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FRIDAY, JUNE 14, 2024

- TOP STORY -
TopStory 61424 Pistol Brace Rule.jpg

The federal court for Northern District of Texas has issued a ruling that vacates, at least for the time being, the ATF’s rule outlawing pistol braces. In his ruling, Federal Judge Reed O’Connor explained his reasoning for the Judgement:

“the Final Rule violated the Administrative Procedures Act’s procedural requirements because it was arbitrary and capricious and was not a logical outgrowth of the Proposed Rules.

O’Connor also denied the Defendants’ Cross Motion for Summary Judgement in Vacating the Final Rule and denied all subsequent claims as “moot.”

Mock v. Garland, was brought by the Firearms Policy Coalition, two individual FPC members, and Maxim Defense.

Definitely a “win” against the ATF and its spate of rulings against lawful gun owners, this is likely not the end of the matter. An ATF appeal of Judge O’Connor’s ruling will putting it back into the courts. But we’ll keep you posted.

- APPAREL -
Pnuma Outdoors is excited to announce the launch of the new CAZA OV camo pattern and a full new line up of technical hunting apparel designed to be versatile in all environments at the best value on the market.
- BIRDING -
Two female and one male peregrine falcon chicks from the nest box near the top of the Nebraska Capitol building in Lincoln were banded and given a checkup June 12. The banding also marks the start of the Name the Chicks contest.
- CHRONIC WASTING DISEASE -
The Pennsylvania Game Commission announced the expansion of several Chronic Wasting Disease Management Areas (DMAs) due to new detections of the disease.
- COMPETITION -
Bushnell® congratulates pro shooters KC Eusebio and Jessie Harrison for winning their divisions at the 2024 World Speed Shooting Championship. Eusebio earned his 11th World Speed Shooting overall title using the new Bushnell RXM-300 Reflex Sight while Harrison captured her 17th Ladies Open World Speed shooting title.

- EVENTS -
Anglers who may have missed out or didn’t get enough of Free Fishing Weekend last week will have an opportunity Saturday, June 15, to help celebrate a fledgling pond in Central Arkansas and enjoy catching some stocked catfish that are ready for the dining table.
GRITR Range announces two upcoming rifle proficiency classes scheduled for June 2024. These courses are designed for modern sporting rifle owners seeking to enhance their handling skills through structured training sessions led by experienced instructors.
SIG SAUER will be exhibiting at the upcoming Eurosatory Exhibition, scheduled for June 17, 2024 – June 21, 2024, at the Paris-Nord Villepinte Exhibition Centre in Paris, France. The SIG SAUER Stand is #E25 located in Hall 6.
- FISHERIES -
Montana Fish, Wildlife & Parks is asking anglers to report any northern pike caught or observed in the Bull River in Sanders County following the first confirmed detection of the predacious non-native fish.

- FISHING -
Fishing Tom Guide Service, Southwest Louisiana’s premier fishing guide service, announces the launch of its Offshore Red Snapper fishing trips. Available from now until August 28, 2024, these 8-hour trips are perfect for up to six people and are priced at $2,000.
- GEAR -
DeSantis introduces the #N87 Pro Stealth holster made for the SIG-Sauer P365-XMACRO and Springfield Hellcat Pro pistols. Made of heavily padded 1050D black senior Ballistic nylon and lined with slick pack cloth, this holster comes with a 1 3/4" sturdy, powder coated black spring clip.
- INDUSTRY -
AG Composites announced the launch of their exciting new contest, "Name that Camo." From June 17-30, customers will have the opportunity to name the latest camo pattern in the AG Composite lineup. The lucky winner will receive a non-adjustable fiberglass rifle stock, while runners-up will receive fantastic swag bags filled with hats, t-shirts, and stickers.
NSSF tracks and reports monthly U.S. export units for several sporting arms, ammunition, and optics categories from the US International Trade Commission. Here are the results for March 2024 compared to March 2023.

NSSF® tracks and reports monthly U.S. import units for several sporting arms, ammunition, and optics categories from the US International Trade Commission.Here are the results for March 2024 compared to March 2023.
AMMO, Inc. (Nasdaq: POWW, POWWP), the owner of GunBroker.com, the largest online marketplace serving the firearms and shooting sports industries, and a leading vertically integrated producer of high-performance ammunition and components, reported results for its Fourth Quarter and Fiscal Year 2024, ended March 31, 2024.
Burris Optics announced the appointment of Bruno Beccaria to the position of General Manager. Beccaria has a long and successful leadership and marketing background in the firearms industry through his work with Beretta Holding S.A.
- NEW PRODUCTS -
SK Customs® presents “Athena,” the fourth creation in the Gods of Olympus engraver series. This production of 200 custom model Smith & Wesson Full Size 1911 pistols chambered in 45 ACP embodies SK Customs’ talent in producing one-of-a-kind engraved firearms.

B5 Systems announced the release of the M-LOK Vertical Foregrip. It is precision engineered and designed to enhance ergonomics and handling for tactical, sporting, and recreational shooters.
Ball and Buck proudly announces the limited edition Abel Fly Reel and Scott Centric fly rod collaborations. The Abel X Ball and Buck Special Edition Rove Deep Green and Rove Slate Grey Fly Reel, is crafted for the extreme angler and boasts a caged frame, and large quick-change arbor spool, with aerospace-grade durability to withstand the toughest battles.
Savage Arms® announces its collaboration with Inside Outdoors TV (IOTV). The latest IOTV podcast episode covers the launch of Savage’s newest rifle– the 110 Trail Hunter Lite. Demonstrating the rifle's exceptional performance, the IOTV crew successfully harvested three axis deer with the rifle during an exciting hunt in Texas.
- ORGANIZATIONS -
DSC is excited to announce the hiring of Scott Fowler to the position of Convention Services Coordinator. Scott interned with DSC during the 2024 DSC Convention & Sporting Expo, gaining valuable experience while providing tremendous assistance to the DSC staff, volunteers and attendees.

- PARTNERSHIPS -
Arcus Hunting’s category-leading brands Tink’s® and Dead Down Wind™ announce their continued partnership with Live the Wild Life TV, hosted by renowned hunter and adventurer Gus Congemi. The series is viewable on Pursuit Channel and The Sportsman Channel.
Kryptek and Formalito, a premier distributor of outdoor sporting products in South Africa, are excited to announce a new strategic partnership. This collaboration aims to bring Kryptek’s cutting-edge apparel and gear to the African market, enhancing the outdoor experience for enthusiasts across the continent.
- PRODUCT NEWS -
The secret to Big & J’s Headrush lies in its irresistible aroma, capable of enticing deer from long distances. By strategically placing Headrush minerals across their hunting grounds, hunters can draw deer from their usual territories, including neighboring properties, and guide them closer to preferred hunting areas.
- RANGES -
Formerly known as the Clemmons Creek Shooting and Archery Range, the Washington County, Iowa, practice facility was recently renamed to honor longtime NWTF volunteer and former Iowa NWTF State Chapter president Don Pfeiffer.

- STATE AGENCIES -
The Nebraska Game and Parks Commission will consider recommendations for a 2025 mountain lion hunting season at its June 21 meeting in Ogallala. The meeting begins at 8 a.m. Mountain time at the Petrified Wood Gallery, 418 E. 1st St.
The Florida Fish and Wildlife Conservation Commission (FWC) applauds Governor Ron DeSantis for his steadfast commitment to supporting and bolstering the mission of safeguarding Florida's natural resources in the 2024-2025 Focus on Florida's Future Budget.
- TELEVISION -
Available to stream live on MLFNOW!® on MyOutdoorTV, Stop Five Presented by 7 Brew on Lake Champlain in the Major League Fishing Tackle Warehouse Invitationals in New York.
- WILDLIFE -
The 2024 winter wolf population survey estimate from the Michigan DNR found a minimum of 762 wolves in Michigan’s Upper Peninsula. This year’s estimate showed an increase of 131 animals compared to the 2022 estimate of 631; however, the results demonstrate a continued trend of statistical stability in Michigan’s wolf population.

The number of breeding ducks that settled in North Dakota this spring declined 15%, according to the annual spring breeding waterfowl survey conducted by the North Dakota Game and Fish Department. The state’s wetland count also dropped from the prior two very wet years, ranking as the 32nd wettest since 1948.
The North Dakota Game and Fish Department’s 77th annual spring breeding duck survey conducted in May showed an index of about 2.9 million birds, down from 3.4 million last year. The 2024 breeding duck index was the 30th highest on record and stands at 17% above the long-term (1948-2023) average.
 

The inaugural class of the Alabama Turkey Hunters Hall of Fame was inducted last weekend during the World Championship Turkey Calling competition at the Mobile Convention Center, and the inductees should come as no surprise to those who call themselves a turkey hunter.

Of the six inductees, only two are still living, Eddie Salter of Evergreen and 97-year-old Colonel Tom Kelly of Spanish Fort who now lives in Virginia and couldn’t travel to the ceremony. Those honored posthumously were Lynn Dent Boykin of Mobile, Fred T. Stimpson of Mobile, Ben Rodgers Lee of Coffeeville and Billy Macoy of Lineville.

Salter, known as “Turkey Man,” has won numerous calling contests, including the World Championship twice, and more awards than you can count as well as hosting a popular TV series.

Eddie Salter of Evergreen, known as "Turkey Man," was among the first class inducted into the Alabama Turkey Hunters Hall of Fame. Photo: David Rainer

“Anything to do with turkeys, I’m always excited to be a part of,” Salter said. “This is something special for Alabama turkey hunters. I know it’s special to me. Hopefully, down the road we can grow it into a lot of different things. They’re talking about possibly having a museum one day. I’m excited to be a part of it.

“It all started as me being an old barber and talking turkey hunting and ended up with the title ‘Turkey Man.’ It’s about being a part of something you love so much. Hopefully we can get it kicked off and get these people who deserve to be in it inducted. It’s not how good you can call. It’s being stewards of the land and caretakers of the turkeys and passing along the tradition where we can have turkeys for these younger generations.”

Kelly is known as the poet laureate of the turkey hunting world with his seminal “Tenth Legion” book considered an annual read for diehard turkey hunters. Kelly was a forester by trade and a turkey hunter by passion. He has authored more than 20 books, most centered around the many aspects of chasing wily turkeys.

Tom Kelly, known as the poet laureate of the turkey world, was an easy choice for induction. Photo: David Rainer

I interviewed Kelly several years ago, and he still marveled at the behavior of wild turkeys.

“After 70 years, a turkey will still do things to me that I wonder how in the (heck) did he do it,” Kelly said. “I honestly think that a third of the turkeys we kill are walk-ups. We call to a turkey, and he gobbles and gobbles, and then a turkey comes up from another side. You wonder how he got around there, but I think it’s a different turkey. I think there is way more of that than we think.

“I think where the fascination lies is that every time you go something happens a little bit differently – every time. And they’ve got a genius for making you look stupid.”

Lynn Dent Boykin was the first female to become the president of the National Wild Turkey Federation (NWTF) and served as chair of the NWTF’s National Board of Directors.

“I think it’s a high honor,” said Starr Boykin, one of Lynn’s four children. “I think she’s smiling from up above. When she was with the National Wild Turkey Federation 23 years ago, I think she was one of the first ones to think about the hunting heritage. She was one of the pioneers of the hunting heritage movement. She wanted to continue hunting and conservation for future generations.

“She transported turkeys with (NWTF’s) James Earl (Kennamer) and Rob Keck all over the United States to encourage the growth of turkey populations so people could enjoy them.”

When Doug Max of Uriah, Alabama, pursued the idea of the Alabama Turkey Hunters Hall of Fame, he discovered that the City of Linden, Alabama, had the rights to that entity but had never pursued the creation of the hall. Max received permission to use the name from Linden, and the result culminated in the first inductions last weekend.

“The tradition of turkey hunting in Alabama cannot be overstated and turkey hunters all over the United States totally understand this,” Max said. “It’s basically where the modern sport of turkey hunting has its beginning. These people chosen for induction and many of the future inductees are largely responsible for this, and we are going to give them their long overdue recognition.”

At the ceremony, Max said many of the inductees are known for their calling and hunting skills, some for their conservation work, but Fred T. Stimpson did it all. Stimpson was famous for his turkey hunting skills and was renowned for his conservation work through land procurement and wildlife management. Named in his honor, the Fred T. Stimpson Special Opportunity Area (SOA) is a 5,400-acre tract in Clarke County that transitioned from youth hunts and limited adult archery deer hunts to SOA status.

“He won the first World Championship Turkey Call Contest in 1940 right across the street at the Battle House,” said grandson Fred T. Stimpson III. “They did the calling contest to bring focus to conserving turkeys. He was president of the Alabama Wildlife Federation and served on the Alabama Conservation Advisory Board for years.

“He spent the first part of his life trying to make money. During the Depression, he hunted a lot and realized they needed to save the wild turkey, so he spent the rest of his life in conservation efforts to conserve and propagate wild turkeys. His favorite thing to do was putting tracts of land together that would be used for taking care of the turkeys and other conservation efforts. That was his hobby. And we’re carrying on the tradition. My uncles and dad have been on the Conservation Advisory Board, and we’ve all been active in the Alabama Wildlife Federation. We’ve continued the legacy of conservation in Alabama.”

Billy Macoy grew up turkey hunting in the rugged terrain around Talladega National Forest and Cheaha Mountain, and his guiding skills were legendary with numerous celebrities at his side. Macoy guided at Southern Sportsman’s Hunting Lodge in Lowndes County, Alabama, for owner Jim Mason from 1982 until Macoy’s passing in 2005. Macoy won the NWTF’s Grand National Calling Championship in 1989.

“Billy was a real good man who did a lot for turkey hunting,” Mason said. “Billy was probably the most generous person I ever met. He’d give you the shirt off his back. Billy was really good at figuring out a turkey and the best way to call that turkey. He and Paul Butski (also a guide at Southern Sportsman’s and Grand National champion) were the same. They knew the turkey and what he was doing. Those were the two best callers I ever hunted with.

“I remember hunting a turkey with Billy one day, and the turkey was supposed to come right up the road. Well, he didn’t come up the road. We looked up and he was pushing through the honeysuckles. He had honeysuckle vines all around his neck. We didn’t even shoot him. If he wanted to get there so bad that he would crawl through those honeysuckles, we weren’t going to shoot.”

Ben Rodgers Lee is remembered as the person who brought turkey hunting to the outdoors mainstream through his videos, seminars, media and publications. Lee’s magnetic personality and his ability to relate to turkey hunters led to his legendary status in the turkey hunting world.

My hunting buddy, two-time World Championship winner Larry Norton of Myrtlewood, Alabama, was a protégé of Lee’s and said Lee taught him more about hunting turkeys than anyone.

“He taught me the turkeys didn’t care if I was a world champion,” Norton said. “It what’s you say and when you say it. You’ve got to learn the turkey language. Clucking and purring mean feeding. Aggressive clucking and purring mean they’ve seen something that they don’t know what it is. He taught me that you’ve got to know what to say and when to say it.”

Speaking of the World Championship Turkey Calling Contest, an event that Kenny Weiss brought back to Mobile five years ago, the competition was tight with many contests decided by a half a point.

In the Senior Open division, Wayne Dozier from Dickinson, Alabama, took top honors, followed by Jared Lowe of Gadsden, Alabama, and Matthew Presley of Front Royal, Virginia.

Jason Conrad of Union, Mississippi, prevailed in the Friction Calling competition. The Owl Hooting champion was Brandon Rick of Pfafftown, North Carolina. Mitchell Johnson of Purlear, North Carolina, won the Gobbling competition, while Dozier and Lowe took home the Team Challenge title. Hudson McGarity of Dahlonega, Georgia, was the Amateur champ.

– David Rainer, Alabama Department of Conservation and Natural Resources

 
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