SUBSCRIBE    ARCHIVES TUESDAY, JULY 7, 2026

- ARCHERY -

Easton's Match Grade Pro Shop Series arrows, crafted in the USA using the exclusive Acu-Carbon process, offer bowhunters premium precision with features including five-point straightness checks, advanced components, and helical fletching. The lineup includes the Easton 5.0, FMJ, AXIS, SONIC 6.0, and Easton 6.5 models.

- BIRDING -

The Arizona Game and Fish Department is hosting its 23rd annual High Country Hummingbird Festival on July 25 at the Sipe White Mountain Wildlife Area near Springerville/Eagar. The free, family-friendly event runs from 8 a.m. to noon and features hummingbird feeders, photography opportunities, bird displays, children's activities, and informational talks.

- BOATING -

The Wildlife and Freshwater Fisheries Division will temporarily close Waterfront Public Boat Ramp on Lake Guntersville in Grant, Alabama starting July 13, 2026 for major upgrades including parking expansion, a new four-lane launching slab, and floating access pier. The facility is expected to remain closed for several months.

- COURTS -

Knife Rights filed Notices of Supplemental Authority in three federal lawsuits challenging California's switchblade ban, Minnesota's switchblade ban, and the Federal Switchblade Act. Recent Supreme Court decisions in United States v. Hemani and Wolford v. Lopez, along with the Fifth Circuit's ruling in United States v. Comeaux, support Knife Rights' position that knives are protected arms under the Second Amendment's plain text.

- EVENTS -

Montana Fish, Wildlife & Parks, the US Army Corps of Engineers, and Fort Peck Interpretive Center are hosting a bat walk on July 31 at 8:30 p.m. FWP biologist Nicole Hussey will present on bats' ecosystem importance, followed by a guided nature trail walk with bat-detecting devices.

- FISHING -

Striped bass season is underway across the country, offering anglers exciting action and nutritious meals. Hi Mountain Seasonings recommends combining their Gourmet Fish Seasoning and Pineapple Sriracha Bacon Seasoning to create restaurant-quality striped bass dishes, according to President and Owner Hans Hummel.

- GIVEAWAYS -

Bleecker Street Publications is hosting a 250th Anniversary Giveaway featuring two Smith & Wesson firearms: the Model 1854 Traditional Walnut Lever Action and the Model 19 Classic. CEO Charles Anderson states the promotion honors Smith & Wesson's 170-year legacy and American firearms heritage.

- GRANTS -

Pass It On – Outdoor Mentors received a $200,000 grant from the Richard King Mellon Foundation, the largest in the organization's 24-year history. The award will fund expansion of its mentoring program into Pennsylvania, connecting youth with volunteer mentors for hunting, fishing, and conservation experiences.

- HUNTING -

Applications for the 2026 Arkansas alligator hunting season are now available through www.agfc.com until July 31. The Arkansas Game and Fish Commission is offering permits across nine public hunting locations in three management zones, with seasons scheduled for September 18-21 and September 25-28. Private land hunters can also purchase tags to hunt during the season.

The Vermont Fish and Wildlife Department reminds hunters that antlerless deer permit applications are due by July 22. Antlerless permits are available for 19 of Vermont's 21 Wildlife Management Units, with a lottery drawing scheduled for August 19. Permit allocations are reduced this year due to new regulations taking effect this fall.

Montana Fish, Wildlife & Parks is offering hunter and bowhunter education in-person classes and field days for online students across central and eastern Montana this summer. Classes begin in July and August at locations including Lodge Pole, Sidney, Glasgow, and Great Falls, with all in-person courses offered free to students aged 10 and up.

- INDUSTRY UPDATE -

Insight Media Stream launched an educational initiative to help outdoor brands understand Return on Advertising Spend (ROAS) reporting and attribution methodology. The company, led by Director of Operations Susan Harkins and Director of Client Strategy Marc Morris, highlights how different attribution models can dramatically affect reported campaign performance and warns against inflated ROAS figures.

- INVASIVE SPECIES -

Utah Department of Natural Resources officers and technicians from multiple agencies inspected 9,847 boats and performed 386 decontaminations over the Fourth of July weekend to prevent quagga mussels and Eurasian watermilfoil from spreading. DNR officers cited violations including failure to complete the mussel-aware boater program course and improper drain plug removal.

- ORGANIZATIONS -

Women For Gun Rights Missouri is hosting a free full-day educational event on July 30 in Springfield featuring school safety expert Ed Monk. The event includes presentations on active shooter response and Missouri's School Protection Officer Program, with sessions designed for parents, educators, administrators, and law enforcement.

- PODCASTS -

The Houston Safari Club Foundation's Hunting Matters podcast featured Don Paullo and Chuck Johnson, leaders of the Spring Branch FFA Alumni Clay Crushers, discussing youth shooting sports, shotgun competition, and firearm safety. The episode explored how the Clay Crushers program develops the next generation of hunters and conservation-minded leaders through competitive clay target sports.

- PRODUCT NEWS -

Staccato 2011 announced the Staccato HD P4X, a mission-ready pistol featuring a steel frame, full-size grip, and 4-inch compensated barrel designed for professional deployment. The pistol offers 18-round magazine capacity and passes federal Ballistic Research Facility standards, with availability beginning July 13, 2026.

One Horse, an American firearms manufacturer based in Brownstown, Indiana, announced limited-time Cerakote editions of the One Horse Express Rifle in American and Woodland Camo patterns. The rifle features Atrius Development Group's Forced Reset Selector and is available beginning July 3, 2026, with an MSRP of $1299.99.

Galco has released the Masterbilt Thunderclap Belt Holster for 4" 1911s with rail, featuring premium full-grain leather, hand-molding, and a reinforced tunnel-style belt loop. The holster offers fast draw capability, easy one-handed reholstering, and is available in black or tan.

- PROMOTIONS -

Orchid announced the "FFL Compliance Countdown" summer program offering firearm retailers, distributors, and manufacturers up to 25% off software packages including Orchid Retail Suite, Orchid eState, and Orchid eBound ERP through July 31.

- PUBLISHING -

African Hunting Gazette, founded by Richard Lendrum, is a premier quarterly publication and monthly electronic magazine covering African hunting, conservation, and safari culture. The publication connects hunters with vetted outfitters and professional hunters while advocating for sustainable hunting and wildlife conservation across Africa.

- SHOWS -

Derya Arms will exhibit at Gun Owners of America's GOALS 2026 summit in Des Moines on August 1–2, featuring a new shotgun launch and the DY9Z TVM variant debut. The company will showcase its RAN and RANX lever-action rifles, full product lineup, and offer giveaways at booth #402.

- SPONSORSHIPS -

Mossberg will continue its partnership as a Whitetails Unlimited national sponsor, announced WTU President Jeff Schinkten. The North Haven, Connecticut-based firearms manufacturer, celebrating its 100th anniversary, remains committed to innovation and quality design at affordable prices.

- STATE AGENCIES -

The Michigan Department of Natural Resources is reconstructing the aging Net River Dam in Baraga County in collaboration with the Keweenaw Bay Indian Community, GEI Consultants, and MJO Contracting. Work began in late June and will be completed in fall, restoring water levels and improving wetland habitat in the 200-acre impoundment.

The North Dakota Game and Fish Department will administer a guide and outfitter written examination on August 15 at 1 p.m. in Bismarck. Preregistration is required by August 7 by calling 701-328-6604. Candidates must meet qualifications including background checks, CPR certification, and first aid training.

- TELEVISION -

Field & Stream TV demonstrates broadcast television's effectiveness for reaching outdoor consumers, delivering 7.8 million households during Q1 2026 with a .303 household rating. The network combines national broadcast distribution with FAST streaming and premium outdoor programming to provide advertisers scalable reach across hunters, anglers, and outdoor enthusiasts.

Sportsman Channel launches "Saturday Big Shots" programming block featuring hunting shows including Trijicon's World of Sports Afield with Dave Fulson, Hornady's Dark & Dangerous, MeatEater with Steven Rinella, and Winchester Deadly Passion with Melissa Bachman, airing Saturdays 8:00-11:30 p.m. ET.

Field & Stream TV offers outdoor brands unmatched reach through 150 million annual FAST impressions across Roku, Xumo, LG, and other platforms, plus 140+ broadcast TV stations covering 90+ million households. The platform delivers 24/7 hunting, fishing, and adventure programming with robust targeting capabilities and original series including Angling Adventures, Duck Camp Dinners, and Hunt Club.

This past Independence Day, the United States of America marked 250 years since patriots declared that liberty isn’t granted by government. It’s an unalienable right, endowed by our Creator. That anniversary is about more than fireworks, flags or patriotic songs. It’s a celebration of a nation born in defiance of tyranny and sustained by free citizens willing to defend what is theirs.

America’s firearm and ammunition industry belongs at the center of that story.

From the colonial gunsmiths who crafted the American long rifle to today’s advanced manufacturers producing the safest, most reliable firearms and ammunition in the world, this industry has helped secure, sustain and strengthen American freedom.

Two hundred and fifty years after the Declaration of Independence, America still builds, still innovates and still defends liberty. And America’s firearm and ammunition industry still helps make that possible.

New Rifle, New Nation, Enduring Freedom

Few early American firearms better capture the nation’s founding spirit than the Kentucky rifle, more accurately known as the American long rifle or Pennsylvania rifle.

It was a firearm born of necessity, ingenuity and frontier experience. Colonial gunsmiths, many of them German and Swiss immigrants working in Pennsylvania, adapted European rifling traditions to the demands of a new land. The result was a distinctly American firearm known for accuracy, efficiency and craftsmanship.

The long rifle was not the standard military firearm of the Revolutionary War. Smoothbore muskets remained the dominant arm of the period. But American riflemen brought something different to the patriot cause. They brought marksmanship, fieldcraft, endurance and the confidence of free men who knew how to provide for and protect themselves.

Captain Daniel Morgan’s riflemen proved that skill mattered. Drawn from Virginia and Pennsylvania lines, Captain Morgan’s rifle corps helped frustrate British forces during the Saratoga campaign and became part of the larger story of American citizens turning practical skill into battlefield advantage.

That’s the story of the early firearm industry in America, built by craftsmen solving real problems for free people. It reflected the self-reliance, inventiveness, discipline yearning for freedom that became the character of the new country.

The firearm and ammunition industry’s role in American freedom grew with the republic and remains indispensable today.

A constitutional right can’t survive as an abstraction. The Second Amendment has meaning because law-abiding Americans can still acquire firearms, ammunition, training and access to safe places to shoot. That requires manufacturers willing to build and ammunition makers willing to invest. It requires distributors, firearm retailers and ranges willing to serve lawful customers despite constant political hostility.

That’s the industry’s role in helping to preserve freedom.

Firearm and ammunition manufacturers do more than produce consumer goods. They sustain the infrastructure of a constitutional right. Without our industry, the right to keep and bear arms would be reduced to words on paper. Because of our industry, that right remains real in the hands of free citizens.

Built in America, Defending America

Today’s firearm and ammunition industry is one of America’s great manufacturing stories.

The work that began at colonial benches and early armories is now carried out in modern facilities across the country. Skilled American workers use advanced machining, metallurgy, ballistics testing, engineering, quality-control systems and sophisticated logistics to produce firearms and ammunition for hunters, recreational shooters, competitive marksmen, law enforcement, the military and millions of law-abiding citizens.

That is what “Made in America” looks like.

The industry supports nearly 383,000 jobs and generated more than $91 billion in total economic activity in 2024. Those are machinists, engineers, compliance specialists, ammunition technicians, toolmakers, logistics professionals, firearm retailers, range operators and small business owners in communities across the country. They are Americans building lawful products for Americans who choose to exercise their rights.

The latest production data the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives records also shows more than 32 million modern sporting rifles are in circulation since 1990 — more than the number of Ford F-150’s on the road. These commonly-owned semiautomatic rifles are used every day by law-abiding Americans for target shooting, hunting, competition and home defense. Their popularity reflects consumer choice, responsible innovation and the continued strength of Second Amendment traditions.

America’s firearm and ammunition industry also gives back in a way few industries can match. Through Pittman-Robertson excise taxes, firearm and ammunition manufacturers help fund wildlife conservation, habitat restoration, hunter education, public shooting ranges and outdoor access. In 2024 alone, firearm and ammunition excise taxes contributed more than $886 million for conservation. Since 1937, those contributions have totaled nearly $31 billion, when adjusted for inflation.

That is a uniquely American model of liberty joined with responsibility, commerce joined with stewardship and manufacturing joined with patriotism.

Red, White and Built to Last

As America celebrates its 250th birthday, the country should remember what made independence possible. It was not timid obedience or government dependence. It was the courage of free citizens who believed their rights were worth defending and the skill of craftsmen and manufacturers who helped make defense of those ideals possible.

The firearm and ammunition industry helped free a people from a tyrannical king. It continues today to equip law-abiding citizens, support national defense, power conservation and preserve one of the core freedoms that sets America apart.

This Independence Day, Americans should celebrate the Founders and the Declaration of Independence. They should celebrate the patriots who stood against the British crown. They should also celebrate the early gunsmiths who crafted the American long rifle and the riflemen who carried skill, grit and courage into the fight for independence. And they should celebrate today’s firearm and ammunition manufacturers, whose work keeps freedom not only remembered, but lived.

Two hundred and fifty years later, America is still free because Americans have always been willing to defend freedom. America’s firearm and ammunition industry has helped make that possible from the very beginning.

Jenn Jacques, Public Affairs Manager, National Shooting Sports Foundation

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