American Shooting Journal - July 2022

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CONTENTS

VOLUME 11 • ISSUE 10

FEATURES

34

(FOX NATION)

COVER STORY

THE BATTLES THAT SHAPED AMERICA

Actor Kelsey Grammer made a career as the wisecracking Dr. Frasier Crane on Cheers and Frasier, but he’s also a military history buff. That passion is the driving force behind his new Fox Nation series, Kelsey Grammer’s Historic Battles for America. Our TV critic and fellow history student Chris Cocoles reviews season one’s big campaigns.

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MAKAYLA SCOTT’S FIELD OF DREAMS Makayla Scott of West Virginia got into the shotgun sports through a 4-H shooting program, and never looked back. She’s not only a Guinness World Record holder but a driving force behind the recent creation of both a clay target facility and a scholastic shooting club that uses the range. Larry Case shares the story of this veritable dynamo!

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LEGENDS OF THE SPRING Pursuing big black bears in the mountains as winter recedes is “one of the most underrated big game hunts someone can do.” So states Cassidy Caron, a Canadian outfitter who has hunted bruins since she was a girl and has lived tales of hair-raising springtime adventure on high.

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BULLET BULLETIN: GOING FROM GOOD TO GREAT Our professor of projectiles, Phil Massaro, likes what he sees in Hornady’s new CX expanding copper bullets, a step up from their GMX line and a solid choice for pursuing big game where lead-free ammo is required.

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ROADHUNTER: OF PREDATORS AND TRAIL CAMERAS Bucks and bulls aren’t the only critters you can scout with today’s game cameras. Scott Haugen shares how you can use them to draw a better bead on predators like bears and cougars.

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SELF-DEFENSE TRAINING: DEFINING REALISTIC SELF-DEFENSE PRACTICE There’s only one way to be ready for a violent encounter: to train for it in ways that are as realistic as possible. Paul Pawela details how his self-defense courses go the distance – real guns, fake blood, “drunk goggles” and all.

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CIVICS AND SHARPSHOOTING April 19 might seem like a random day of the year, but not at Project Appleseed, which teaches both marksmanship and history lessons as it aims to “reignite the spirit of the American Revolution.” We chatted with the program’s national coordinator, Rusty Bonkoski, on the meaning of that fateful day and to learn more about the project’s classes and courses being held around the country.

107 BLACK POWDER: CALL IT QUIGLEY LIGHT Mike Nesbitt makes an annual trek to southeast Montana to participate in the famed Matthew Quigley Buffalo Rifle Match, and this year the long-range rifle competition served as inspiration for he and fellow black powder cartridge shooters to hold their version back home, albeit with smaller targets set at shorter distances. Mike relives some fine doin’s.

AMERICAN SHOOTING JOURNAL is published monthly by Media Index Publishing Group, 941 Powell Ave SW, Suite 120, Renton, WA 98057. Display Advertising. Call Media Index Publishing Group for a current rate card. Discounts for frequency advertising. All submitted materials become the property of Media Index Publishing Group and will not be returned. Copyright © 2022 Media Index Publishing Group. All Rights Reserved. No part of this publication may be copied by any means, electronic or mechanical, including photocopying or recording by any information storage or retrieval system, without the express written permission of the publisher. Printed in U.S.A.

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American Shooting Journal // July 2022


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