SUBSCRIBE    ARCHIVES THURSDAY, MARCH 26, 2026

- TOP STORY -

Beretta Holding, which owns 9.95% of Sturm, Ruger & Company, has proposed an all-cash partial tender offer for up to 20.05% of Ruger's outstanding shares at $44.80 per share, representing approximately 20% premium to the 60-day average price. Beretta Holding seeks exemption from Ruger's shareholder rights plan to acquire up to 30% beneficial ownership, believing increased investment would establish a strategic partnership to improve operational and financial performance.

Sturm, Ruger & Company's Board of Directors received a letter from Beretta Holding S.A. proposing a partial tender offer for up to 20.05% of Ruger's outstanding shares, which would increase Beretta's ownership to approximately 30%. The proposed tender offer has not yet commenced, and shareholders need not take action at this time.

- AWARDS & HONORS -

The South Carolina Waterfowl Association has named TrueTimber CEO Rusty Sellars as its 2026 Member of the Year, recognizing his outstanding commitment to wildlife conservation and education. TrueTimber is serving its third consecutive year as a $150,000 Mission Partner, supporting SCWA's youth education programs, conservation initiatives, and outdoor experiences.

- BOATING -

Arkansas recorded 17 boating fatalities in 2025, the highest since 2009, with 73 accidents reported, according to Sgt. Sydney Grant of the Arkansas Game and Fish Commission. Hazardous spring conditions from flooding and increased duck hunting accidents contributed to the peaks, with only 33 percent of boaters wearing life jackets.

- COMPETITION -

Team Lapua's Brandon Green won the Open Heavy division of the Best of the West Hunter Championship held March 6-8 in Bartlesville, Oklahoma. The competition featured 20 simulated hunting stages with target engagements from 200 to over 900 yards across diverse terrain.

Remington Ammunition celebrated strong performances at the 2026 NSCA Western Regional Championships in Tucson, Arizona. Brandon Powell won the Prelim Event High Over All with 98 out of 100 targets, while Todd Hitch claimed the 12 Gauge High Over All with a perfect 50 out of 50 score.

Federal Ammunition sponsored shooters excelled at the 2026 NSCA Western Regional Championships in Tucson, Arizona, with Derrick Mein winning the FITASC High Over All Championship and Jonathan Prince claiming the Junior Main Event Championship among 625 competitors.

World champion Jessie Harrison, a Taurus Team Captain, won three national titles at the 2026 US Steel Nationals, with the all-new Taurus TX9 earning a national championship in its stock configuration. Harrison captured Ladies Carry Optics, Ladies Open, and Ladies Overall National Champion titles, validating the TX9 as a competition-capable platform.

- CONTESTS -

The Gulf Council is hosting a photo contest celebrating its 50th Anniversary, inviting photographers to submit images showcasing Gulf fisheries, coastal communities, and marine life. Winning photos will be displayed in Council offices and featured in publications and materials, with submissions due by April 30, 2026.

- COURTS -

Firearms Policy Coalition announced it will appeal Judge Pittman's ruling upholding Texas's carry ban at sporting events and other public spaces to the Fifth Circuit, arguing the decision contradicts the Constitution and Supreme Court precedent.

- EVENTS -

The Arizona Game and Fish Department will auction wildlife assets including antlers, hides, mounts, and hunting gear at its 2026 Outdoor Expo on March 28-29 at Ben Avery Shooting Facility. Proceeds support wildlife crime investigations and resource protection.

- GIVEAWAYS -

MDT announced the Mountain Hunter Giveaway offering a complete backcountry hunting setup featuring MDT's lightweight rifle platform and products from Leupold, Lone Peak, Aziak, EXO Mtn Gear, TriggerTech, and Muley Freak. The giveaway runs March 24 through April 6, open to U.S. residents only.

- HUNTING -

The Vermont Fish and Wildlife Department and National Wild Turkey Federation of Vermont are offering "Learning to Hunt Spring Turkeys" seminars on April 7, 22, and 29 at three locations. These seminars for new hunters cover setup, regulations, and turkey calling techniques.

- ORGANIZATIONS -

Dallas Safari Club elected Rick Warren as Board President, along with Chris Ruhman, Colby Hale, and Daniel McGehee to the Board of Directors. The membership also approved proposed bylaw updates enhancing governance and board structure during the Annual General Meeting on March 19, 2026.

Pennsylvania Governor Josh Shapiro has been appointed as the Democrat Co-Chair of the Governors Sportsmen's Caucus for a two-year term. Governor Shapiro signed Act No. 36 into law in 2025, repealing Pennsylvania's ban on Sunday hunting, benefiting the state's 850,000 licensed hunters and supporting rural economies.

Turkeys for Tomorrow (TFT) has partnered with Grounded Turkey Hunting Vests, founded by Drew Able, to offer an innovative modular vest designed by turkey hunters. TFT members receive a 10% discount, with a percentage of sales supporting conservation projects.

- PRODUCT NEWS -

DeSantis Gunhide introduces the INTRUDER 2.0, a Red Dot Ready hybrid holster featuring precision-molded Kydex body and premium steerhide construction. Available for Glock, Springfield Hellcat, and Sig P365 models, the holster retails for $114.99 and offers configurable IWB/OWB carry options.

Faxon Firearms announced an exclusive ARAK-21 16" 5.56 NATO Complete Upper Receiver Group in Midnight Bronze Cerakote available exclusively through Sports South distributor. The patented long-stroke gas-piston upper features ambidextrous controls, user-reversible bolt, and adjustable gas valve with an MSRP of $999.00.

MDT announced the addition of TrueTimber Viper color option to its CRBN chassis system, designed for precision hunters seeking lightweight builds with enhanced camouflage options. The carbon fiber chassis features adjustable ergonomics and accessory compatibility, available starting March 24 through MDT dealers and mdttac.com.

WOOX, an Italian-American gunstock manufacturer, is increasing production of its new "High Grade" line of stocks and chassis due to overwhelming demand. Each piece features hand-selected American Walnut with unique grain patterns and receives traditional oil finishing by WOOX artisans, available across multiple product lines including the new Elegante Series.

Zanders, a national distributor based in Sparta, Illinois, has added SHIELD Sights' innovative micro red dot optics to its product lineup. The partnership expands dealer access to SHIELD Sights' rugged, compact optics designed for concealed carry pistols, duty firearms, and competition platforms.

Sturm, Ruger & Company, Inc. launches its 250th Anniversary Series of firearms commemorating the U.S. Semiquincentennial. The limited production models include the 10/22 rifle, LCP MAX pistol, Ruger American Gen II rifle, Mark IV 22/45 pistol, Super Wrangler revolver, and AR Lower, each marked "Made in the 250th Year of American Liberty."

Lyman's Turbo Sonic 2500 ultrasonic brass cleaner is now available for reloaders. The heated tank system processes up to 900 9mm cases in under 15 minutes, cleaning cases inside and out including primer pockets.

- RETAIL -

Outdoor Edge encourages dealers to stock hunting knives for turkey season, featuring new products including 2.5" and 3.0" Razor APX Hunting Knives, Vantex Boning and Drop Point Knives, and the ErgoMax Game Processing Set. Will Morgan, director of marketing at Outdoor Edge, highlights these lightweight, high-performance options designed for hunters and game processing.

- SPONSORSHIPS -

Killer Instinct Crossbows, based in Windom, Minnesota, continues its sponsorship with Whitetails Unlimited. WTU President Jeff Schinkten praised the crossbow manufacturer's commitment as the popularity of crossbows among hunters continues to rise.

- STATE AGENCIES -

The Natural Resources Foundation of Wisconsin is celebrating its 40th anniversary by offering 280 unique outdoor field trips across the state in 2026. Trips range from hiking and kayaking to citizen science experiences, with options for all ability levels. Registration opens April 8th at noon on WisConservation.org.

- TELEVISION -

Major League Fishing's Bass Pro Tour Stage 4 streams live on MyOutdoorTV from O.H. Ivie and Lake Brownwood in Early, Texas, March 26-29, featuring 51 professional anglers competing for a $125,000 top prize and $600,000 purse. Broadcast team Chad McKee and J.T. Kenney will cover all four days of competition.

- WILDLIFE -

The Utah Division of Wildlife Resources' Hardware Wildlife Education Center in Hyrum is hosting a free "Bear Aware" exhibit during select April weekends to educate visitors about black bear safety as bears emerge from their dens. Education Coordinator Marni Lee encourages outdoor enthusiasts to tour the exhibit featuring displays, crafts, and activities for families recreating in black bear country.

Editor’s Note: The following was first published on the Northern Ag Network and is republished here with their permission.

There are 8.1 billion people on this planet.

Wildlife does not survive on sentiment. It survives because people choose to conserve it.

For more than a century, the United States has operated under the most successful wildlife recovery model in the world — the North American Model of Wildlife Conservation.

Through science-based management, regulated hunting and fishing, working ranches, habitat stewardship, and user-funded conservation, America restored wildlife from the brink of collapse.

Elk returned. Whitetails rebounded. Wild turkey flourished. Waterfowl populations stabilized. This did not happen by leaving nature alone. It happened because wildlife had value.

Now that system faces one of the most serious threats in modern history.

What Is Initiative Petition 28?

Oregon’s Initiative Petition 28 (IP28), also called the PEACE Act, seeks to remove longstanding exemptions in the state’s animal cruelty statutes.

If passed, it could redefine hunting, fishing, ranching, animal agriculture, and other lawful wildlife management activities as criminal acts under expanded animal cruelty definitions.

The Congressional Sportsmen’s Foundation (CSF) has publicly opposed this initiative, recognizing the magnitude of what is at stake.

Jeff Crane, CEO of the Congressional Sportsmen’s Foundation, and Tom Opre, CEO of Shepherds of Wildlife, patently agree:

This legislation may be the single largest threat to wildlife conservation, rural communities, and the American way of life in modern history.

That is not rhetoric. It is a recognition of what happens when sustainable use is removed from conservation policy.

The Signature Campaign: How This Is Moving Forward

The group behind IP28 is actively collecting signatures across Oregon. They are reportedly tens of thousands of signatures away from qualifying for the ballot.

Petition gatherers are often stationed outside grocery stores and public spaces, presenting the initiative in emotionally simplified terms — focused on animal cruelty language — without fully explaining the sweeping legal consequences for hunting, fishing, farming, and wildlife management.

Many citizens signing may not understand that this measure could:

• Criminalize traditional hunting and fishing
• Undermine livestock operations
• Disrupt food production systems
• Destabilize conservation funding structures

Ballot initiatives are powerful tools. But when complex wildlife law is reduced to emotionally charged soundbites, the public deserves a full and honest explanation of what is at stake.

The Core Issue: Removing Humans from Conservation

IP28 represents a philosophical shift. It reframes the human use of wildlife — even regulated, science-based use — as inherently immoral. That is not how American conservation was built. Conservation in North America is based on wise use.

Wildlife is a public trust resource. It is renewable. It is managed. It is regulated.

When you remove sustainable use from that equation, you remove incentive. When you remove incentive, you lose habitat. When you lose habitat, you lose biodiversity. This is not speculation. It is ecological and economic reality.

What Happens If This Model Collapses?

If initiatives like IP28 succeed, the consequences will extend far beyond Oregon.

1. Wildlife Funding Erodes

State wildlife agencies rely heavily on hunting and fishing license revenue and federal excise taxes tied to sportsmen and women.

That funding supports habitat restoration, species research, law enforcement, and conservation education.

Dismantle sustainable use, and you destabilize conservation funding. There is no replacement system currently structured to fill that gap at scale.

2. Working Landscapes Disappear

Rural America holds the majority of wildlife habitat.

Ranchers, farmers, and landowners maintain open space and migration corridors. These working lands often provide better habitat than fragmented development.

If rural families lose the ability to sustainably benefit from their land, development pressure increases. Pasture becomes pavement. Habitat becomes housing tracts. Biodiversity declines — not because of regulated hunting — but because habitat disappears.

3. Rural Stewardship Collapses

Wildlife lives where people live. Elk, deer, predators, livestock — these interactions happen in rural communities. Conservation succeeds when those communities are empowered as partners.

Criminalizing lawful interaction does not create harmony. It creates resentment. And when resentment replaces stewardship, wildlife loses its strongest defenders.

4. Human Dignity Is Undermined

Hunting and ranching are not fringe activities. They are food systems. They are livelihoods. They are cultural traditions.

For many families, wild game supplements household food. For many ranchers, livestock is generational survival. Conservation cannot survive if it excludes human dignity.

On a planet with 8.1 billion people, wildlife must coexist with humans in ways that are practical, sustainable, and economically viable. Wildlife that provides no value to local communities does not remain protected for long.

A Global Lesson

Through films like Killing the Shepherd, The Last Keeper, and The Real Yellowstone, Shepherds of Wildlife has documented this truth around the world:

Wildlife thrives where rural people benefit from it.

When sustainable use is removed, unintended consequences follow — poverty increases, illegal killing rises, habitat declines, and conservation weakens.

Mother Nature doesn’t practice conservation. We do. People do.

Conservation is a human decision — and it works when people are included.

This Is a Defining Moment

IP28 is not a minor policy debate.

It is a direct challenge to the North American Model of Wildlife Conservation — the most successful wildlife recovery system ever implemented.

If sustainable use is criminalized: We risk losing biodiversity. We risk losing working landscapes. We risk losing rural stewardship. We risk losing the system that rebuilt wildlife in America.
This moment demands clarity.

Conservation means wise use. Conservation means science-based management. Conservation means human dignity alongside ecological responsibility.

If we allow conservation to be redefined as the elimination of use, we will not strengthen wildlife. We will weaken it.

Wildlife survives with people — not without them.

– Tom Opre

Tom Opre is a film director and wildlife conservationist from Montana’s Flathead Valley, founder of the Shepherds of Wildlife Society, which produced the documentary film “The Real Yellowstone.”  As the past president of the Professional Outdoor Media Association (POMA), he works to help other outdoor communicators and industry leaders understand the top issues facing wildlife conservation today.

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