Please Sign In

Please enter a valid username and password
  • Log in with Facebook
» Not a member? Take a moment to register
» Forgot Username or Password

Why Register?
Signing up could earn you gear (click here to learn how)! It also keeps offensive content off our site.

Recent Comments

Categories

Recent Posts

Archives

  • May 17, 2012

    The Total Outdoorsman: Hunt Better, Fish Smarter, Master the Wild

    by T. Edward Nickens

    A little bit here and a little bit there. You keep your eyes open. That’s how you learn. You pick up a new knot from a new fishing buddy, or try a decoy trick you saw in a magazine. You make mistakes. And if you’re lucky, like I was, there will be a mentor along the way. An unselfish someone who cares enough about you that he wants you to know everything he’s ever learned.

    That’s the good thing about hunting and fishing and camping: You can never know it all, and you’re never as good as you could be.

    Over the years, I’ve learned from the best—mentors, buddies, guides, story subjects, and some of the most dedicated outdoor-skills competitors this world has ever seen. Put them together, and they’ve got a half dozen different ways to shoot a double or cast a fly rod. Here’s the best of what I’ve learned from them, and on my own, in 35 years of hunting and fishing. And this is what all sportsmen should do with such knowledge: Pass it on.

  • April 19, 2011

    A Bug Spray You Can Drink? CDC Promotes Grapefruit Extract "Nootkatone"

    By Chad Love

    This must be a good year for insect repellant research. First it was a new type of pre-treated clothing. Now researchers at the Centers For Disease Control say they're working on a new all-natural insect repellant made from a citrus extract.From this story on NPR.
    "...the CDC is pushing hard to develop a completely natural insect repellent made from a chemical called nootkatone, which is found in Alaska yellow cedar trees and citrus fruit. (CDC researcher Marc Dolan) says nootkatone "is nongreasy, dries very quickly, and it has a very pleasant, citrus-y grapefruit odor to it." He recently demonstrated its effectiveness as a mosquito repellent, rubbing some on his hand and then sticking it into a cage containing 50 hungry mosquitoes. When he holds the treated hand near mosquitoes, they try to get away in the opposite direction as fast as they can. Even after five minutes, Dolan has no bites on his nootkatone-treated hand.

  • May 5, 2010

    DEET Resistant Mosquitoes Bred in Captivity

    By Chad Love

    A half-century after its discovery, DEET is still the unquestioned king of mosquito repellants. But researchers have discovered that under the right circumstances the mosquitoes can fight back...
     
    From this story on Wired.com

  • October 12, 2009

    11-Year-Old Boy Dies In Georgia Youth-Hunt Accident

    From the Dawson News & Advertiser:

    An 11-year-old Dawsonville boy who was shot in the head when his gun accidentally discharged in the Dawson Forest Wildlife Management Area on Friday has died.



    John Wayne Corcoran was transported by air to Children’s Healthcare of Atlanta at Scottish Rite following the incident, which occurred just before 6 p.m. He died at the hospital later that night.



  • October 6, 2009

    Illinois Hunter Killed By Friend In Bowhunting Accident

    From the Evansville Courier & Press:

    Aaron J. Long, 20, was pronounced dead at the scene shortly after 7 p.m. Thursday night. According to Wayne County Sheriff Jim Hinkle, Long had been hunting near the Sam Dale Lake State Park with several friends Thursday evening when he decided to come down from his deer stand earlier than expected.

  • August 11, 2009

    Bears Kill Colorado Woman Who Fed Them

    From The New York Times:

    A 74-year-old woman who was known for leaving food outside her home for bears -- despite several warnings that it was illegal and dangerous to do so -- was killed by one of the animals, an autopsy confirmed.

    Donna Munson's body had been partially eaten by a bear or bears when it was found outside her home in Ouray County, in southwestern Colorado, on Friday. . . .

     

  • July 30, 2009

    Experts Say: Little Correlation Between Deer And Lyme Disease

    By Dave Hurteau

    From The New York Times:
    When deer are scarce, ticks don’t necessarily become scarce, because they have alternative hosts. Indeed, several recent studies. . . in New York and New Jersey found no correlation between deer and ticks.

    Second, ticks and Lyme disease are rare or absent in parts of the United States (the Southeast, most of the Midwest) where deer are abundant.

  • July 22, 2009

    Wyoming Man Kills Attacking Grizzly, Suffers Serious Injuries

    From the Cody Enterprise:

    A Clark man is in the hospital with extensive injuries to his face after encountering a grizzly bear sow with three cubs Sunday afternoon.



    The man fired three shots at the bear with a .41 caliber revolver, killing the bear.


    Game & Fish has the three cubs, which are about a year old.

     

  • July 20, 2009

    Discussion Topic: Your Fingers Or Your Dog?

    By Dave Hurteau

    How much do your love dog? Would you trade two fingers for Fido? Maybe it depends on which fingers. Maybe it depends on the dog. Over the weekend, 65-year-old Floridian David Grounds traded his right index and ring fingers for his wheaten terrier, Mandy, when he stuffed is hand into a 7-foot alligator’s mouth to save the pooch.

  • May 27, 2009

    Chad Love: Locked & Loaded in Parkland

    There's already been a  boatload of bloviation expressed on the recent reversal of the ban on loaded firearms in our national parks, some of it sensible but most of it (predictably) bordering on  hysterics.

    This column from the Huffington Post is a perfect example:
     
    "In fact,  the new rule is likely to make national park visitors less safe around  wildlife. Packing heat could give some people a false sense of security and  make them more likely to approach bison, elk, moose, and grizzly bears,  rather than keep a safe distance which is better for both people and  animals."

    But the most certain outcome of this congressional action is  that it will promote poaching. The National Park Service warned in its fiscal 2006 budget submission each year for the past several years ... The data  suggests that there is a significant domestic as well as international trade  for illegally taken plant and animal parts." Poaching, the agency said, "is suspected to be a factor in the decline of at least 29 species of wildlife  and could cause the extirpation of 19 species from the parks." 

Page 1 of 212next ›last »