, Washington, was the scene of industry uproar when it hosted the Outdoor Writers Association of America national conference. Two decades later, the underlying premise that ripped that organization apart is repeating itself at another national conference in Spokane.

That OWAA conference was my first. As a young associate editor with ESPNOutdoors.com, I was a panel speaker on the emerging trend of “Writing for the Web.” Like most first-time convention goers, it was an experience to see everyone in the industry together, sharing ideas and having fun. As we all know, this industry is built on relationships.

But many of those relationships suffered when a rift within OWAA was exposed later in the week. As some of you might remember, my future employer, the Sportsmen’s Alliance and the NRA rightfully called out the organization for allowing membership to anti-hunting and anti-gun organizations, such as Sierra Club. That rift split OWAA as members fled the soft-peddled “inclusive” approach and formed the Professional Outdoor Media Association.

Today, The Wildlife Society is about to repeat history when my hometown of Spokane hosts their national convention Nov. 5-10. The conference is where scientists, biologists and state game agencies gather to inform each other on research and share ideas. Good people doing good things. Read more

J. Wayne Fears Releases A Tater Knob Almanac

68 Stories Of A Simpler Time And Place in Appalachia

For many years, award-winning outdoor author J. Wayne Fears has been writing his folksy tales about Tater Knob for a variety of popular publications, including, among others, Progressive Farmer, Rural Sportsman, Great Days Outdoors, GunHunter, and Mature Living. Now, he’s collected 68 of these heart-warming short stories, most of them humorous, some quite poignant, in a new nostalgia-packed book.

So, go ahead. Buckle up. A Tater Knob Almanac will be taking you on an unforgettable wild ride full of rural-childhood adventures and misadventures from back in the 1940s and ’50s. Written for all ages and told through the eyes of three intrepid boys and one just-as-gutsy girl, these stories will introduce you to (or maybe reacquaint you with) plenty of colorful characters from in and around the remote Alabama mountain community where Fears actually grew up. Yes, it was a real place. Read more

WSF: Bighorns Back on Utah’s Antelope Island

Bozeman, Montana – The Wild Sheep Foundation (WSF) congratulates the Arizona Game and Fish Department, Utah Division of Wildlife Resources (UDWR), KUIU, Sportsmen for Fish and Wildlife, WSF Chapter Utah Wild Sheep Foundation and WSF Affiliate Arizona Desert Bighorn Sheep Society on a successful transplant of Rocky Mountain bighorn sheep onto Utah’s Antelope Island State Park.

“This is what collaborative conservation looks like,” explained Gray N. Thornton, President and CEO of the Wild Sheep Foundation. “Wild sheep enthusiasts from industry, national and state conservation groups, and state wildlife agencies all pulling on the same rope to get good work done.”

Twenty-seven bighorn sheep were captured near Morenci, Arizona using helicopter netguns and darting. The sheep were then transported by horse trailers to Antelope Island for release. The wild sheep near Morenci were chosen for this relocation because of the high risk of vehicle collisions. In recent years more sheep living near Morenci began frequenting its urban areas with high traffic. Tranquilizer darting was used to capture those sheep that were closer to town. Read more

Nanosecond Indian Nation Reacquires Ancestral Lands

Ducks Unlimited and partners help return ancestral land for conservation protection

SUFFOLK, Va. – Oct. 24, 2022 – In a precedent-setting land transfer, Ducks Unlimited has acquired from a private owner more than 500 acres of ancestral land of the Nansemond Indian Nation and then returned it to the Tribe for protection and stewardship. This historic gift of the forested wetlands of Cross Swamp will enable the Tribe to develop a conservation program, educate tribal youth about their historic ties to the land, and strengthen coastal resilience for future generations. This project received support from Dominion Energy, the Enviva Forest Conservation Fund, the North American Wetlands Conservation Act grant program, the Virginia Outdoors Foundation, and The Mary Morton Parsons Foundation.

After decades of work to achieve federal recognition, which occurred in 2018, and more than 350 years of efforts to reacquire access to their ancestral territory, the Nansemond Indian Nation celebrates this achievement for equity and conservation. Read more

Savage Arms Introduces the Impulse Mountain Hunter

WESTFIELD, Massachusetts –– Savage Arms has officially announced the Impulse Mountain Hunter as the newest model in their award-winning series of straight-pull rifles. Introducing faster speeds and lighter weights for big game treks, this rifle is a gamechanger for 2023.

“At Savage, we not only value the input of our customers, but we also listen to it. Since 2021 when Savage launched the first Impulse variant, the number one request we’ve received is for a lightweight version ideal for hunting in the mountains,” said Beth Shimanski, Director of Marketing at Savage Arms. “With extreme accuracy and breakthrough technology, the Mountain Hunter is light, sharp, and encompasses all that the Impulse family represents, thus giving our customers what they wanted.” Read more

FPC: Federal Judge Blocks New York’s “Places of Worship” Handgun Carry Ban

BUFFALO, NY – Today, Firearms Policy Coalition (FPC) announced that United States District Judge John Sinatra, Jr. has issued a temporary restraining order against New York’s ban on guns in “any place of worship or religious observation.” The order in Hardaway v. Bruen, which is effective immediately, can be viewed at FPCLegal.org.

“The Constitution requires that individuals be permitted to use handguns for the core lawful purpose of self-defense,” wrote Judge Sinatra in his opinion. “And it protects that right outside the home and in public. Nothing in the Nation’s history or traditions presumptively closes the door on that right across every place of worship or religious observation. As in Bruen, where the Court stated that, ‘[n]othing in the Second Amendment’s text draws a home/public distinction with respect to the right to keep and bear arms,’ nothing there casts outside of its protection places of worship or religious observation. New York’s exclusion violates ‘the general right to publicly carry arms for self-defense.’ It, too, is one of the policy choices taken ‘off the table’ by the Second Amendment.”

“Today another court blocked an unconstitutional gun law, this time the ‘places of worship’ carry ban New York imposed as punishment for the Bruen decision,” said FPC Director of Legal Operations Bill Sack. “Today, the Court recognized what we have long argued: That no one should be forced to forgo one constitutional right in order to exercise another.” Read more

Sighting in your Rifle Efficiently and Effectively

By Glen Wunderlich

Charter Member Professional Outdoor Media Association (POMA)

With firearms deer season approaching, many hunters will be sighting in their guns in the coming weeks.  When one considers that three weekends remain to dial in your firearm(s) – and some of them may be problematic with strong winds and/or cold – opportunities for good practice are limited.  Finally, if problems surface, such as equipment failures, it will be a difficult proposition to iron out issues – especially, if repairs will require the assistance of a gunsmith.

Here are some tips to prepare for a good session at the bench.

*  Make sure the firearm is unloaded before doing anything.  There should be no oil, grease, or any obstruction in the barrel.  A clean and dry bore is the best way to start, and when finished, don’t clean the barrel with the exception of muzzleloaders.

*  Ensure that everything is tight – especially scope bases and rings but don’t overtighten rings beyond 20-inch pounds.  If you can’t remember when you changed batteries on any electronic sights, change them.

*  Have a range kit on hand which should include basic tools in the event mechanical problems arise.

*  If you are experiencing a strong crosswind, postpone the session.  In any wind it’s best to sight in either up wind or downwind to minimize the effect of wind deflection.

*  For sighting in, smaller targets help with precision.  Orange squares with the black outlines are good for scoped guns.  Plain black circles are best for iron sights, red dot sights and holographic sights.

*  If you have iron sights or even a scope with a large dot in the reticle, you’ll want to have your target directly above the front sight or dot.  Covering up the target with either front sights or a dot will block out the target at longer ranges rendering ethical shots virtually impossible.

*  Begin at 25 yards and make sure you have a solid rest at the forend and buttstock.  For guns with newly installed scopes, use a large backing around the target in case you don’t hit the target; that way, at least you’ll know where you are missing and can make adjustments accordingly.  Sandbags or commercial rests are recommended but short bipods work equally as well.

*  Since most deer guns pack a punch at both ends, it’s extremely important to pull the buttstock tight to the shoulder and to pull down on the forend section with your other hand.  Good hearing protection can include foam plugs with hard shell muffs over them.  Use a pad at the shoulder – especially for youngsters.

*  Before beginning the shooting session, make sure to have enough ammo on hand to sight in and to hunt.  You don’t want to purchase more ammo that was produced from a different production lot than the ammo you sighted in.

*  Forget the one-shot sight-in, because there are too many variables that can fool a shooter.  Shoot three shots and find the middle of the group.  Remember, at 25 yards to make adjustments four times that at 100 yards.  For most guns, you are ready to move the target to 100 yards, if you are dead on at 25 yards.

*  If you want to save some expensive ammo, here’s a shortcut to get you on target fast.  Shoot a three-shot group.  Now, press your gun tight into the rest and center the sights on the bull’s eye – or, the point you’d like the bullet to strike (your zero).  Have a helper move the crosshairs of the scope from your zero to the center of the three-shot group, while you hold the gun steady.  For example, if you were shooting high, the assistant will move the crosshairs down to the group’s center.  I realize it sounds backwards, but trust me, it isn’t.  Make left and right adjustments the same way.

Once you get sighted in, try shooting from various positions and distances with rests you will use in the field.  As long as you can keep 9 out of 10 in a six-inch circle at a given range, you are shooting within ethical standards and are good to go.

Babe Ruth’s Record-book Buck

Every October, baseball fans and hunters have reason to rejoice. Between hunting season and the playoffs, what’s not to be excited about? Babe Ruth, the Yankee slugger and Hall of Famer from the 1920s and ‘30s, loved hunting and baseball. Along the way, he killed at least one mighty fine whitetail buck.

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George Herman “Babe” Ruth Jr.’s 22-season professional baseball career was legendary. He started as a left-handed pitcher for the Boston Red Sox in 1914. By the time he retired in 1935, he was knocking the stitches off baseballs as an outfielder for the Yankees, including a 587-foot dinger that is arguably the longest home run ever. With a .342 career batting average, Babe chalked up 2,214 RBI and 714 home runs.

His exploits off the field were legendary as well. He liked to drink as much as he enjoyed the ladies. He gambled on horse racing like it was his job. After all, he could afford it. In 1930, he made $80,000 annually ($1.4 million in 2022). And he loved hunting.

Babe was an avid outdoorsman, chasing everything from trout to pheasant to moose. In November 1940, Babe was hunting around Fredericton, New Brunswick, when he killed a “typical head, heavy with long tines. Main beams meet in front,” according to Boone and Crockett records from 1948. Newspaper clippings note that the “…horns are notably, symmetrical.” Babe died in 1948, the same year that taxidermist John Hansen of Jersey City, New Jersey, entered the antlers into the Boone and Crockett records.

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Unfortunately, no photos of Babe Ruth’s award-winning whitetail antlers can be found in B&C’s records archives. The only evidence resides in these newsclippings and a vintage score chart shown at top.

Babe’s whitetail rack was honored at the Club’s 3rd Awards competition in 1949. There, the antlers received a second award. In 1950, the Club refined its series of measurements into the system that we have today. Any records measured before 1950 had to be remeasured with the new system if they were going to be in the records. Unfortunately, Babe’s buck was never rescored. Babe retired from baseball in 1935, and we like to think he spent plenty of time hunting once his falls were free of the playoffs.

Heat with wood? It’s time to stock up

Market forces have shifted loggers’ attention to harvesting building-friendly softwood tree species this year, and with new, competing demands for firewood-friendly hardwood material, fuelwood supplies in some areas are coming up shorter than usual.

Combined with predictions for more traditional winter weather than recent mild winters, it’s time to stock up if you heat your home with wood.

“Demand for firewood pulp logs is strong,” said general manager Tim Neff of AJD Forest Products in Grayling. “We have a waiting list from large firewood processors for production.”

If your local sources have waiting lists, there are different options available to purchase or harvest fuelwood. Some sources include:

Michigan: Webinars Focus on Keeping White Oaks Healthy, Productive

Contact: Mike Smalligan (DNR), 517-449-5666

Webinars focus on keeping white oaks healthy, productive

The Michigan Society of American Foresters is offering a series of five webinars to boost knowledge about white oak and best practices for growing and using it.

Foresters, land managers and family forest landowners are welcome to sign up for any or all of the webinars. A new one is offered the first Wednesday of each month November through March. Read more

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