SUBSCRIBE    ARCHIVES   
WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 8, 2025

- EDITOR'S NOTE -
In observance of the Columbus Day/Indigenous Peoples Day holiday we will not be distributing any of our services on Monday, October 13. The Outdoor Wire Digital Network will resume our normal distribution schedule on Tuesday, October 14. If you have important news to distribute prior to the holiday weekend, it should be submitted by 4:30pm Eastern on Thursday, October 9.
- ARCHERY -
Bowtech Archery announces the launch of the Bowtech Virtue 80# draw weight model, engineered specifically for serious hunters pursuing the world’s largest and toughest game.
- AWARDS -
The No Lowballers podcast earned both first and second place honors at the 2025 Association of Great Lakes Outdoor Writers (AGLOW) annual conference.
The National Marine Manufacturers Association (NMMA®) and Boating Writers International (BWI) honored Yamaha Marine with an Innovation Award in the propulsion parts and propellers category for its Helm Master® EX Wireless Control System.
- BOATING -
The Wildlife and Freshwater Fisheries (WFF) Division of the Alabama Department of Conservation and Natural Resources (ADCNR) will temporarily close the Moundville Public Boat Ramp for renovations on Monday, October 13, 2025.

- CHRONIC WASTING DISEASE -
After chronic wasting disease was detected in three white-tailed deer near Bonners Ferry, Idaho, a portion of Unit 1 was designated as a CWD management zone effective Oct. 1. During the 2024 hunting season, three additional white-tailed deer also tested positive for CWD within the management zone.
Free, fast and convenient sampling for chronic wasting disease (CWD) is available by appointment during the archery season and on Mondays through Fridays, 8 a.m.–5 p.m. during the general hunting season at Montana Fish, Wildlife & Parks headquarters in Billings.
- COMPETITION -
Hornady® congratulates sponsored shooter Craig Anderson, for his performance at the 2025 Freedom Nationals benchrest match. Anderson, the Bullet Production Supervisor at Hornady, won the Light Gun Score shooting 6mm 108 gr. ELD Match bullets for a score of 147 out of 150.
- CONTESTS -
Photographers of all ages and skill levels can have their work published in Wyoming Wildlife magazine as part of the magazine’s annual photo contest, which is now accepting submissions.

- ENFORCEMENT -
Check stations are an opportunity for Idaho Fish and Game staff to talk to thousands of hunters and see thousands of harvested animals. The goal is for Fish and Game personnel to get information and learn what's happening in the field and also answer questions, collect samples for CWD, and then quickly get folks back on their way. Anglers and trappers also have to stop at check stations if coming from or going to those activities.
- EVENTS -
Armscor / Rock Island Armory will be attending the upcoming 2025 National Association of Sporting Goods Wholesalers Annual Conference and Expo. The event will take place in Grapevine, TX, and is scheduled for October 15-17, 2025.
Primary Arms Government is pleased to announce its participation as an exhibitor at the 2025 TTPOA SWAT Competition, scheduled for October 8–12 at the Conroe/FBI Training Facility in Texas.
- FISHERIES -
The AGFC is giving away concrete spawning disks and gravel to Lake Conway anglers and lakeside landowners to create their own future hotspots. Property owners also can sign up to have the AGFC build gravel spawning beds in front of their property.

For the second year in a row, anglers have some exciting opportunities to chase hefty thirteen- and fourteen-inch brook and rainbow trout at four ponds in southern Vermont this fall, thanks to a successful new stocking program from the Vermont Fish & Wildlife Department.
The Maryland DNR has officially recognized Marc Spagnola of Berlin, Worcester County, as the new state record holder for longfin albacore (Thunnus alalunga) for the Atlantic Division. Spagnola’s 78-pound catch surpasses the previous record set in 2004 by four pounds.
The recreational and commercial stone crab harvest season starts Oct. 15 and will remain open through May 1, closing May 2. The minimum claw size limit is 2 7/8 inches.
Eighteen lakes across Iowa are gearing up to receive trout this fall. The Iowa DNR will release between 1,000 to 2,000 rainbow trout at each location as part of its cool weather trout program that brings trout to areas that cannot support them during the summer months.

- FORESTRY -
The best way to prevent the spread of oak wilt is to not prune any oak tree during the growing season.
A half-inch of rain overnight helped firefighters make headway on the Benzie Road Fire near Michigan's Houghton Lake, which is now about 95% contained.
- GIVEAWAYS -
This October, Primary Arms is offering up the chance to win a Daniel Defense DDM4V7 AR-15 chambered in 5.56 NATO. Equipped with a Primary Arms Optics PLxC 1-8x24 SFP Rifle Scope with the ACSS NOVA Reticle, a SureFire M640DF Turbo Scout Light, and much more, this rifle package is valued at over $4,700.
- GRANTS -
The Interagency Grizzly Bear Committee (IGBC) is accepting grant applications from organizations seeking to promote bear education and conflict reduction. The IGBC's Information, Education & Outreach grants are intended for organizations working to disseminate consistent messaging about grizzly bears and support grizzly bear recovery and conservation in the western U.S.

Whitetails Unlimited recently granted $938,340 to various mission-related projects during the third quarter of 2025. These grants fall within Whitetails Unlimited’s four pillar programs: Outdoor Education, Hunting Preservation, Habitat Enhancement, and Shooting Sports Advancement.
- HUNTING -
Are you planning to hunt in a hunter management area this fall? Be sure to do the right thing and secure permission. Hunter management areas are typically private ranches the Wyoming Game and Fish Department manages for hunting access, and permission slips are required.
The Vermont Fish and Wildlife Department held its annual permit lottery for muzzleloader antlerless deer permits on September 9 and says it still has unallocated muzzleloader antlerless deer permits available for use in the antlerless-only October 30-November 2 muzzleloader season and the December 6-14 muzzleloader season.
Idaho’s mule deer hunters have reason to be optimistic about this fall, and cautious about the future. Mule deer harvest increased by 30% last fall over the 2023 season, and signs look promising we could see another harvest bump.

The Maryland DNR reminds hunters that squirrel, rabbit, fall turkey, and other small game seasons are either underway or set to open in the coming weeks. Some of these species offer generous seasons and bag limits and are abundant throughout Maryland.
Montana’s two-day, youth-only deer hunt is coming up October 16 and 17, and general deer season opens October 25. If your youth is planning to apply as an apprentice hunter to participate in the youth hunt, it’s a good idea to apply now and avoid what could be longer wait times closer to general season.
Pheasant season opens Oct. 11 in north Idaho and Oct. 18 in south and east Idaho. See area maps for opening dates on pages 11-12 of the Idaho Upland Game, Turkey and Furbearer seasons and rules booklet.
The Utah Division of Wildlife Resources and The Peregrine Fund are once again asking hunters in the Zion hunting unit to stop at a check station this month, where they can demonstrate their efforts to help protect scavenging wildlife — like eagles, hawks and California condors — and also enter to win a prize.

Epizootic Hemorrhagic Disease (EHD) is not a threat to humans or livestock, but it can be alarming to hunters and landowners who encounter sick or dead deer. Idaho Fish and Game has received many questions about the outbreak, what it means for hunting this year, and what to expect for the future of white-tailed deer populations in the Clearwater Region.
Pheasant season opens on Saturday, Oct. 11, and FWP is busy with a second round of pheasant releases at several sites across the state. This fall, Montana Fish Wildlife & Parks will release nearly 18,000 birds on wildlife management areas, fishing access sites and some school trust lands around the state.
- INDUSTRY -
The Murray Road Agency announces its partnership with Redding Reloading Equipment. The partnership with Murray Road will expand Redding Reloading’s reach, with a focus on continuing to serve their dedicated users, customers and audience.
Silencer Central has initiated a lawsuit against FedEx and its subsidiary corporations. Filed October 8, 2025, in the Southern Division of the District Court of South Dakota, the complaint seeks to recover damages caused by FedEx’s alleged negligent misrepresentation and breach of contract.

- INVASIVE SPECIES -
The Iowa Department of Natural Resources (DNR) reminds lake property owners to check their boat and trailers, and docks and lifts, for aquatic invasive species before storing them for the winter.
- LITIGATION -
The Sixth Circuit Court of Appeals will hear oral arguments in Sportsmen’s Alliance Foundation’s (SAF) lawsuit challenging the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention’s (CDC) unlawful and arbitrary puppy ban on December 12, in Cincinnati, Ohio.
- ORGANIZATIONS -
The Project ChildSafe® Safety Sweepstakes is now open for entries. The annual sweepstakes is a national fundraising initiative supporting Project ChildSafe, the trusted firearm safety education program committed to saving lives and preventing accidents—especially those involving children—as well as suicides and firearm theft.
The Gulf Council will meet at the Golden Nugget Hotel and Casino from November 3-6, 2025. The meeting will begin with the adoption of Council Committee assignments.
The Wild Sheep Foundation (WSF) is partnering with Jamma International and Conservation Visions to host a Pavilion where we will present case studies and conduct panel discussions at the International Union for Conservation of Nature (IUCN) World Conservation Congress, held this month in Abu Dhabi, United Arab Emirates.
- PODCASTS -
Houston Safari Club Foundation (HSCF) announces that Bobby Deeds, Wildlife Specialist with Record Rack Deer Feeds, will be the featured guest on an upcoming episode of the Hunting Matters podcast.
In the latest episode of The Michael Waddell Podcast, presented by Spandau Arms and in partnership with Spartan Precision and Folds of Honor, Michael Waddell welcomes Phillip Culpepper, a renowned turkey hunter and host of “The Hunt Club with Phillip Culpepper.”
- PRODUCT NEWS -
Moultrie introduces its new Buck List feature in the Moultrie App. This new feature in its app is designed to help hunters efficiently track and manage target bucks throughout the hunting season.
Boar Products has released a whitepaper titled The Future of Firearm Care – Why Natural Gun Cleaning Solutions Are the Only Path Forward. This comprehensive report details the health, environmental, and performance risks of traditional gun cleaning products and outlines the urgent need for a transition to safe, natural alternatives.
TriStar Arms introduces the APOC, a compact 9mm pistol that delivers modern features and reliable performance at an affordable price of $359.00. It features fiber-optic sights, accessory rail, and included 15-round magazines.
Custom & Collectable Firearms is proud to introduce the Marlin 1894 SBL Wild Boar .44 Magnum, a distinguished addition to our Wildlife Series. This American-made lever-action rifle showcases exceptional craftsmanship and attention to detail.
SK Guns announced the release of the 'San Judas' Colt 1911, the third installment in its Saints series. This limited-edition firearm is restricted to 500 units, each chambered in .38 Super and individually numbered.
- PUBLISHING -
Hook & Barrel Magazine® announces the Second Annual HOOK & BARREL TOP SHELF AWARDS, honoring the best-in-class outdoor industry brands and personalities showcased in Hook & Barrel Magazine and hookandbarrel.com.
- RETAIL -
Derya Arms announced that Turners Outdoorsman Sporting Goods will become a stocking dealer for select Derya products across its more than 35 stores in California and Arizona.
- STATE AGENCIES -
The Idaho Fish and Game Commission has approved the following proposed rules to proceed to the public comment phase. Comment period is open and deadline to comment is Oct. 22. Comment here.
A new agenda item has been added to the Oct. 9 Fish and Wildlife Commission meeting agenda: Epizootic Hemorrhagic Disease-Bluetongue Virus and Potential Adjustments to the 2025 Deer Hunting Regulations. The commission will meet via Zoom starting at 8:30 a.m.
The Iowa Department of Natural Resources (DNR) is launching a major habitat restoration effort at the Meadow Lake Wildlife Management Area (WMA) beginning this month.
The best way to prevent the spread of oak wilt is to not prune any oak tree during the growing season.
- STATE PARKS -
Dewy White of Paoli, Indiana, visited Crater of Diamonds State Park on October 2 and found a beautiful 2.71-carat white diamond. White spent most of the day dry sifting, a process where dirt is broken up by hand and sifted through mesh screens without water. White finally spotted something that looked different than everything he had seen.
- TELEVISION -
Law enforcement, firefighters and first responders from around the world have gathered in Birmingham, AL for contests of all descriptions. Nearly all of the shooting sports events are hosted by the CMP Talladega Marksmanship Park.
- WILDLIFE -
A hiker was injured in a bear attack near Squirrel Creek in Fremont County on Tuesday afternoon, Sept. 30. The hiker, an adult male, was traveling alone on the South rim of Squirrel Creek when a bear charged at him through the thick timber from a short distance away.
Montana Fish, Wildlife & Parks is considering a new program that would provide guidance on how beavers can be transplanted in appropriate areas and ecosystems across the state. FWP staff have developed a draft Environmental Assessment (EA) that evaluates its proposal to establish a Montana Beaver Transplant Program (MBTP).
 

Flounder are perhaps the best tasting of all coastal fish, but numbers are down in many states due to overharvest, fishery managers say. 

For anglers who chase flatfish from the Outer Banks down through Florida and across the Gulf Coast, the best fishing time of the year is coming—and it will be closed to harvest.

The rolling series of fall closures is timed to protect southern and gulf flounder as they gather to spawn. Flounder are one of those fish rarely released because they are perhaps the best-tasting of all coastal species—if it’s legal-sized, it goes in the box, unlike many “game” species like bonefish and tarpon which U.S. anglers chase purely for sport. Even redfish, seatrout and snook are mostly released—but not flounder.

In recent years, state agencies from North Carolina to Florida and along the Gulf have tightened seasons, raised size limits and, in some cases, shut down the spawning period completely for recreational harvest. The intent is simple: let more adults reproduce so there are more and bigger flounder on the next generation.

Is it working? The results are mixed so far, but in general seem to be positive. Managers set closures where and when flounder aggregate to spawn — typically October through December in much of the Southeast and Gulf. 

Florida has used an annual statewide recreational closure from mid-October through the end of November to protect prespawn and spawning aggregations. In the Gulf states, similar seasonal blackouts have become standard: Alabama’s flounder fishery is closed through November to protect spawning migrations, and Texas has routinely shut down November to mid-December periods to reduce harvest during peak movement. Louisiana likewise observes an October 15–November 30 closure for both commercial and recreational sectors. These pauses reflect growing agreement that protecting flounder during the vulnerable migration and spawn window is a straightforward, enforceable tool. 

The bottleneck in the spawning period comes as the flounder migrate out of bays and estuaries to deeper water to spawn on nearshore reefs and wrecks. Anglers are well aware of these runs and set up in the passes or just outside, put live bait on the bottom, and catch them in massive numbers. Not surprisingly, a few decades of this and flounder numbers have plummeted.

Flounder are readily caught on artificials as well as live bait worked close to bottom. (Z-Man Lures)

The patchwork of state rules — different season dates, size limits and gear restrictions — has produced both wins and frustrations. 

In North Carolina, regulators went as far as not opening the recreational flounder season in 2024, a move that drew anger from inshore anglers and commercial interests alike. Other states have preferred shorter closures paired with stricter size limits or reduced bag limits, hoping to spread conservation measures without entirely quashing angling opportunity. 

Those differences matter because adult flounder move along coasts and between estuaries; piecemeal protections in one state can be undermined by open seasons next door. That’s why scientists and many managers now emphasize coordinated, coast-wide strategies rather than a state-by-state patchwork. 

Are the closures working? The short answer is: slowly, and unevenly. In places where closures have been paired with other measures — net bans, minimum size increases, reduced creel limits and enforcement of gear restrictions — there are encouraging signs: landings stabilize, mean sizes creep up, and a greater proportion of fish sampled in surveys are mature females. Alabama’s flounder population seems to be coming back faster than most due to these measures. 

But recovery is not uniform. Some states still report downward trends in commercial and recreational landings, and stock assessments caution that rebuilding will take years, especially where recreational harvest comprises a large share of the take. The economics of the fishery complicate things, too: flounder are beloved by anglers and valuable to coastal communities, so managers have to weigh conservation benefits against real social and economic cost. 

For the angler, the rules mean adapting. Shorter seasons pressure fishermen to be more selective: learn to release fish quickly and properly, favor catch-and-release techniques during pre-spawn aggregations, and pay attention to minimum sizes that protect females before they spawn. 

It’s all about the eating when it comes to flounder—catch and release is rare because they are premium food fish. (Frank Sargeant)

Gigging seasons in some states have been pointed to as a significant source of mortality: You can’t release an undersized flounder that has been gigged.

Of course habitat preservation and restoration for nursery areas on the grass flats and bycatch reduction in other fisheries like shrimp trawling are also major factors in enhancing this fishery—tens of thousands of baby flounder go to waste each year as bycatch in shrimping in some areas. 

As anglers, we need to remember closures are not punitive, they’re part of a multi-tool strategy to restore a fishery that delivers both sport and supper. Where managers have been bold — closing seasons, limiting gear and leaning on data — the trend lines show recovery is not only possible but relatively rapid. 

Missing a few flounder dinners this fall will be well worth it if in future we can expect more and larger flounder on tap for most of each year.

— Frank Sargeant
Frankmako1@gmail.com

 
Outdoor Wire - 155 Litchfield Rd., Edgartown, MA 02539
Copyright © 2024, OWDN, All Rights Reserved.