Social-Distancing Can Save Wild Sheep

“Social-distancing” is a term most hope disappears from the lexicon soon.

While the concept of keeping a safe distance during the COVID-19 pandemic is wisdom, losing the connection to others is challenging for humanity.

For wild sheep, social-distancing is essential.

Domestic sheep and goats can transmit a form of pneumonia to bighorn and thinhorn sheep that is devastating to herds. It is so devastating that more than two million that existed at the time of Lewis & Clark’s expedition declined to around 25,000 by the early 1900s.

“Wildlife agencies and conservation groups have done a remarkable job of bringing them back to around the 150-175,000 range, but there is still a major problem with exposure to domestic sheep. Die-offs are occurring in pockets right now in states like Oregon and Utah,” said Chester Moore, an award-winning wildlife journalist and founder of Higher Calling Wildlife. Read more

WILDCraft: West of Somewhere Video Now Streaming on Prime Video

SIG SAUER Presents “WILDCraft: West of Somewhere” Video Series Now Streaming on Prime Video

NEWINGTON, N.H., (January 22, 2020) – SIG SAUER, Inc. is pleased to present the WILDCraft Video Series featuring the SIG SAUER Electro-Optic Ballistic Data Xchange (BDX) 2.0 Rangefinder and Riflescope system, and SIG SAUER Elite Hunter Tipped Ammunition. Season Two of the WILDCraft series is now streaming exclusively on Amazon Prime Video.

WILDCraft: West of Somewhere is an eight-part video series that follows four industry writers on their hunting adventure across Texas, from preparing and training with their SIG SAUER gear at the FTW Ranch to the overland journey across West Texas.

Throughout the WILDCraft series hunters train, and utilize, the SIG SAUER Electro-Optics BDX System now available in an upgraded 2.0 version. BDX 2.0 takes all of the advanced Applied Ballistics Ultralight and Bluetooth™ technology and adds simplified, and easy to use, functionality to get hunters and shooters on target with unprecedented speed and accuracy. New features of BDX 2.0 include nine pre-loaded, user-selectable Ballistic Drop Compensation (BDC) reticles in all SIERRA Riflescopes, eight ballistic groups pre-loaded in KILO BDX rangefinders and the QuickBOND™ feature that quickly bonds BDX rangefinders and scopes together as a ballistic system. The BDX 2.0 System is simple, fast, and intuitive – Just Connect The Dot.™ Read more

Utah: Weighing Invasive Fish at Annual Burbot Bash

What: Known for its ugly face and tasty flesh, the eel-like burbot is a menace to the other fish in Flaming Gorge Reservoir. It has a huge appetite and sharp teeth that are carving into the reservoir’s sportfish populations. To do their part in combating this invasive fish — and have a chance at cash and prizes — hundreds of anglers will participate in the Burbot Bash from Jan. 29–31. DWR employees will be working at the fish weigh-in stations for the competition and will get a close look at all the fish that come in. Read more

CZ Adds Match-Grade Chamber to 457 MTR Precision Rimfire Rifle

The enhanced accuracy of the new 457 VPT MTR makes it an affordable, out-of-the-box competition gun.

Kansas City, KS – For anyone looking to get serious about rimfire competition shooting without the costs of a full-on custom rifle, a new day has dawned. CZ-USA has announced it is offering its match-grade MTR chamber and the extremely tight tolerances that come with it in one of the gunmaker’s most popular 22 LR bolt guns-the 457 VPT (Varmint Precision Trainer).

The MTR chamber has already proven itself in its namesake, CZ 457 Varmint MTR rifle, and has garnered an excellent reputation for accuracy.

The MTR variant of the VPT allows shooters to buy an affordable, match-chambered rifle that’s ready to compete right out of the box. This eliminates the perceived need to upgrade any major components, putting this rifle a step above the competition. Read more

Registration Now Open for NWTF’s Virtual Convention and Sport Show

EDGEFIELD, S.C. — The National Wild Turkey Federation is excited to announce that registration for its virtual Convention and Sport Show, sponsored by Mossy Oak, is officially open.

As with many recent conventions across the country, the 2021 NWTF convention will look much different than previous years. But, the NWTF’s dedicated staff, volunteers and partners are working tirelessly to make this one-time virtual event truly one for the books.

The NWTF will host the 45th annual Convention from Johnny Morris’ Wonders of Wildlife National Museum and Aquarium in Springfield, Missouri, highlighting many of the acclaimed wildlife exhibits bringing conservation and the outdoors lifestyle directly to at-home viewers. Read more

2021 DU Ducks in the Desert Continental Shoot set for March 4-7

Register now for the 35th Annual sporting clay event

LAS VEGAS – – Ducks Unlimited’s Ducks in the Desert Continental Shoot sporting clay competition will take place March 4-7, at the world-class Clark County Shooting Complex in North Las Vegas.

The competition, now in its 35th year, hosts skilled clay shooters from around North America supporting wetlands conservation and shooting for more than $75,000 in prizes. Read more

Toxon Announces Launch of BOWdometer Open Platform

WATERLOO, ON., January 25, 2021 – Toxon Technologies is pleased to announce the launch of the BOWdometer Open Platform. The BOWdometer Open Platform allows archery manufacturers and app developers to use real-time shooting data from the BOWdometer archery practice companion in their products. This data can is available to enhance existing products or to develop new products and apps for all archers from target archers to bowhunters.

“Since we launched BOWdometer in 2020, archers across the globe have been interested in using BOWdometer data in new and interesting ways,” said Marianne Bell, COO of Toxon Technologies. “At Toxon, we believe in growing the tech ecosystem to enable archers from all disciplines to make use of data in ways that are meaningful to them – and our BOWdometer Open Platform can enable that.”

The first application to take advantage of the BOWdometer Open Platform is the Artemis archery performance application for Android smartphones and tablets. Popular with both athletes and coaches, the BOWdometer Open Platform will enhance the Artemis app with live, raw shooting data from when an archer draws to the release. Read more

Wolf Management Needs Hunters

By Glen Wunderlich

Charter Member Professional Outdoor Media Association (POMA)

The headline read as follows:  “Groups ask court to restore protections for gray wolves.”  The unsigned piece began with “Wildlife advocates asked a federal court to overturn a decision that stripped ESA protections.”  Oh, no!  And, to make matters even more threatening, language followed by indicating the toxic Trump administration announced just days ahead of the November 3rd election that  wolves were considered recovered.  That’s news?  It certainly is.  Old news.

Before getting into current details – reminiscent of clever, past maneuvers by these “advocates” – a history refresher is in order.  America’s lawmakers through a Supreme Court decision established public ownership of wildlife as a matter law. Titled the Public Trust Doctrine, this principle is the very essence and foundation of the North American Model of Wildlife Conservation.  It would ultimately expand to link funding of wildlife management to consumptive, public users – principally hunters and anglers.

Gone were the days of no-rules market hunting when animals of various stripes were wiped out.  Boone and Crockett Club founder, Theodore Roosevelt, was a strong advocate of science-based decisions that were to be used on our then-dwindling natural resources ultimately called the Roosevelt Doctrine.

The term “wildlife advocate” has since been co-opted by far-left, anti-hunting individuals who steadfastly hold to one underlying motive:  to end hunting of any kind.  They’ll tug at heartstrings with pictures of puppy-dog wolves and paint hunters as thrill killers devoid of consciousness.  Baloney!

Americans learned that the responsibilities guaranteed by the Public Trust Doctrine were too great for proper wildlife management.  Once the public realized their wildlife was being eliminated, their collective voice was so great that the conservation legislation being proposed began passing easily.  To this day, through excise taxes on guns, ammo, and fishing gear, the spirit thrives.

The slanted piece goes on to state how many wolves – some 4400 of them – reside in Michigan, Wisconsin, and Minnesota, unarguably far above the agreed-upon full-recovery goals.  And, it’s been this way many years – over a decade – before Trump declared anything.

Said Lindsay Larris, wildlife program director and current litigator at WildEarth Guardians. “No matter how you try to spin the data, wolves do not even inhabit 20 percent of historic range. This is not true recovery under the Endangered Species Act and a clear violation of the law.”  And, that’s their spin on an old yarn resurfacing with their newfound opposition to science.

Ah, but it is recovery, my dear uninformed spin masters.  Under the ESA, if it is determined that a species is no longer threatened or endangered throughout all or a significant portion of its range, the U.S Fish and Wildlife Service must publish in the Federal Register a proposed rule to remove the species from the Lists of Endangered and Threatened Wildlife and Plants.

In 1917, the U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals for the D.C. Circuit issued its ruling in the Western Great Lakes wolf lawsuit appeal which claimed that wolves could not be recovered unless they inhabited all of their historic range.  Sound familiar?

“This distorted view of the Endangered Species Act is simply emblematic of activists’ view of the ESA as a whole. They view this as a means to enshrine federal protections in perpetuity, as opposed to a tool to help those in need to recover and be returned to state management”, said Evan Heusinkveld, of the Sportsmen’s Alliance.  “The court’s ruling that regional delisting is legally possible was a victory for sound, scientific wildlife management and further upholds policy of the Endangered Species Act as an important tool for conservation moving forward.”

The court upheld the Service’s interpretation that the ESA’s definition of “range” refers to “current range” at the time of the listing or delisting decision that is the subject of the case, not “historic range,” as opponents argued and now continue with the same, lame tactics.

History may show where wolves were, but it also shows where people were not. The mere presence of man on the landscape can negatively affect wildlife and the habitats that support them.

And, if anyone thinks that by hunting wolves to control their numbers, is going to wipe them out, just name one single species that falls under the parameters of regulated hunting in which this has happened.  I’m waiting.

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