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FRIDAY, DECEMBER 6, 2024

- AWARDS -
"No Lowballers," presented by GunBroker.com, a history-adjacent podcast that delves deep into the back stories of the shooting and firearms industry, has officially been nominated for the 2024 Gundie Awards in the Best Podcast category.
- BIRDING -
Seeing a snowy owl is a stunning and memorable experience. Before you go looking for these birds, learn why they visit Massachusetts, where you may see them, and how to view them safely.
- CONTESTS -
Wildlife Forever, wants your carp fish pictures. Along with Yamaha RighwatersTM, the two conservation partners are launching “Catch, Kiss, & Cook!” national social media photo contest. It’s a new innovative campaign to fight against invasive carp that are a detriment to sportfishing in our lakes and rivers. This fun campaign is part of Wildlife Forever’s Citizen Carp Control program.
Attention teachers, homeschoolers, and parents: Help the child or students in your life unleash their creativity and make connections with the natural world by participating in the Massachusetts Junior Duck Stamp (JDS) art contest.
- COURTS -
The Second Amendment Foundation has filed an important amicus brief with the U.S. Supreme Court supporting the firearms industry in its defense of the Protection of Lawful Commerce in Arms Act (PLCAA), which is being attacked through a lawsuit against gun manufacturers by the Mexican government.

NSSF® filed an amicus brief in support of Smith & Wesson, Inc., with the U.S. Supreme Court in Smith & Wesson Brands, Inc., et al., v. Estados Unidos Mexicanos. Smith & Wesson, Inc., and other industry members, petitioned the Court to reverse the U.S. Court of Appeals for the First Circuit’s decision to allow the frivolous lawsuit to proceed.
The Second Amendment Foundation has filed an amicus brief with the Washington State Supreme Court in a case challenging the state’s ban on so-called “large-capacity” magazines and its legal action against Gator’s Guns, a Washington state firearms retailer. The case is known as State of Washington v. Gator’s Custom Guns, Inc.
- FISHERIES -
Blue Ribbon Fisheries are waterbodies that provide some of Utah’s most exceptional, high-quality fishing experiences, and Scofield Reservoir was recently reclassified with this elite designation.
- FISHING -
Are you searching for the perfect gift for the angler in your life? Look no further than Fishing Tom Guide Service. With over 20 years of experience and a reputation built on successful fishing trips, Captain Tom Adams and his skilled crew are ready to take your loved ones on an unforgettable fishing adventure.

- FORESTRY -
The Indiana public is invited to cut up and remove certain downed trees at McCormick’s Creek State Park for firewood. Trees eligible for firewood have fallen as a result of natural causes or have been dropped by property staff.
- HUNTING -
The 2024 Michigan muzzleloader deer-hunting season begins Friday and ends at the close of shooting hours on Sunday, Dec. 15. When heading out to enjoy your season, remember that legal equipment and other regulations vary based on where you are hunting.
December is the last month to get your hands on Pure Michigan Hunt applications before the January drawing.
Steve Pennaz has spent virtually his entire life in the woods. An avid hunter and sportsman, he recently relocated from Minnesota to southwest Montana; rather than sit-and-wait hunts for whitetails, he’s now pursuing a variety of game including elk at elevations of up to 9,000 feet or more.

- INDUSTRY UPDATE -
Lyman Products is pleased to welcome Tom Ricks as the Director of Sales & Marketing for Lyman and all of the Lyman family of brands.
- PROMOTIONS -
Through December 2024, Luth-AR is offering a fantastic deal: purchase any MBA Buttstock or MBA Buttstock Kit and receive your choice of a FREE Chubby Grip® or Wing Grip™. The MBA Buttstock family is the original Modular Buttstock Assembly for the AR-15 platform, designed for maximum customization to suit your shooting style.
- STATE AGENCIES -
The Arkansas Game and Fish Commission is asking waterfowl hunters and wildlife watchers heading to the field to keep an eye out for any sick or dead birds they find in the wild that may be the result of avian influenza.
The two missing elderly men who went missing Tuesday morning were found alive deep in the Maine woods off the Stud Mill Road, after a couple who lived in the area heard shouts for help.

A commercial poultry flock in Adair County was confirmed by the Oklahoma Department of Agriculture, Food and Forestry (ODAFF) and the USDA Animal and Plant Health Inspection Service (APHIS) to have been infected with highly pathogenic avian influenza (HPAI). ODAFF and APHIS are responding according to their Avian Influenza Response Plan.
- STATE PARKS -
Montana’s Tongue River Reservoir State Park has three new cabins available for rent year-round beginning this month. The cabins are situated along the southeast shore of the reservoir on the Anglers Rest loop with a view of the water. The Monument Cabin is handicap accessible.
- TELEVISION -
MyOutdoorTV (MOTV) is streaming now the “Birds and Dogs Channel” presented by Wild Upland. This scheduled channel brings the excitement of the great outdoors to viewers’ screens all day, every day.

 

I’m not going to beat around the bush. Here’s what I’d like to see from a renewed NRA Competitions Division.

First, and foremost, the NRA needs to utilize competitions to activate more of its members. As NRA Past President John Sigler noted in his open letter the “NRA competitive shooters are the solid backbone of NRA and that it is the competitive shooting community that makes the rest of NRA happen.”

A renewed NRA Competitions Division needs to prioritize getting NRA members out to matches on a regular basis. More members shooting competition means a stronger membership base built on the foundation of the competition community.

It also means new members. The shooting sports are an obvious gateway to NRA membership. Once you get into shooting a local match you’re not competing but joining your friends in competition. And now you’re a joiner and joining those new friends as a member of the NRA is an obvious next step.

Second, by all means, put effort into the legacy competitions of Smallbore, High Power Rifle, and Precision Pistol, but don’t make these the be all, end all of the Division’s work. These are legacy matches and by legacy I mean they have an aging and dwindling shooter base.

There is also a financial and equipment barrier to entry that’s hard for new and younger shooters to meet. Growing these sports from older shooters isn’t a growth plan, it’s a maintenance plan to keep these off life support.

If the NRA can find a way to breath new life, i.e. bring in new, younger shooters, then great. But if not I wouldn’t go crazy putting too many budget eggs into this particular basket.

Third, while the NRA World Shooting Championship is cool and all, with just 213 competitors at the 2024 match it is a marquee event that I’m guessing is more for sponsors than NRA members.

By-the-way, the 213 competitors this year represent a whopping 0.0051% of the NRA’s membership (assuming 4.2M members).

To create value this match needs to grow. And I’m not talking 10 or 20 percent growth. I’m talking double the number of competitors. The goal should be to have 400 to 500 competing in 2025.

The problem with marquee events, though, is that they are complex and by their very nature self-limiting as to the number of competitors that can enter. So, again, not a solid growth strategy.

The marquee events need to at least generate marquee media coverage in local media markets around the country. It’s not much of a showcase of the greatest shooters if nobody sees the show.

As you can see, I’ve been thinking a bit too much about what a renewed NRA Competitions Division could mean since I wrote about the need for aggressive public relations from the Division. As the ‘NRA 2.0’ rebuilds its credibility, coffers, and, most importantly, staff morale, it needs to also rebuild its depleted Competitions Division.

It needs a new direction that doesn’t abandon the past but also doesn’t cling too desperately to that past. The glory days of NRA shooting events are far enough behind us that resurrecting them to their former glory is highly unlikely.

Competition shooting is not simply an individual sport. When you compete you take your place in a larger connected community of shooters. And it’s not just local clubs but a nationwide network of clubs. Competitive shooters are a vast but tight community with different disciplines but similar motivations.

This network of shooters, clubs, and competitions is vital to the NRA’s mission in promoting safety, recreational shooting, and Second Amendment advocacy. A message delivered at a local match can travel all across the country in a short time. A message that comes from NRA HQ on a vital issue is quickly amplified throughout towns all across America by the community of shooters.

The shooting community is a living, breathing grassroots machine and the NRA needs to nurture it with strong, passionate leadership – and the appropriate funding – of a robust Competitions Division.

If a newly stood up NRA Competitions Division, staffed with those passionate about growing the shooting sports and able to not get stuck in the past, can get thousands, tens of thousands, or even 100,000 NRA members out competing weekly or even monthly in a fun, engaging format the impact on the organization could be dramatic.

And its value to the industry, to gun owners, and to the preservation of our Second Amendment rights would be transformative.

– Paul Erhardt, Managing Editor, the Outdoor Wire Digital Network

 
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