SUBSCRIBE    ARCHIVES FRIDAY, JUNE 5, 2026

- BOATING -

Michigan DNR Conservation Officers Brian Lasanen and Cody Smith rescued a family of five from L'Anse whose 31-foot sailboat became stuck on rocks in Keweenaw Bay. The family was safely transported back to Baraga County Marina with assistance from the U.S. Coast Guard.

- COMPETITION -

Over 400 competitors from 30 states participated in the 2026 Zombies in the Heartland 3-Gun match hosted by Hornady and Heartland Public Shooting Park in Grand Island, Nebraska. Hornady-sponsored shooters Andrew Tarver, Dillen Easley, and Dylan Mertens won their respective divisions using Hornady ammunition and equipment.

Federal sponsored shooters Kayle Browning, Brian Burrows, and Derrick Mein qualified for the 2026 U.S. National Trap Team following the Shotgun National Championships at Hillsdale College. Burrows, a 2020 Olympic bronze medalist, is pursuing a spot on the 2028 Los Angeles Olympic team.

- CONTESTS -

The Oklahoma Department of Wildlife Conservation invites artists to enter the 45th annual Oklahoma Waterfowl Stamp Design Competition featuring the white-fronted goose. Artwork is due by the final Friday in August, with the winning artist receiving a $1,200 purchase award and their design featured on the 2027-28 Oklahoma Waterfowl Stamp.

- COURTS -

Firearms Policy Coalition (FPC), an FPC member, and the California Gun Rights Foundation filed a federal lawsuit challenging handgun rationing laws in Los Angeles and Inglewood that limit purchases to one handgun per 30 days, arguing the laws are unconstitutional following a Ninth Circuit ruling against California's statewide law.

- FISHERIES -

The USGS, Montana State University, NOAA-NIDIS, and Montana Fish, Wildlife & Parks launched TroutCast, an interactive web tool providing seasonal and long-term drought forecasts for trout populations across Montana's rivers. The tool integrates monitoring data and streamflow records to support fisheries management and recreational angling opportunities.

Nebraska Game and Parks Commission biologists captured a 70-pound lake sturgeon at Gavins Point Dam that had traveled 681 miles upstream from the Osage River, where it was originally tagged by the Missouri Department of Conservation in 2017. The threatened species, rarely encountered in Nebraska, represents a significant finding in ongoing sturgeon monitoring efforts.

- FISHING TOURNAMENTS -

The National Walleye Tour presented by Progressive is accepting final registrations for the Gladstone, MI – Bay De Noc event on June 18–19, 2026. The tournament features elite-level competition with takeoff at North Shore Boat Launch and weigh-ins at Van Cleve Park, offering critical season points in the Progressive Team of the Year race.

Texas Team Trail, Bass Pro Shops, and Visit Tyler are hosting the Texas Team Trail Championship presented by Progressive in Tyler, TX, bringing over 200 anglers for a multi-day event featuring tournament competition, fan festival, youth fishing, and giveaways June 6-7, 2026.

- GIVEAWAYS -

Wolfe Publishing marks Handloader Magazine's 60th anniversary with a Legendary Giveaway of two commemorative firearms chambered in 45 Colt. Founded in 1966 by Dave Wolfe, the handloading publication has thrived for six decades through contributions from dedicated editors and writers.

- GRANTS -

The MassWildlife Habitat Management Grant Program provides $5,000 to $75,000 grants to private and municipal landowners to enhance wildlife habitat on conserved lands. Applications are due July 6, 2026, and projects must be completed by June 30, 2027, supporting habitat restoration for Species of Greatest Conservation Need and promoting outdoor recreation access.

The Arizona Game and Fish Department is accepting applications for Local Sportsmen's Group grants with a June 14, 2026 deadline. The $100,000 in available funding supports organizations providing mentored projects to recruit and develop new hunters and anglers.

- HUNTING -

Governor Healey filed legislation (Bill H.5377) in April 2026 to update Massachusetts hunting laws, including removing the Sunday hunting ban, allowing crossbow hunting, reducing archery setback distances, and removing falconry setbacks. MassWildlife held public listening sessions with nearly 1,000 attendees and received over 11,300 comments, with majorities supporting the proposed changes to modernize wildlife management practices.

- INDUSTRY UPDATE -

NSSF urges gun owners, retailers, and range operators to participate in Gun Storage Check Week through June 7, promoting the "Make Sure It's Secure" message to prevent firearm accidents. Participants can utilize promotional toolkits, host in-store events, and enter a sweepstakes for a B.O.S. Lock Fusion device at GunStorageCheck.org.

NSSF praises the bipartisan introduction of the Federal Firearms Licensee Protection Act (S. 4671) by U.S. Sen. Lindsey Graham, which strengthens criminal penalties for firearm thefts from licensed retailers. The legislation builds on NSSF's Operation Secure Store initiative with the ATF, which has achieved a 60 percent drop in firearms stolen during burglaries and robberies at retail locations.

Hornady Manufacturing Company donated $55,030.56 to the Nebraska Cattlemen's Disaster Relief Fund to support ranchers affected by devastating wildfires. Funds were raised through the "Nebraska Strong" t-shirt campaign, Hornady Gear contributions, and matching donations from Steve Hornady and Jason Hornady.

Dead Air Silencers has appointed Dunkin-Lewis, Inc. as its western sales representative agency covering 13 states. The partnership leverages Dunkin-Lewis's 60+ years of sporting goods industry experience to provide sales support and dealer service across the western United States.

- INVASIVE SPECIES -

The Barry, Calhoun, Kalamazoo Cooperative Invasive Species Management Area will pilot the first Michigan release of mile-a-minute weevils in June to control invasive mile-a-minute weed in Calhoun County. The weevil, native to Asia and successfully used in the U.S. since 2004, will be monitored by BCK CISMA staff and Grand Valley State University researchers to assess its effectiveness in Michigan.

- ORGANIZATIONS -

The South Carolina Waterfowl Association officially launched its 31st summer of Camp Woodie at the SCWA Wildlife Education Center in Pinewood. The 2026 season features new amenities including a multi-lane climbing tower and expanded adventure programming, with Education Programs Director Jami Lisenby emphasizing the camp's mission to foster lasting connections to nature and conservation.

- PRODUCT NEWS -

OG Suppressors' Scorpius .22, an ultra-lightweight titanium rimfire suppressor weighing under 2 ounces, has become one of the most sought-after suppressors on the market. The design eliminates traditional maintenance issues through its monolithic architecture and was recognized as the quietest rimfire suppressor tested at the TBAC Sound Summit.

- SAFETY NOTICES -

Ruger has discovered that in some LCP MAX Manual Safety models, the recess that retains the safety lever detent spring may not be machined properly. When this condition is present, the safety lever detent spring can become dislodged under the recoil of firing. If this happens, the manual safety lever will have no resistance and will not remain in the "safe" position. Ruger is committed to safety and is warning consumers of the potential for this condition to occur.

- SHOWS -

Sons of Liberty Gun Works will exhibit and conduct live-fire demonstrations at the 2026 Ohio Tactical Officers Association Tactical Operations and Public Safety Conference in Sandusky, Ohio, showcasing their MK1, L89, and EXO3 rifle platforms to law enforcement attendees.

- SPONSORSHIPS -

RCBS has been named the 2026 Official Reloading Equipment of the Precision Rifle Series, continuing their partnership with the national leader in competitive long-range shooting. RCBS Marketing Director Joel Hodgdon highlighted the company's commitment to supporting PRS competitors with premium MatchMaster reloading tools and equipment.

- STATE AGENCIES -

Montana Fish, Wildlife & Parks has selected Malia Freeman as the new communication and education program manager for Region 1 in northwest Montana. Freeman joins FWP from the Flathead City-County Health Department, where she served as public information officer and population health supervisor for six years.

- STATE PARKS -

Indiana Governor Mike Braun and the Indiana DNR celebrated playground updates across 43 state parks funded by a $50 million grant from Lilly Endowment Inc., with $11 million specifically invested in playgrounds. Sixteen installations are complete, five more by early June, and the remainder by fall 2026.

- TELEVISION -

MyOutdoorTV launches "AdventureStream," a limited edition live-streaming channel featuring 24/7 outdoor adventure content with no ads. The platform, managed by Sr. Vice President and General Manager Sean Luxton, offers hit shows including Jim Shockey's Uncharted, MeatEater's Cal In The Field, and Wardens, available across multiple devices.

Major League Fishing's Tackle Warehouse Pro Circuit Stop 5 Presented by K&N Filters streams live on MLFNOW! via MyOutdoorTV from Lake Eufaula, Oklahoma, June 5-7, 2026. Up to 150 pro anglers compete for a top prize of $135,000, with coverage by Chad McKee and Rob Newell on MajorLeagueFishing.com, the MOTV app, and Rumble.

Let’s talk about the two letters that every CEO loves to say, and every marketing VP hates to hear: AI.

The fear these two letters create in the marketing, content, social media and PR departments across the outdoor industry has made it the only topic that matters. Stories of companies as large as Oracle and Cisco down to mom-and-pop operations cutting staff and replacing them with an LLM are everywhere.

The AI revolution is here, and it is not friendly.

Hogwash, I say.

It’s time to show my age and talk about all the “revolutions” in technology I’ve survived and why the AI tsunami is no different.

See, when I first entered this industry, it was all website all the time. Websites could replace printed catalogs! Websites could replace paid advertising! Websites could replace in-store merchandise!

#RIPMarketing

Then, once everyone had a thrown-together website, brands learned that wasn’t enough. You needed some wildly crazy things like good design, a friendly user-experience and actual content that the visitor found of value.

And to do that, you needed to bring on web designers and copywriters and digital marketing experts. Those that did, succeeded. Those that didn’t, struggled.

Next came blogs.

Heck, all we have to do is send out some product and we’ll get shiny reviews without having to pay for it. Then we can copy/paste that right onto our website. Blogs will replace marketing! Blogs will replace media events! Blogs will replace copywriters!

#RIPMarketing.

Except the basement bloggers’ reach dwindled as the market got saturated and taken over by monetized channels and pay-for-play. Like most media, the blogs that drew the most eyeballs weren’t always the ones you wanted to showcase your products. The solution? Start your own blog to control the messaging, provide education to users and help convince shoppers to buy your product.

And to do that, you needed to bring on content creators, videographers and digital marketing experts. Those that did… Well, you know.

Now, it was Facebook, which was quickly repackaged as social media et al. These sites are free and my 15-year-old kid can do it. Social media can replace digital marketing! Social media can replace blogs! Heck, social media can replace our website!

#RIPMarketing.

Then the rules changed. And they never stopped changing. Restrictions on what you can post became almost insurmountable challenges. Monetization hit all the channels, so your message disappeared unless you threw boosting dollars at it. The almighty algorithm became the new de facto god we all struggled to please. Turns out, you need content strategists, paid digital experts, writers, editors and marketing experts to make the now large investment pay off.

Next came the SMS wave. Data show that most consumers use their phones to shop and we can deliver messaging and offers right in the store based on geofencing. SMS can replace paid digital! SMS can replace PR! SMS can replace database marketing!

#RIPMarketing

Wait, what do you mean we can only send to opted-in users who allow us to send to them? How the heck are we supposed to get people to opt-in for advertising messages? You need to hire experts in marketing, digital marketing and PR to create interest and reasons for people to open the door to getting even more sales-focused texts.

Now, we’re at the AI tidal wave. And AI will replace… everything. Marketing, strategy, PR, Social, SEO, analytics, copywriting, design, photography, videography! All we need is a $20 a month ChatGPT subscription and we can replace entire departments!

#RIPMarketing

Not so fast, my friend. AI is only as good as the people who create the prompts. And just as it is in marketing or sales or even manufacturing, if the minds that control the machine have no clue, it doesn’t work. We’re being overrun with AI slop. For every AI piece that works well, there’s 999 others that are utter trash.

You need a marketing expert to create good messaging. You need a design expert to create good creative. You have to have an SEO expert to feed AEO. You need a PR expert to create good awareness content for the LLMs to find. You need… you get the idea.

Folks, the AI revolution is no different than all the other paradigm shifts. It’s a shiny new tool that no one fully understands yet. It has a lot of promise to be a huge force multiplier, but in the end it’s going to be another tactic in the marketing arsenal. Once brands get a handle on what good AI can and can’t do, they’ll see the need for experts in their disciplines to oversee and operate this tool.

Don’t believe me? Just look at the companies that created these LLMs and their biggest early adopters.

Both OpenAI (ChatGPT) and Anthropic (Claude) have recently hired marketing strategists and chief communications experts to oversee their programs. Amazon and eBay, huge global leaders in AI integration, have done the same. And these companies are taking it seriously. These have not been specialist or manager roles. They’ve brought on CCO and VP level leaders to ride shotgun on their AI marketing and communications programs.

Who better to understand the need for intelligent, thoughtful, strategic and, most importantly, human experts to steer the AI-generated marcom effort than the ones who built it to begin with? They don’t trust their messaging to an LLM and neither should you.

This understanding will start to trickle down through the users until the need for strong marketing-minded AI leaders is just table stakes, no different than the need we discovered for great website work, high-quality owned content, strategic social media and broad brand awareness campaigns.

There will be jobs to fill, and expertise needed. Leadership will learn, albeit some the hard way, that AI is no more a panacea for all things marketing than websites, blogs, SMS or social media were. All are valuable tools, but just part of a larger, cohesive, strategic marketing effort, driven by intelligent, expert humans at the helm.

So, if you’re concerned about your career by the threat of AI, I get it. It can look scary. But those that learn to use the new tools and maximize their potential will become even more valuable. Those that don’t may have reason to be stressed.

But I would simply suggest this. The marketing world sees a new revolution take over every 5-10 years. AI will be no different. You either learn to adapt, overcome and survive, or you don’t.

You just have to realize that once you get comfortable with this technology, there will be a new one waiting in the wings to overturn the apple cart all over again.

Times may change. Tools and tactics always change. The need for an expert to write the blogs, create the social content, attract users to opt-in and prompt AI to do the right and meaningful thing will never change.

– Allen Forkner

Allen Forkner has spent more than 25 years helping outdoor recreation, conservation and shooting sports organizations tell their stories in an industry that never seems to stop reinventing itself. As a communications and marketing executive, he has led brand strategy, public relations and corporate communications efforts for organizations ranging from nonprofit conservation groups to publicly traded companies. Along the way, he has worked through nearly every major shift in modern communications, from the rise of social media and digital publishing to podcasting, influencer marketing and data-driven content strategies.

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