Fitting inside an altoids tin, this kit is easy to keep on hand at all times. This is ideal for anyone who wants to have the essential ...
Founded in 1887 by Theodore Roosevelt, the Boone and Crockett Club can boast a list of hugely significant accomplishments, among them; the protection of Yellowstone, Glacier, and Denali National Parks; the foundation of the National Forest Service, National Park Service, and National Wildlife Refuge System; the passing of the Pittman-Robertson and Lacey Acts; and the establishment of the Federal Duck Stamp Program. It's a long list, and it gets even longer when you consider that each trophy the club records is another validation of the system it helped build, a sign that America's wildlife conservation efforts continue to be a resounding success because of the sportsman's support. The 40 magnificent animals shown in this gallery are proof of this. So browse through the photos, plan your next dream trip, and know that each hunt you take strengthens the foundation of hunting's future.
Don't miss part I of our hunting cover collection, Hunting Covers: 1899-1928 Introduction by David E. Petzal Roughly 25,000 years ago, in a series of deep caves in Spain and France, a number of forever nameless Cro-Magnon geniuses gave us our first works of art. Working by lamplight in otherwise total darkness, they produced images so breathtaking that for many years after their discovery in the late 19th and early 20th centuries, many paleontologists thought they were modern fakes. And what was the first thing that man chose to depict at the very dawn of civilization? It was hunting. Wild bulls, bears, reindeer, and all the other creatures upon which early man depended were rendered in colors that are still vibrant today. The question is, why? What compelled them to do this? One theory holds that the paintings were a form of magic. The Cro-Magnons might have believed that if you could capture an animal's image, you could control the actual animal and thereby make your struggle for survival a little less desperate. We no longer live in caves, but the need to hunt is still hardwired into us, and it is from this ancient urge that the covers you see here derive their visceral power. Is there anyone reading this who has not looked at a monster-buck cover and imagined himself putting the crosshairs on that animal? Or looked at a snarling grizzly cover and not felt the hair on his neck rise just a little? What was magic to the Cro-Magnons is still magic to us.
Roughly 25,000 years ago, in a series of deep caves in Spain and France, a number of forever nameless Cro-Magnon geniuses gave us our first works of art. Working by lamplight in otherwise total darkness, they produced images so breathtaking that for many years after their discovery in the late 19th and early 20th centuries, many paleontologists thought they were modern fakes. And what was the first thing that man chose to depict at the very dawn of civilization? It was hunting. Wild bulls, bears, reindeer, and all the other creatures upon which early man depended were rendered in colors that are still vibrant today. The question is, why? What compelled them to do this? One theory holds that the paintings were a form of magic. The Cro-Magnons might have believed that if you could capture an animal's image, you could control the actual animal and thereby make your struggle for survival a little less desperate. We no longer live in caves, but the need to hunt is still hardwired into us, and it is from this ancient urge that the covers you see here derive their visceral power. Is there anyone reading this who has not looked at a monster-buck cover and imagined himself putting the crosshairs on that animal? Or looked at a snarling grizzly cover and not felt the hair on his neck rise just a little? What was magic to the Cro-Magnons is still magic to us.
There are lots of ways to catch walleyes that don't involve nasty rapids and remote country. But they're not nearly as much fun. WITH BONUS PHOTO GALLERY FROM DUSAN SMETANA
Field editor Phil Bourjaily tests eight new slate calls to see which can really talk turkey
More Tip Galleries: Week of May 15 (15 tips) Week of May 8 (15 tips) Week of May 1 (15 tips)
More Tip Galleries: Week of May 15 (15 tips) Week of May 8 (15 tips) Week of May 1 (15 tips)