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THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 5, 2024

- BOATING -
With the recent introduction of YAK-EASE®, Connect-Ease® has extended their expertise into the realms of kayak angling with numerous new, problem-solving rigging and power distribution products for all anglers.
- ENFORCEMENT -
Utah Division of Wildlife Resources conservation officers are investigating the recent poaching of a pronghorn in Emery County and are seeking information from the public about the incident.
- EVENTS -
ANECHOIC and Breek Arms announced their participation in the Dragonman's 32nd FRONT RANGE FREEDOM SHOOT in Colorado Springs, CO. The event, scheduled for September 7-8, promises to be an exciting gathering of enthusiasts, manufacturers, and industry professionals.
KGM Suppressors announces its participation as an exhibitor at the National Tactical Officers Association (NTOA) 2024 Conference in Kansas City, MO. This trade show component will take place Sept 8-9 at the Kansas City Convention Center, with KGM being located at Booth 313.
- FISHERIES -
The Maryland Department of Natural Resources (DNR) recognizes Jian Feng Li of Silver Spring as the first state record holder for yellowedge grouper (Caulolatilus microps) in the Atlantic division. Li caught the 38.0-pound, 43-inch fish on August 27 while fishing in Poorman’s Canyon off Ocean City.

The Gulf of Mexico Fishery Management Council aims to gather input from a broad variety of stakeholders on cobia, king mackerel, and Spanish mackerel. The Council would like to hear your input through its online feedback tool and through a series of virtual Special Engagement Sessions. The input you provide will help inform future management of cobia, king mackerel, and Spanish mackerel.
- GEAR -
Latitude Outdoors expands its offerings with the introduction of its first mobile hunting-compatible pack, the new Ranger 22. Intuitively designed to keep the most on-the-go mobile hunters organized and mobile throughout every step of the hunt, this pack redefines versatility with its adaptable design, customizable storage options and ergonomic comfort.
FALCO® Holsters announces its extensive range of holsters and equipment tailored specifically for hunters and outdoor enthusiasts. Whether preparing for a rugged backcountry expedition, scouting new terrain, or heading out for a local hunting trip, FALCO has versatile options to meet every hunter's needs.
- GRANTS -
The Indiana DNR Division of Forestry has awarded $2 million in grants to 16 communities to support tree planting and maintenance, workforce development, education, and tree inventory projects.

Lilly Endowment Inc. announced the approval of a $50 million grant to the Indiana Department of Natural Resources (DNR) for a variety of enhancements at Indiana State Parks. DNR will use the grant to make several improvements within Prophetstown State Park and to fund upgrades across the state parks system that will improve the experience for Hoosiers who visit these treasured places.
- HUNTING -
The Vermont Fish and Wildlife Department announces that applications are available on its website for permits to hunt coyotes with dogs and that the deadline to apply is October 15, 2024.
For hunters planning to apply for 2025 hunt permit-tags for spring turkey, javelina, bison, and raptor capture, the Arizona Game and Fish Department (AZGFD) is offering the tips to make the process go smoothly.
The Maryland Department of Natural Resources has drawn the lottery for the 2024 Maryland Black Bear Hunt. A total of 950 lottery entrants were randomly selected and will receive a permit valid for the six-day bear hunting season open from October 21-26, 2024 in Allegany, Frederick, Garrett, and Washington counties.

Montana’s two-day, youth-only deer hunt is coming up Oct. 17 and 18, and general deer season opens Oct. 26. Now is a good time to consider signing up for the Apprentice Hunter Program and the application is available on Montana Fish, Wildlife & Parks’ website at fwp.mt.gov/hunt/education/apprentice-hunter.
Arkansas hunters will be able to hunt many private and public properties for deer earlier this year than anytime since the AGFC was established in 1915, thanks to a new buck-only archery season scheduled Sept. 7-9.
- INDUSTRY -
Sports South is the latest addition to the Kimber authorized distributor network. Throughout 2024 Kimber has actively increased its product distribution, brand visibility, and legacy Master Dealer support.
July was a record month for the leading online retailer, Guns.com, as thousands of gun owners chose Guns.com’s easy-to-use online system to sell their used firearms. The record number marks a 40% increase year over year, with nearly $1 million in accepted offers in July. This marks the most guns sold to Guns.com in one month since launching the program in 2018.

September marks TETRA Hearing’s 5th year of helping folks #HEARTHEHUNT and to say we are humbled beyond belief is an understatement. Our goal when launching TETRA HearingTM was to create a brand and community that helps bring the sounds we love to hear back into reality for those that have suffered hearing loss from years of abuse.
- NEW PRODUCTS -
TRUE’s BERM knife is a cleaver-style folder that punches far above its price point. With an MSRP of $29.99, the BERM features a full hollow grind 7Cr17Mov steel 2.5-inch blade that is treated with a black oxide finish, providing excellent corrosion resistance.
The HuntMaster line from Bear Creek Arsenal is expanding bringing the 7mm Remington Magnum. The HuntMaster line is the latest in Bear Creek Arsenal’s continuing effort to provide the largest selection of calibers and options in the AR platform at an affordable price.
CrossBreed Holsters announced the new Chest Rig Nomad, which solves the problem of carrying a handgun comfortably and with easy access while wearing a pack. The core of the Chest Rig Nomad is a handgun-model-specific rugged Kydex pocket fitted to CrossBreed’s premium soft and breathable leather backer.

- OPTICS -
The Primary Arms SLx 1-6x24mm SFP Rifle Scope with ACSS NOVA Reticle has been recognized as the Industry Choice Awards (ICA) 2024 Scope of the Year.
Vortex has unveiled the Viper HD 11-33x50. This compact spotting scope weighs in at just 27 oz. – less than a filled water bottle and taking up similar space.
- ORGANIZATIONS -
The Wild Sheep Foundation has released a new publication focused on keeping wild sheep populations healthy and thriving. Keeping Wild Sheep Healthy is a free educational brochure that delivers the science and presents various strategies for keeping wild sheep from contracting a deadly disease from animal-to-animal contact with domestic sheep, goats, and even infected wild sheep.
This fall, the Civilian Marksmanship Program is set to host another session of its fun and informative Junior Rifle Club – a weekly group that introduces firearm safety, marksmanship fundamentals, air rifle competition experience and life skills through fun instruction on the range.

In cooperation with the University of Missouri, MU Extension Service and the Missouri Department of Conservation (MDC), the Quail and Upland Wildlife Federation (QUWF) added two additional categories – “Invasive Species” and “Pasture Plants” – to its “Research and Reference” section of its web site, www.QUWF.net.
- PROMOTIONS -
Hydra Weaponry announce a special September sale on its renowned MARCK-15 Rifles and Pistols, as well as the Hydra Survival Package. This sale, running until Sept. 30, 2024.
- RETAIL -
TrueTimber announces the return and line expansion for Tekari at Walmart this fall. TrueTimber launched the Tekari line of hunting apparel and gear in Walmart in 2023 and is now returning in store and online with even more options for hunters nationwide.
- SPONSORSHIPS -
Hoyt, the world-renowned brand in archery and bowhunting, has renewed as a Whitetails Unlimited national sponsor, WTU President Jeff Schinkten has announced.

- STATE AGENCIES -
On Thursday, Sept. 5, the Miles City Fish, Wildlife & Parks office is hosting an evening event in honor of Bear Aware Month in September. Beginning at 5:30 p.m., wildlife biologist Emily Mitchell will give a talk on black bears in southeast Montana and how FWP monitors and manages them.
The Ohio Department of Natural Resources (ODNR) held a groundbreaking ceremony to mark the start of construction for a new visitor center for the Appalachian Hills Wildlife Area. The visitor center will serve as the gateway to the great outdoors, providing an education experience that celebrates southeast Ohio’s incredible wild spaces.
Montana Fish, Wildlife & Parks is seeking public comment on environmental assessments (EAs), conservation leases and other department projects. For more information, including how to submit comments, click on the links provided or visit fwp.mt.gov/public-notices.
- STATE PARKS -
Montana Fish, Wildlife & Parks is hosting events at Tower Rock and Giant Springs State Parks on Sept. 14, and First Peoples Buffalo Jump is transitioning into winter hours this month.
- TELEVISION -
Explore ways to hunt, butcher and cook all types of protein with Hardcore Carnivore, a new original series starring professional carnivore and chef Jess Pryles, premiering on Outdoor Channel on Monday, September 23 at 9:30 p.m. ET. Hardcore Carnivore is part of the network’s "Taste of the Wild" Monday night lineup.
Hunting season is heating up on Sportsman Channel during “Monday Night Hunts” every Monday beginning at 8 p.m. ET. Tune in for the best hunts featuring tried-and-true personalities, such as Jason Matzinger, Greg McHale, Steve Chappell, Nick Ventura, Tom Petry and many more.
Pursuit Media is pleased to highlight and pay tribute to one of its longest running and most successful programs, The American Way with Tony & Angie Walker. Since the very first days of Pursuit Channel’s existence, The American Way TV has been delivering a complete, high energy adventure ride, and a television home for all the working class, blue-collar outdoor junkies there.
- WILDLIFE -
September is Bear Aware month in Montana and as bear activity increases and archery hunters take the field, Gov. Greg Gianforte, Montana Fish, Wildlife & Parks, and several partner organizations, are highlighting the importance of being bear aware.
On Sept. 3, the Wyoming Game and Fish Department, through the Wyoming State Veterinary Laboratory, confirmed a case of anthrax in a dead moose in Carbon County. The Wyoming Livestock Board recently informed Game and Fish that cattle near Elk Mountain have tested positive for anthrax.
 

The first rule in medicine is simple: first, do no harm.

Unfortunately, that rule doesn’t translate in one important areas where do no harm would be helpful for everyone: government.

Politicians seem driven by an irresistible urge to do something.

It’s why we wind up with bridges to nowhere, white elephant VA hospitals that treat neither veterans nor elephants, and geriatric legislators whose mental acuity isn’t even at room temperature.

They won’t accept Burt Bachrach’s lyric that says: “knowing when to leave can be the smartest thing that anyone can learn.”

Like the drunken uncle at the holiday party, they just don’t know when to say when.

The U.S. isn’t the only country to be infected. Which is my point.

We are no longer cutting-edge (ouch) when it comes to protecting people from inanimate objects.

Germany has experienced a rapid rise in “knife crime.” In 2023, there were 13,844 knife crimes in Germany. Unfortunately, there’s another inconvenient truth the government is working assiduously to ignore: a large percentage of those “knife crimes” were committed by young Muslim men.

Conservatively, a million (or more) of them have come to Germany. Unfortunately, a number of them, including the young man who decided to slash the throats of people attending a “diversity festival” are also known ISIS terrorists. They bring their way of solving disagreements with them, too.

This is the point when the story goes from bad to worse.

Rather than cracking down on the criminal element and following through with promised mass deportations, the German government took another tack: they put yet another regulation on the tool of choice for slicing, dicing, filleting, and slashing: knives.

Right now, a knife with a blade up to 4.7 inches long is legal in Germany. Under new (improved) regulations, law-abiding citizens will only be able to carry blades up to 2.4 inches long.

The use of “law abiding” was intentional.

Criminals, by definition, don’t care about the laws.

It gets worse. They’re proposing “knife free zones” around railway stations and other areas where incidents seem to happen with alarming frequency. In May, an Afghan Muslim man attacked attendees at an “Anti-Jihad rally” at a train station. He injured several people, including a policeman who was trying to restrain the people being attacked. Yes, he was trying to protect the attacker from the victims who decided to fight back.

Germans are being told the fact that nearly one in five criminals since 2023 were committed by refugees is “not really helpful” when it comes to solving the problem of “knife crime”. The problem isn’t people, it’s knives. Thankfully SUVs didn’t get together with knives in the 1990s. It would have been West Side Story with leather seats.

So, the German intellectuals are relying on the shopworn, but proven, tactic used whenever one group wants to restrict, or eliminate something they don’t like: they objectify the tool.

They imbue it with the malevolent equivalent of Mrs. Potts, the talking tea kettle in Beauty & The Beast. Instead of wanting to serve tea, the nasty old knives want to harm innocents.

It’s not really that different from the steps to eliminating whole categories of people. First, vilify them. Then, dehumanize them. Viola! You’ve arrived at step three: the “final solution.”

Glad I’m not in Germany or the UK.

There, I could face prosecution for hate speech. In the UK, I would likely be jailed until the courts could find time to hear my case. In the UK, speaking out about criminals who happen to be refugees brings a visit from the local constabulary. The same constabulary that books, then releases, the refugee who just finished posting his latest ISIS recruiting video.

Doug Ritter at Knife Rights sent me a Gatestone research report outlining all this foolishness. What I first believed was a well written but not well-received joke, turned out to be the opposite of a joke.

If we ignore what’s happening in Europe, Ritter pointed out, we’re ignoring the fact that our system is progressively moving along the same track.

I know, it’s just another piece of evidence that politicians, social justice warriors and other well-meaning dunderheads are running the asylum.

It’s enough to make sane people consider crazy things, isn’t it? It may be too late, but I’ve always heard there were consequences when you confuse civility with weakness.

We’ll keep you posted.

— Jim Shepherd

 
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