Nosler Trophy Grade Ammunition Line Additions

Bend, Ore. –– Manufactured to Nosler’s strict quality standards, Trophy Grade™ ammunition uses Nosler® brass and Nosler® bullets to attain optimum performance, no matter where your hunting takes you. Whether you want your ammunition loaded with AccuBond®, Partition®, Ballistic Tip® or E-Tip®, Nosler® Trophy Grade™ Ammunition has the right load for the right game.

2020 offerings in Nosler’s Trophy Grade® Ammunition line include:

6.5 Creedmoor – 140gr Partition® 6.5 PRC – 140gr AccuBond®

270 Winchester – 130gr Partition® 270 Winchester – 150gr Partition®

27 Nosler – 150gr AccuBond® 28 Nosler – 160gr Partition®

30-06 Sprg – 165gr Partition® 30-06 Sprg – 180gr Partition®

30 Nosler – 200gr AccuBond® 30 Nosler – 200gr Partition®

For more information on Trophy Grade® Ammunition please visit: www.nosler.com/trophy-grade-ammunition/

Michigan: rustic campground to open at Ionia State Recreation Area

Starting this spring, visitors to Ionia State Recreation Area will have access to hike-in camping options at the popular, mid-Michigan outdoor recreation destination. The new rustic campground, opening May 15, was designed to provide the space and setting for people interested in a camping experience that puts them even closer to nature.

The campground will have 16 rustic campsites that require an easy, quarter-mile hike from the parking lot, including 10 sites set in the woods, five sites set along Sessions Lake and one site that backs up to a creek. Each of the rustic campsites includes a fire pit and picnic table and proximity to outhouses located along the access trail. Read more

Mantis Tech Launches X2

Oswego, IL – Mantis Tech is tickled pink to announce the Mantis X2, the most affordable and effective dry fire tool available. Mantis continues to accelerate the pace at which it provides real-time, data-driven feedback to shooters of all shapes and sizes.

“Dry fire practice is proven as the gateway to efficient improvement in shooting,” says Engineering Manager Chase Roberts. “But it sucks. It’s boring. Most people hate it. Until they dry fire with Mantis. Then all of a sudden it’s like they’re on a first date with their future spouse. Sparks fly, rainbows and unicorns, ALL the goodness happens.”

The X2 is a small, powerful precision sensing device that tracks the minutest of movements, collecting thousands of datapoints per second. Once rail-mounted, it analyzes shooter movements, and sends the data over Bluetooth to the MantisX app for smartphones and tablets. The app provides real-time analytics and coaching tips to improve shooting mechanics.

Additionally, the free app maintains a history of your shooting performance that is optionally stored in the cloud. Shooters can form groups and view each other’s data, and is extensively used by both instructors and students. Read more

Pennsylvania Bear Harvest State’s Best All-Time

Pennsylvania hunters took 4,653 black bears this past fall, setting a new state record bear harvest.

In 2018, the bear harvest was 3,153, 11th best all-time, but also the lowest bear harvest in the past 11 years. So, the overall bear harvest increased by a third from 2018 to 2019.

With a statewide bear population of about 20,000 bears over the past several years, it was a harvest increase sought by the Game Commission, which had employed the largest suite of bear-season changes ever approved in a single license year.

“There were 30 days of bear hunting across all bear seasons in 2019,” explained Mark Ternent, agency biologist. “The last time that happened was in 1931.”

Pennsylvania’s previous top bear seasons occurred in 2011, when 4,350 bears were harvested, and in 2005, when 4,164 were taken. Read more

Michigan: DNR Launching New License Sales System

System down starting Feb. 15; customers encouraged to buy licenses and permits early

The Michigan Department of Natural Resources will move to a new, more technologically advanced system for selling hunting and fishing licenses, hunting applications, and ORV and snowmobile permits online and at retail agent locations statewide. The new system will go live at noon Feb. 18.

The transition to the new license sales system will take place Saturday, Feb. 15, through noon Tuesday, Feb. 18. DNR licenses, permits and applications will not be sold in stores or online during that time.

To avoid any interruption to outdoor activities that weekend, customers are encouraged to buy licenses or permits before Feb. 15, if possible.

Anglers will not need a license to fish Feb. 15-17. No fishing license is required during the annual winter Free Fishing Weekend, Feb. 15 and 16, and the DNR also is allowing free fishing on Monday, Feb. 17, to coincide with the time the license system is unavailable. All rules and regulations still apply.

Snowmobilers and off-road vehicle riders can find a list of select dealers selling preprinted ORV licenses and ORV and snowmobile trail permits while the system is down at Michigan.gov/Snowmobiling.

Moving to the new system, which will replace a 26-year-old system under a vendor contract ending in April, allowed the DNR to upgrade its license sales technology, enhance features for customers and provide new equipment to license retailers.

“We’re always looking to improve our customers’ experience, and we designed this new system to improve the license-buying experience both online and in stores,” said DNR Director Dan Eichinger. “We spent more than two years planning and developing a modern license sales system that offers up-to-date, convenient and cost-effective services for our customers and retail partners.”

Features of the new license sales system include:

  • A barcode scanner wand at retailer locations, which will allow license agents to speed up the sales process by quickly scanning customer driver’s licenses – including nonresidents – rather than typing in customer information.
  • A more streamlined buying and selling process both online and in stores – for example, customers will only have the option to buy licenses for which they are eligible, meaning they shouldn’t be able to accidentally buy the wrong license and pay the wrong amount.
  • The opportunity for online customers to create a profile, access their order history, reprint previously purchased, non-kill tag items and set up voluntary auto-renewal of fishing licenses.
  • Purchases consolidated on the printed license, which means fewer licenses for customers to carry and potentially lose.
  • A QR code on the license to encrypt the customer identification number for increased security.

The DNR license sales system serves about 2 million customers a year, online and through 1,500 retail agent locations throughout Michigan, issuing nearly 4 million licenses and permits and processing roughly $77 million in revenue. Read more

NDA Lances Educational CWD Video to Advocate Action

The video centers on Pennsylvania and the CWD-related issues it’s facing now while getting insight from experts in Wisconsin

INDIANA, Pa. – (February 3, 2020) — The National Deer Alliance (NDA) has launched a new communication initiative to combat chronic wasting disease (CWD) that will provide accurate and timely information to the public. A new video brings added levels of education, testimony and data around the spread of this disease that threatens America’s most popular hunting pastime and conservation as a whole.

CWD is an unprecedented threat to healthy deer herds. Unlike other known or more visible diseases though, CWD does not kill large amounts of deer at the same time, and affected deer often don’t show signs or symptoms until death is near. These factors, in addition to other communication and non-scientific-based reasoning from a few vocal groups and individuals, can leave hunters and members of the public confused, or without a sense of urgency of what’s at stake.

A New Vision Spearheaded by Unique Video Read more

SAF, ISRA File Suit against Illinois State Police

BELLEVUE, WA – The Second Amendment Foundation and Illinois State Rifle Association have filed suit in U.S. District Court against the Illinois State Police, ISP Director Brendan Kelly and Jessica Trame in her official capacity as Bureau Chief of the Illinois State Police Firearms Services Bureau, alleging they have allowed Firearm Owner Identification Card and Concealed Carry applications to languish for interminable periods, thus violating the Second Amendment rights of law-abiding Illinois citizens.

The lawsuit was filed on behalf of Illinois residents Ryan A. Thomas and Goran Lazic. Plaintiffs are represented by attorneys David G. Sigale of Wheaton and Gregory Bedell of Chicago. The lawsuit is known as Thomas, et.al. v. Illinois State Police, et.al.

The lawsuit, filed in the Northern District of Illinois, Eastern Division federal court, says ISP “has swept or transferred funds totaling more than $29,500,000.00 from the State Police Firearms Services Fund, the State Police Operations Assistance Fund, and the State Police Services Fund away from these funds and into other accounts.” According to the complaint, “The money was to be used for three purposes: administration of the Firearm Owners Identification Card (“FOID Card Act”), background checks for firearm-related services, and concealed carry licensing pursuant to the Firearms Concealed Carry Act (“FCCA”). Instead, the more than $29,500,000.00 has been subject to interfund transfers which are ostensibly to be repaid but which have not been, or swept into other accounts without an obligation to reimburse the funds at all.” Read more

Federal Component Bullet Options for Reloading

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ANOKA, Minnesota –– Federal has expanded its wide range of its renowned centerfire rifle and handgun bullets for reloaders. The first new option is a .224 90-grain option in the Fusion line intended for hunters and shooters looking to reload the 224 Valkyrie cartridge. The second new bullet offering is a full line of new Terminal Ascent bullets which is a match-style, all-range, bonded hunting bullet.

“We have always loaded our ammunition with the industry’s finest components, and for decades we have provided the same world-renowned brass, primers and wads to handloaders,” said Federal Product Director Mike Holm.” But until just a few years ago, we kept all our proprietary Federal branded bullets to ourselves, offering them only in factory-loaded ammunition. Those days are now over and Federal is proud to now offer seven product lines of our top bullet designs to be sold as components for reloading.”

Today, product options for rifle include the new Terminal Ascent, Trophy Bonded Tip, Trophy Bonded Sledgehammer Solid, Trophy Bonded Bear Claw and Fusion component bullets which includes the new option for 224 Valkyrie. For handgun, Hydra-Shok and Syntech options are offered to consumers. Read more

Getting Outside

By Glen Wunderlich

Charter Member Professional Outdoor Media Association (POMA)

“Get outside and blow the stink off!” were my grandfather’s harsh words when I got on his nerves some 60 years ago. I don’t know about the “stink” part of that command, but he had a way of chasing us kids outdoors. Back then it was perfectly natural to be physically active and I thrived on the competitive nature of sports and anything out of doors; it just wasn’t anything anyone really had to force us to do.

However, a disturbing trend ominously portends a bleak forecast in the well-being of our younger generation. Outdoor Foundation, the philanthropic arm of Outdoor Industry Association (OIA), released the latest Outdoor Participation Report, showing about half the U.S. population participated in outdoor recreation at least once in 2018, including hunting, hiking, camping, fishing, canoeing and biking among many more outdoor activities. Unfortunately, the report illustrates that half the U.S. population does not participate in outdoor recreation at all.

That sure explains why I see vacant baseball fields in the summer months now, whereas in the past we scrambled on our bicycles to claim these sandlot spaces for a pick-up game.

“Currently, 90 cents of every health care dollar is spent on treating people with chronic disease,” said Jeff Bellows, vice president, corporate citizenship and public affairs, Blue Cross Blue Shield of Massachusetts. “We need to attack the root causes of these diseases, for example, by helping people adopt healthier lifestyles to make sure they are giving themselves and their families the best chance at a healthy life.”

“At a time when Americans are experiencing an epidemic of chronic disease, it’s troubling to know that nearly half do not engage in outdoor recreation at all – something we know helps improve overall quality of life,” said Patricia Rojas-Ungar, vice president of government affairs at OIA. “

Troubling trends include the following:

  • Less than 20 percent of Americans recreated outside at least once a week.
  • Americans went on one billion fewer outdoor outings in 2018 than they did in 2008.
  • Kids went on 15 percent fewer annual outings in 2018 than they did in 2012.

Reversing these current tendencies begins at home and we need more adults like my grandfather, if ever we are to release ourselves from the trappings of physical inactivity.

Sometimes all it takes is a nudge or a simple invitation to participate in a simple fishing excursion or walk in the woods. Opening these conceptual doors can open eyes in a manner that no pretend-video experience has the potential to do.

Today, we see myriad TV commercials touting new wonder drugs to combat what ails us. “Tell your doctor…” they exclaim and take a pill. And, when a person gets too overweight and lazy, it’s the easy way out – that is until years later we learn about all the serious side effects of doing just that.

An ounce of prevention is still worth a pound of cure, so get out there and blow the stink off.

As temperatures fluctuate, Michigan DNR urges ice safety

With temperatures warming throughout much of the state, the Michigan Department of Natural Resources reminds the public that no ice is considered safe ice and there is no reliable inch-thickness test to determine if ice is safe.

“Two snowmobilers went through the ice of Big Manistique Lake on Jan. 16,” said Sgt. Jerry Fitzgibbon, the DNR’s acting district law supervisor for the eastern Upper Peninsula. “Luckily, they were not harmed.”

Big Manistique Lake is in the Upper Peninsula in both Luce and Mackinac counties. Read more

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