Sportsman's News August 2018 Digital Edition

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FREE August 2018 | Volume 14 | Issue 8

DIY Barren Ground Caribou Gary Lewis

Oregon: Ducks and Football Chad LaChance

A Case For Conventional

Barren ground caribou, like this one from the Western Arctic Herd, are on the decline. Numbers are down to 235,000 from the peak of 490,000 in 2003. Hunting and good wildlife management are the keys to saving these animals, by giving them tangible value.

Relentless Range:

INTRODUCING LEUPOLD’S RX SERIES OF LASER RANGEFINDERS PAGE 8


SPORTSMAN’S NEWS 2322 W. Industry Way Cedar City, UT 84721

PRESIDENT/PUBLISHER Mike Deming President/Publisher 435-669-4624 mdeming@sportsmansnews.com

SENIOR EDITOR Kent Danjanovich 801-231-9838 kdanjanovich@sportsmansnews.com MANAGING EDITOR Dan Kidder 435-865-1680 dkidder@sportsmansnews.com EDITORIAL ASSISTANT Lisa Deming info@sportsmansnews.com VIDEO PRODUCTION MANAGERS Sam Staudt sam@sportsmansnews.com Andrew Saullo andrew@sportsmansnews.com Subscribers should contact Managing Editor for changes of address.

Sportsman’s News is published monthly. The entire content of this newspaper is Copyright 2017 © All rights reserved. No part of this publication may be reproduced in any form without written consent of the Managing Editor.

SPORTSMAN’S WAREHOUSE 7035 So. High Tech Drive Midvale, UT 84047

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August 2018 | SPORTSMAN’S NEWS


WORDS FROM THE PUBLISHER By Michael Deming

WHAT’S INSIDE

4 DIY Barren Ground Caribou

Dropped in the Alaskan wilds to get the job done.

Leupold Laser Rangefinders 8 Relentless Reach under any condition.

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10Choose a Sportsman's News Endorsed Guide for your next trip. Platinum Approved Outfitters

Modern Autoloading Shotguns 14 The latest and greatest just in time to blast some birds.

Outdoors - Oregon: High School Football and 22 PacWest Ducks The mixture of high school football and ducks has never been so Oregonian.

Pro Member Sweepstakes 24 Over $300,000 In Giveaways. Drawing Every 10 Days.

26 Pro's Tips: The Problem of Drones

Fun and easy, but also dangerous and potentially costly.

T

he Dog Days of Summer are here. The scorching heat makes doing nearly anything in the middle of the day almost impossible. However, we are quickly approaching the end of preparation time for those upcoming fall hunting and fishing trips. Social media is loaded with pictures of big bucks and bulls that are getting close to finishing their growth. The monsoon rains bring those cool afternoon showers and make for great fishing and hatches once it clears. So, even though these days are tough, there is always something to look forward to when you are talking about the outdoors. This is a place the Sportsman’s News Team loves and we spend nearly a thousand man-days a year partaking of it. So, we always find the best in every time of year. We always put the best of these trips in the pages of Sportsman’s News and we are happy that you have picked up this free copy of the August issue. We hope you enjoy everything that we do and provide to you in these pages. In this issue, we have a great overview of some of the best shotguns on the shelves of Sportsman’s Warehouse this fall. With dove season and early waterfowl season just around the corner, you might be interested in some of the things Senior Editor, Kent Danjanovich, has to say about some of these shotguns. Dan Kidder, our Managing Editor, has provided some great tips in our “Pro’s Tips” column about the use of drones. Many of us utilize these great pieces of equipment for fun as well as a professional tool for taking photos and filming. Regardless of your use, there are lots of laws you should be aware of when it comes to putting one of these things in the air. With all the forest fires around this year due to the hot, dry summer in the southwest, this is a must read. You don’t want to find yourself on the wrong end of the law when you are just out having a good time. You could very well be interfering with flight crews that are working on a fire that isn’t even close to where you are at. Our Pro Member update is always an exciting article about one of our lucky winners who has won one of our $300,000 worth of grand prizes through the Pro Membership Sweepstakes. This current issue has the experience of our winner in the great state of Texas at the world famous 777 Ranch. The center page spread of this issue has all of the great prizes we will give away over the next twelve months as well. So, if you aren’t a member, you might want to consider it. Now that all the big game drawings are out and you don’t have that anticipation of finally drawing that tag of a lifetime, you can be back in the mix every ten days with this sweepstakes. Each drawing is video-taped and posted on our Facebook and YouTube channels for all to see. Take a look at these channels and be part of our community. We not only post these drawings, but also great tips and gear reviews on what will give you a leg up on the competition this fall. Thanks again for your patronage and we hope you have a wonderful end of your summer.

Fishful Thinker: A Case for Conventional 31 Even fly fishers benefit from spin polers.

26

Lure Lock Tackle Box 33 A new way to keep your lures organized.

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Pro-Member Update: 777 Ranch 35 Big Game Bonanza.

39 Business Directory 40 Video Product Reviews A detailed look at some of the newest products.

Pro's Pick: Browning Citori CZX Over-Under 47 A blend of beauty and performance. Wild Game Recipe: Salmon Poke 48 A perfect repast for a hot summer day.

50 Adventures on a Budget: First Shots

Dove Season Opens Another Eventful Fall for Many Sportsmen

54 Writing Contest: Elk Stalking for Rookies Fulfilling a father and daughter bucket list item.

CONTRIBUTING WRITERS Raymon Kemper Gary Lewis Chad LaChance Steve Mayer John Felsher Lee Ann Alexander

August 2018 | SPORTSMAN’S NEWS

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DIY Barren Ground Caribou with Ram Aviation

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August 2018 | SPORTSMAN’S NEWS

By Raymon Kemper

W

hen I was a child, I would thumb through the pages of the outdoor magazines by the hours. The fly-in float plane hunts in Alaska and Canada were extremely captivating to me. Hunting and fishing in areas that very few had ever stepped foot became my ultimate dream. However, an adventure of this magnitude would likely cost me a small fortune based on my research. Canada requires nonresidents to have a guide, but I found that Alaska had a few big game species which could be hunted as a non-resident without a guide. This consisted of caribou, moose and black bears and without having to hire a guide, I could likely make my dream a reality. Doing the research on putting a trip like this together was most of the fun. Trying to figure out where to go, what gear to take, when was the best time to go were just a few things to consider. I had a couple of good buddies that were up to the challenge as well and we were doing the research together. The research and saving of hard earned cash took several years to put together. We were finally ready to pull the trigger when I met with Bryan and Julie Alberts at an outdoor trade show in Salt Lake City, Utah. They had recently purchased Ram Aviation out of Kotzebue, Alaska. They specialized in drop camps for the same type of hunt we were looking to do. The research I had done allowed me to be very specific in my questioning and I knew that the price they were offering was better than what I felt I could do it for myself. They lived in the area and had spent a lot of time flying, which meant that they would have scouted out the herds and travel patterns before we arrived, which would give us a better chance of success. We paid the deposits required and booked the hunt for the upcoming fall. It was mid-August and there was a cool breeze as I walked into the Denver International Airport. I couldn’t believe that the time was finally here; I’d been dreaming of this day for most of my life. My excitement was growing by the hour, knowing that I was heading to the Arctic Circle to hunt the biggest herd of caribou in Alaska and on top of that, we were going to be in one of the wildest places in the world. My two really good friends going on this trip were Steve and Nate Manson, from San Diego. The plan was that we were going to meet up in Seattle, then fly to Anchorage, then on to Kotzebue, Alaska. It was a full day of flying and sitting in airports, but well worth it; knowing we would fulfill a lifelong dream over the next week. When we arrived in Kotzebue, there was a representative from Ram Aviation to pick us up and show us around. That night we stayed in the Nullagvik Hotel, which had very nice accommodations considering we are at the end of the world. We had the pleasure of getting a bit of history on Bryan and his operation during our stay. He has been a bush pilot for his entire life. He loves to hunt and fish and is extremely passionate about the outdoors and his operation. He is meticulous about his planes and demands the same from his pilots. This is a great trait in an operation that uses planes, since breaking down has some severe consequences. This conversation made me even more confident in the decision we had made to book with Ram Aviation. The next morning, Bryan picked us up and took us to their office, located next to the runway. Steve, Nate and myself quickly repacked our gear and took care of all of the required paperwork. We had a safety briefing and then loaded up in the planes. Being inside the planes confirmed what Bryan had said about being meticulous. All of the planes were very clean and well taken care of. Our two-hour bush plane flight went fairly quickly, with lots of terrain to see and Bryan made sure he pointed out everything of interest. When we arrived at our destination, we were greeted by


a huge grizzly crossing the river. Not exactly what we expected as a neighbor for the next week. We unloaded all of our gear on the gravel bar and the pilots took off, disappearing over the horizon. I looked at Nate and Steve and said, “Welcome to the Arctic Circle!” The area was beautiful, but it was very apparent that we were deep in the wilderness of Alaska. We quickly put on our waders and loaded our pistols. I waded across a narrow channel and started looking for a good camp location. Nate started setting up a tent, while Steve and I waded over to the gravel bar and carried all of the gear to our camp. We crawled out of the tent early that morning, all of us anxious to start our caribou hunt. Nate fixed breakfast while Steve and I dressed up the camp and situated our packs. Then we started glassing and immediately spotted caribou around camp, about 60 all together. That was amazing! We all had a smile on our face, as I put on my pack Nate, Steve and I headed up the ridge to the overlook. As I looked around the valley at all of the caribou, I could not identify one bull, but I knew that if the cows were there, the bulls were not too far away! We stayed up there most of the day, but unfortunately with the warmer temps, the animals were not moving, so we decided to head back to camp. The tundra in the area was very tough to walk across. Thankfully, we were all in very good shape and had trekking poles. When we got back to camp and started fixing some food, Steve walked to the river to wash his hands and he noticed fish swimming up the river. All three of us are avid fly-fishermen, so it didn’t take much for us to grab our fly rods. We fished for a little while but were unable to get any of the chum salmon, so we went back to camp and ate our dinner. It was getting late and I think everything was catching up with us. I pulled out my Nikon spotting scope and scanned the valley, but unfortunately, we couldn’t spot anything close to camp, so we decided to call it a day. The next day was almost the same as the first, as we saw a lot of cows, but no bulls. Finally, the weather started to change on the third day, as the temperature dropped and rain showers persisted on and off all morning. We left camp and hiked over a little ridge by camp. As I was looking through my binoculars, I spotted the tip of an antler. I dropped to the ground and looked back. Steve and Nate were laying right behind me. The caribou were only about 200 yards away. Unfortunately, there was nothing but tundra between us. Luckily the bull was over a small ridge. We started low-crawling and after about 150 yards, we could finally see the bull. Steve set up his rifle on top of my pack just as the bull walked down the ridge. We then low-crawled a little farther and set back up, Steve was just about to pull the trigger when the bull laid down. It now became a waiting game. Twenty minutes later, the bull stood up. I looked over at Steve and he was ready. I pulled up my binoculars and looked at the bull, just as he was pulling the trigger. The bull dropped to the ground and we started to hoot and holler! As we walked up to the bull, there was nothing but smiles on our faces. After a bunch of pictures, we quickly took care of the meat and laid it on a tarp before hanging it up. I looked to the east and saw something in the distance. I looked through my binoculars and saw another bull about a mile away. I looked at Nate and said, “are you ready? Let’s go!” Nate grabbed his bow and off we went. Steve said that we should drop down to the river and work our way along its course, as it would probably be faster. We agreed and hiked about 3/4 of a mile. I climbed up and looked to see if the bulls were still in the same location. The bigger bull was still there with three smaller bulls. I went back down and told them that the bulls were still there and we moved within 100 yards. We then inched a few yards closer. Nate slowly moved up and realized he was now only 40 yards from the big bull. He pulled back his bow as the three smaller bulls turned and looked. Nate then released his arrow and made a perfect shot. The bull ran about 30 yards, then fell down. Nate and his dad gave each other a big hug, then another picture session commenced. We processed the meat into bags and then carried them to camp. Wow, what a day! August 2018 | SPORTSMAN’S NEWS

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away we went. Three hours later, we finally reached the mountainside - two miles of the toughest terrain I have ever hiked! As we started climbing around the mountain, I saw three smaller bulls, but neither one of the bigger bulls. We slowly worked around and suddenly I spotted them about 600 yards away. We crawled within 400 yards and then I spotted one of the bigger bulls. I set up my rifle on my pack and adjusted my scope. As I put the crosshairs on the Caribou, it suddenly laid down beside a smaller bull. All I was thinking was, “Really? Again!” We laid there watching them for 30 minutes. The big bull finally stood up and took three steps to an opening. I squeezed the trigger and the bull stumbled, then stood behind a bush. I could still make out the outline of the bull, so I took another shot and the bull disappeared. As I hiked up to the caribou,

By the time we got all of the meat back and hung on the meat pole, it was late and time to eat. We then turned in for the night. The next morning, we all left camp. Just before we went up the first ridge, a big grizzly came over the top, about 40 yards from us. I instantly started hollering, “hey bear, hey bear!” The bear turned and walked along the ridge away from us. What a way to start the day! As soon as we got to the top, I saw bull caribou everywhere in the distance. I pulled out my spotting scope and saw two nice bulls about a mile away. Just as we were about to go after them, a grizzly started walking towards them, then running at them. The bulls quickly took off and ran over the mountainside and that was the end of that! Looking around the valley with my spotting scope, I saw five more bulls on a distant mountain nearly two miles away. Even at that distance, I could tell that there were two big bulls. I turned to Steve and Nate and said, “What do you think? It is going to be two miles across rough tundra. We would have to hike all the way across the valley and back.” Steve said, “Let’s do it.” I packed up my spotting scope and

Fly into the wild for an unbelievable adventure along the Arctic Circle

907.521.1723 Ram Aviation has been providing world-class trophy Alaska hunting

for both Caribou and Moose out of Kotzebue, Alaska for over 25 years. Transporting unguided caribou and moose hunters into the wild Alaska landscape is nothing new for us. Specializing in unguided caribou and moose drop off hunts, Ram Aviation has the experience and local knowledge to put you in the optimum position to “get” that big bull you’re after.

www.flyingak.com 6

August 2018 | SPORTSMAN’S NEWS

I was amazed at how big the bull was. After we celebrated and took pictures, I started figuring that it would take at least two trips to get my meat back. Nate said that he could carry two front quarters and one rear quarter. I then asked him, “Are you crazy, trying to carry three quarters that distance?” I said to myself, “He’ll be lucky to make it a quarter of the way back with that much weight.” Nate said that he could do it, so he loaded his pack up with two front quarters and one rear quarter. Steve took the other rear quarter. I loaded up the backstraps and the rib meat, then put the cape and the antlers on my pack. Five hours later, we made it back to camp. Needless to say, Nate did carry three quarters the whole way! I was very impressed and thankful that I didn’t have to make a second trip. We all celebrated that night. We went fishing the next day and caught so many chum salmon between 5- and 12-pounds that I lost count. The next morning, we packed up and Ram Aviation flew us back to Kotzebue. Without Ram Aviation (907-521-1723), this DIY hunt would have never happened. Thank you Bryan and Julie so much for this hunt of a lifetime!


August 2018 | SPORTSMAN’S NEWS

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Relentless Reach: Leupold’s RX Series of Laser Rangefinders

T

he time has come – you’re all settled into your shooting position on one ridge, eyeing a target that’s hundreds of yards away on the next. Maybe it’s the trophy-class Dall sheep you’ve waited years to settle your reticle on; maybe it’s the most challenging target on the course of your favorite competitive shooting circuit. Either way, you’re going to need the right range before making the right scope adjustments. That’s where the Leupold RX series of laser rangefinders comes in handy. The flagship rangefinder line offered by the Oregon-based company, the RX series launched three new models for 2018: the RX-2800 TBR/W, the RX-1600i TBR/W with DNA, and the RX-1300i TBR with DNA. All three come packed with the features hunters and shooters have come to expect from the RX series and a bevy of model-exclusive perks, to boot. The most advanced model in the pack, the RX-2800 TBR/W, was designed to offer the very best in long-range performance. As its name suggests, it’s capable of accurately ranging reflective targets out to 2,800 yards, and with a long list of useful features, it doesn’t stop there. Modern long-range rifles and ammo reach out farther than ever, and the RX2800 TBR/W makes hitting steal at those distances easier than ever. Powered by Alpha IQ, it ranges farther, faster, and more accurately than any other monocular you can carry. At 7x, it’s also the most powerful Leupold monocular, with the optical performance you need to pick out long-range targets. It’s built with an impact-resistant polymer armor outside and a lightweight, skeletonized aluminum chassis inside, ensuring it lives up to the legendary Leupold standard for ruggedness and reliability. It sports a high-contrast, red OLED display and offers continuous range updates in Scan Mode to keep you on target as you track movement or scan an area. Next up is the RX-1600i TBR/W, which also features an impact-resistant polymer armor – and its own lightweight, aluminum inner housing. It comes fitted with a 6x monocular and a fully-multicoated lens system to ensure a bright, crisp image. Fold-down rubber eyecups are included to accommodate hunters and shooters with or without eyeglasses. It’s a workhorse ready for any hunt and delivers the most accurate ranging in its class – out to 1,600 yards on reflective targets. The advanced OLED technology is also adjustable to match display intensity for changing light conditions, so no matter what time of day it is, you’ll be able to see the yardage. The RX-1600i TBR/W is the perfect laser rangefinder for any hunter and should find a home with rifle hunters and archers, alike. If you don’t have the desire to range objects farther than you can see, the RX-1300i TBR is a great place to start. It’s defined by performance, versatility, and reliability – which should make it a staple among hunters and shooters that

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August 2018 | SPORTSMAN’S NEWS

are looking for a great-priced ranging solution. The RX-1300i TBR features a high-contrast, black LCD display and 6x magnification. It sports a lightweight, ergonomic design that’s comfortable to use in a tree stand or on a backcountry trail. This rangefinder is built to last, firmly living up to Leupold’s standards for reliability. Capable of delivering accurate ranges – to within a ½-yard – out to 1,300 yards on a reflective target, the RX-1300i TBR will make sure you know where to send your next shot. You’ve probably noticed that all three rangefinders share a defining trait: Leupold’s unparalleled True Ballistic Range (TBR) technology, which can be found throughout the RX series. TBR takes into account the angle of your shot and your rifle’s ballistics to put you dead on target. Other rangefinders will certainly spit out a number, but they won’t produce an accurate range to your target because they use basic trigonometry to calculate a straight-line horizontal distance. When you’re going long, the angle matters – and the RX series will deliver the information you need to ensure a successful shot. The RX-2800 TBR/W and RX-1600i TBR/W also offer a windage feature that’s the easiest way to account for wind out to distances of 800 yards. It generates a hold point for a 10-mph wind at a 90 degree angle of your aim point. Select RX series rangefinders also offer Trophy Scale, which gives you an accurate measure of the width of an animal’s rack or the height of the animal you’re targeting. The new RX series of Leupold rangefinders are built to take a beating and are 100 percent waterproof. If you demand rugged reliability on your hunt or at the range, the RX series has got you covered. When you’re faced with the shot of a lifetime, you’re going to need to know how far away your target it. And you’re probably going to need it fast. With an RX series rangefinder from America’s most dominant optics manufacturer, you’ll get it.


RX RANGEFINDERS

TRUE BALLISTIC RANGING (TBR) TECHNOLOGY EASY-TO-READ, HIGH-CONTRAST DISPLAY LIGHTWEIGHT, COMPACT, AND RUGGED BODY WATERPROOF AND EXTREME CLIMATE TESTED

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LEUPOLD.COM

August 2018 | SPORTSMAN’S NEWS

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The Sportsman’s News Platinum Approved Outfitter is an outfitter book. These are outfitters you would be proud to refer to a friend. that has excelled in every aspect of their business. They put We know this because we are proud to endorse each one of these people and customers before profit. They do what it takes to make sure that they will be outfitters based upon our staff members personally visiting each one of these in business for the long haul and ensure that they have repeat customers. They practice operations. These outfitters have proven to us that they have what it takes to be good game management, which will ensure a top quality trip with them every time you “Sportsman’s News Platinum Approved.” AFRICA HUNTING

ALASKA GUIDED FISHING

ALASKA FISHING

ALASKA GUIDED FISHING

ALASKA GUIDED FISHING

ALASKA GUIDED FISHING

ALASKA GUIDED FISHING

ALASKA GUIDED FISHING Halibut, Yelloweye, King, Silver, Pink, and Chum Salmon, Ling Cod, and Dolly Varden. Fresh and saltwater fishing adventures.

Pybus Point Lodge Juneau, AK 1-(800) 94-PYBUS • www.pybus.com

ALASKA GUIDED FISHING

Becharof Rapids Camp On the banks of the Egegik River on the outlet of Becharof Lake in the Bristol Bay region. Uninhabited, untouched, and pristine with the area a veritable salmon factory. All five species of salmon plus rainbows, Arctic char and grayling.

360-532-7594

www.becharofrapidscamp.com

10 August 2018 | SPORTSMAN’S NEWS

ALASKA GUIDED FISHING


ALASKA GUIDED FISHING

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ALASKA HUNTING AND FISHING

ALASKA FISHING

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CANADIAN FISHING

Join us for a Canadian fishing adventure of a lifetime!

Fully Guided Fishing On Mcintosh Lake, Part Of The Legendary Churchill River System Which Holds Massive Pike, Trophy Lake Trout And Scrappy Walleye

775-741-4539

ruffossportsmanslodge.com ALASKA GUIDED HUNTING

CANADIAN FISHING

ALASKA GUIDED HUNTING

CANADIAN WATERFOWL HUNTING

ro de Renf With Wand Guide Pilot a

ALASKAN ADVENTURES

Fly-in Alaskan hunting for brown bear, Alaskan moose or black bear. Custom tailored trips.

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renfrosalaskanadventures.com ALASKA HUNTING

CANADIAN HUNTING

August 2018 | SPORTSMAN’S NEWS

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CANADIAN HUNTING

MANITOBA FISHING

Ranchland Outfitters offers First Class Waterfowl Hunts and Big Game hunts in Alberta, Canada. If you are looking for an Outfitter that cares about each hunt, look no further. Ranchland Outfitters is a First Class Waterfowl and Big Game Outfitter.

ALBERTA

www.ranchlandoutfitters.com 877-924-8440

CANADIAN HUNTING

NEW MEXICO HUNTING

Book your Bison hunt now to secure available dates. Contact Season Elliott at contact@ranchodechavez.com or 505-884-3503 www.ranchodechavez.com

COLORADO HUNTING

NEW ZEALAND HUNTING

COLORADO/UTAH HUNTING

SASKATCHEWAN HUNTING

COLORADO WATERFOWL

Stillwater Outfitters is Colorado's oldest and largest Waterfowl Outfitter. We have exclusive hunting leases on over 50 farms on the beautiful Front Range of Colorado. Our goal is to provide the trip of a lifetime without any drama. We also offer Turkey and Trophy Whitetail Deer hunting.

• Colorado's Largest and most productive waterfowl Outfitter • Exclusive Leases on over 50 Farms on the Front Range of Colorado • World Class Guides and Equipment • Hunts are conducted in spacious in-the-ground pit blinds

303.659.8665

www.stillwateroutfitters.net

MANITOBA HUNTING & FISHING

Canada’s Best Fishing Lodge Of The Year! Five Star Main Lodge Featuring Fully Guided American Plan Packages Plus Remote Outpost Camps on 4 Lakes

BIG SAND L AKE LODGE & PREMIER OUTPOSTS Northern Pike

Lake Trout

Walleye

Arctic Grayling

SOUTH DAKOTA HUNTING

South Dakota Pheasant Hunting at its Finest!

Contact Brett Waibel: info@badriverhunts.com

Day and all inclusive hunts available!

JOIN the PARTY!

(605) 669-3440 BadRiverHunts.com

SOUTH DAKOTA HUNTING Hunt the Grand Slam of the Dakotas World Class Pheasant Hunting Sharp-tail Grouse • Prairie Chicken Hungarian Partridge • Waterfowl

Tumbleweed Lodge

605-875-3440

Tumbleweed@sbtc.net

• Chippewyan Lake • Wolf Lake • Jordan Lake • LeClair Lake

Trophy Fishing For • Northern Pike • Lake Trout • Walleye • Arctic Grayling

Big Game Hunting • Spring & Fall Bear • Fall Moose

1-800-348-5824 www.bigsandlakelodge.com

12 August 2018 | SPORTSMAN’S NEWS

www.TumbleweedLodge.com


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SportsmansNews.com Logon to our website for a full list of endorsed outfitters with photos, descriptions, and details about each.

August 2018 | SPORTSMAN’S NEWS

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Modern Auto-Loading Shotguns By Kent Danjanovich

F

or many of us, our first introduction to shooting sports was with a shotgun. I remember when I was just a pup some fifty years ago (sigh!) my parents bought me a .410 single-shot. Now a BB gun might have been a safer purchase in most peoples’ eyes, but my mom and dad knew that I would only be using it when they were around to instruct, rather than me being on my own, probably shooting at everything in sight with a BB gun! So, my introduction to the sport of shooting started a little more advanced than most. Soon I became pretty proficient with my little .410, so the next step was to move me up to a “big boy’s” gun. My dad and all of my brothers were Browning guys, to be specific, ‘Sweet-Sixteen’ guys, so of course, I followed suit. Now, I give you this little history introduction to explain why I am a little partial to semi-automatic shotguns and this is exactly what this article is about – my view of some of the best semi-loaders on the market today and all are carried at your local Sportsman’s Warehouse.

Browning

Browning semi-autos have been around for a long time. In fact, they introduced the very first gas operated, semi-auto loading shotgun to the market. The original “Auto-5” was THE gun of choice for decades and still adorns gun cases and vaults around the world. Although similarities still exist, the new models in the Browning line offer even greater diversity, quality and workmanship.

A5 As mentioned, the original was gas operated, where as the new A5 is powered by Kinematic Drive. In its simplest term, kinetic energy is the energy of motion. The new Browning A5 makes better use of kinetic energy with its powerful, short recoil-operated Kinematic Drive System. Kinematic Drive harnesses recoil energy and converts it into the mechanical motion needed to operate the action. This concept is tried and true and now perfected by the company that broke ground first with autoloading shotguns. The beauty of Kinematic Drive is the simplicity of design for consistent, reliable function with any load and under the full extremes of weather, temperature, moisture and grime. This gun is designed to work, no matter the conditions. Operation is clean because gases are sent out the barrel and away from the action. There’s also extreme load versatility. The extensively tested Kinematic Drive offers reliable performance with virtually all loads down to 1-ounce field loads with no adjustments. The A5 comes in eight different models, including both wood and synthetic stocks, camo patterns and finishes. A5’s are available in 12 gauge 2 ¾-, 3- and 3 ½-inch models as well as 16 gauge in 2 ¾”. MSRP starting at $1,499.99.

14 August 2018 | SPORTSMAN’S NEWS

Maxus Hunter As shotgun pedigrees go, the Browning Maxus Hunter is a true blueblood. After all, its granddad was John Browning’s own Auto-5, the model by which all other semi-autos were judged. Since the introduction of the Auto-5 over 100 years ago, there have been several advancements in semi-auto technology. Chief among these was the development of a reliable gas-operated action that would cycle a wide range of loads while reducing felt recoil. The Maxus has taken gas guns to a new level and proven the old American system is incredibly reliable while significantly softening the blow of hard-kicking shells. The Maxus Hunter is a perfect companion for the upland hunter or clay shooter who still values the feel of a well-built, classicallystyled field gun. It was designed for hard work and has the same heavy-duty guts as any of the other Maxus variants. For starters, the Power Drive Gas System has larger ports that allow increased flow from high-powered loads. But the Hunter model is aimed more toward wingshooters and clay-bird enthusiasts who are more likely to be shooting very light loads. The larger gas ports and a 20-percent longer stroke mean that the Maxus will cycle anything you feed it. The Maxus handles very well, partly because it is slightly nose-heavy, making the gun point naturally and swing smoothly on passing shots. Browning has a long history of making dependable upland guns and the Maxus’ family history shows through in its build, quality and function. The Maxus is available in the Hunter and eight other models, 12ga in 3- and 3 ½-inch models in most. MSRP starting at $1,379.99.

Silver Field Browning’s Silver line is built on an aluminum-alloy frame and employs a gasoperated action. With several stock and finish options, as well as a few 3 1/2-inch variants, you can have your Silver just about any way you want it in a 12 and 20ga, even in a couple of rifled options. This is actually my preferred Browning shotgun in the whole line of great autoloaders. I love the sleeker, semi-humpbacked look and the thinner fore-stock allows for me to swing on my target quicker and more efficiently. The barrel also has a lightweight profile and a fully constructed ventilated, slightly raised rib. Its gas operated action utilizes the Active Valve System, making it possible to shoot light to heavy loads with ease while sparing your shoulder along the way. MSRP starting at $1,069.99.

Benelli

Benelli Armi S.p.A. was formed in 1967. The idea behind the company, however, first came to the Benelli brothers, owners of the famous Benelli motorcycle company of Pesaro, in 1940. The Benelli brothers were passionate hunters as well as fine engineers and at that time were already convinced that the future of hunting shotguns lay with semi-automatic models. This idea became reality when a brilliant designer


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August 2018 | SPORTSMAN’S NEWS

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16 August 2018 | SPORTSMAN’S NEWS

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from Bologna, Bruno Civolani, invented a revolutionary action. Civolani’s design led to the creation of an extraordinary hunting shotgun that used a simple inertia driven mechanism in place of a conventional gas operated system. With the bolt providing all the movement needed, this revolutionary design provided the fastest reloading action the world had ever seen. The Inertia Driven system, combined with features like ComforTech, AirTouch, SteadyGrip, GripTight and Crio System, offers shooters and hunters an edge that allows them to hunt longer, harder and more successfully.

ETHOS The Ethos has the time-proven, Inertia-Driven Operating System introduced by Benelli back in 1967. Lockup is accomplished as twin lugs on the rotating head of the breech bolt engage shoulders on the inner wall of the barrel extension. More than 3-million have since been sold, so, obviously, no small number of hunters and shooters like it — and for good reason. It has proven to be an extremely rugged and totally reliable design and the Ethos introduces a major difference in operation that makes it even better. Several Ethos design features were borrowed from other Benelli shotguns and there is no better example than the receiver. Similar in concept to the Vinci, it consists of a lower unit containing the trigger, cartridge-drop, bolt-release and cartridge-feed mechanisms, while an upper unit mainly serves to enclose the bolt. Upper and lower receivers are precision-machined of aircraftgrade aluminum. The ETHOS is an elegant semi-automatic shotgun that is the culmination of Benelli’s latest innovations, refinements and design, all centered around the core – the Inertia Driven System. It incorporates the Progressive Comfort recoil reduction system, cycles even the lightest of loads and is available in 12, 20 and 28ga. MSRP starting at $1,999.99.

Super Black Eagle 3 Ever since Benelli introduced its innovative and durable Super Black Eagle semi-auto shotgun many years ago, the SBE name has been somewhat revered in hardcore hunting circles. For years, hunters from around the world, have used the original Super Black Eagle and the second-generation Super Black Eagle 2, to bring down a host of feathered offerings in about every known hunting scenario. The Super Black Eagle has proven itself rugged, reliable and high-performing in every way. Last spring, Benelli revealed that it was introducing the Super Black Eagle 3. Impressively, Benelli has managed to further improve on the SBE’s design, incorporating elements that enhance ergonomics, functionality and style. Obviously, the new shotgun retains an Inertia-Driven Action, but it also received an upgrade in the Easy-Locking System, an improved breech-closing system that eliminates the potential for shooter error when trying to gently close the bolt and prevents it from slipping out of battery if the gun is hit hard or knocked over. This was an issue that had afflicted earlier Benelli models; when a shooter tried to ease the bolt closed on a shell, proper lockup would not occur, resulting in the inability to fire. This great gun is still really made for heavy loads in the field and in the marsh and is available in 12ga 2 3/4-, 3- and 3 ½-inch offerings as well as a left-hand model and a rifled barrel too. Options include, satin walnut, black synthetic and three camo patterns. MSRP starting at $1,899.99.

August 2018 | SPORTSMAN’S NEWS

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Stoeger

Winchester

M3500 The Stoeger M3500 is a 7.8-pound inertia-driven semi-automatic shotgun capable of cycling everything from light 2 3/4-inch to heavy 3 1/2-inch magnum loads. The M3500 ships with standard accessories including improved cylinder, modified, full and extended extra-full turkey screw-in chokes. Stoeger is able to boast that there are only three moving parts in the M3500’s bolt — to help speed cycling and increase reliability. A steel recoil reducer is housed within the stock to improve follow-up shots and balance the firearm. The shotgun’s balance point is ideally located directly beneath the step of the rib. The M3500 is a larger gun, built more for adults than for young shooters, but its edges are all smooth and very manageable. This gun is by far the lowest priced of our reviewed group and is a solid, reliable choice for getting the job done in the field, in a turkey blind, or decoying in ducks and geese on your favorite waterway. MSRP starting at $669.99.

Super X4 It’s hard to believe that Winchester’s Super X semi-auto series in its modern form has been around for nearly 20 years. Introduced in 1999, the Super X2 was a revamped version of the original Super X. After enjoying a good run, the Super X2 was eventually replaced by the Super X3. The lighter and more streamlined SX3 proved to be a worthy replacement. Available in 3- and 3½-inch 12-gauge models, as well as 3-inch 20-gauge, the SX3 has been offered in waterfowl, turkey, field and various target configurations. Now we welcome the fourth generation, the SX4 that is even lighter (7.15 oz), faster, more reliable and truly handles like a dream. The fit and balance of a shotgun stock are critical factors of how well you’re able to shoot it. The new SX4 comes with polymer length of pull spacers that fit between the stock and the recoil pad and when adjusted properly, the shotgun can be shouldered with a smooth confidence and “felt recoil” is greatly diminished. Also adding to the reduction in ‘kick’ is their Inflex Technology in the recoil pad as well as the Active Valve gas system that automatically self-adjusts to allocate the exact gas pressure necessary to cycle a wide range of loads. I recently put the SX4 to the test on a Saskatchewan spring snow goose hunt and was very impressed with its handling and workability, evidenced by the smile on my face from the big numbers of birds falling from the sky! It is fast, smooth and a little easier on the pocket book than other options in the same class on the market at an MSRP starting at $939.99.

Stoeger Industries, established in 1924, is a member of the Benelli USA family of companies, offering a complete lineup of shotguns. Technology and expertise are integral to Stoeger’s manufacturing processes. Stoeger products have a solid reputation for affordable quality. These shotguns are built with the same operating system as their mother company.

18 August 2018 | SPORTSMAN’S NEWS

Oliver Fisher Winchester was an innovative and driven man who saw the future of firearms and built an industrial empire around the lever-action rifle. Born in Boston in 1810, Winchester’s initial foray into business was as a maker of men’s shirts. Seeing the economic potential of the fast-growing firearms industry, Winchester began to assemble investors and secure venture capital and in 1857 bought a controlling interest in the Volcanic Repeating Arms Company from two inventive gentlemen named Horace Smith and Daniel B. Wesson. Winchester continued to refine firearm designs with inventors Benjamin Tyler Henry and Nelson King and on May 22, 1866, the Winchester Repeating Arms Company was born.


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6/18/18 8:25 AM


Beretta

Fabbrica d’Armi Pietro Beretta S.p.A. is an Italian company born of the dream and capability of a renaissance craftsman. Thanks to the courage, vision and skills of its lineage, its name has earned international status for its high-tech content, performance and for the Italian style that distinguishes its products. Passed down through 15 generations of the Beretta family, the company was already active in Gardone Valtrompia in the 1400s and its work has been documented since 1526. Beretta’s output is approximately 1,500 Firearms a day and covers just about the entire range of portable firearms. An estimated 90% of Beretta’s production consists of sporting firearms, with more than 75% of its arms being exported to about one hundred countries. Industriousness, inventiveness, traditional methods, attention to the needs of its customers and its craftsmen, as well as ongoing research, technological improvement and state-of-the-art manufacturing methods are the foundation on which Beretta has built its image.

A400 Xtreme Unico Beretta’s A400 Xtreme Unico was introduced in 2015. It is designed with three recoil-reducing systems to reduce an overall combined felt recoil of 70%. The three systems work together to minimize recoil, reduce muzzle raise and to lessen mechanical stress on the shotgun. The one I noticed on my first shot was the Kick-Off Mega. The Kick-Off Mega is a hydraulic damper system built into the stock, reducing axial movement on the cheek, alleviating 60% felt recoil. Even on rushed shots where I did not mount my gun solid against my cheek, the shots were much less harsh than I experienced with other models. Another recoil reduction system built into the A400 Xtreme is the Kick-Off 3 located just behind the alloy aluminum receiver. It is compressed by rearward travel of the bolt assembly and it reduces 10% felt recoil in the two distinct recoil peaks of a shot: the cartridge ignition and the impact of the bolt against the receiver, which also aids in reducing wear and tear of mechanism. The third recoil reducing system is located in the butt-end of the gun stock and is a system of two hydraulic dampers and springs which form a spring-loaded recoil absorber with a GelTek recoil pad. The total system is capable of absorbing 3/8″ during recoil. The reinforced lightweight fiberglass stock, ventilated rib with a low-profile design not only allows for natural placement and line of sight down the barrel; it also allows for fluid motion swings for more control over the shot. The Unico System allows for efficient cycling of any 12-gauge shell, from 2 ¾to 3 ½-inch magnums. Beretta’s Optima Bore HP and exclusive tri-alloy blend steelium barrel offers the best ballistic performance available with shot size versatility and dense patterns. This shotgun proves to be a versatile, do-it-all shotgun with features that enables a shooter to have improved shot placement accuracy with marked recoil reduction. The low profile, lightweight 12ga Beretta A400 Xtreme Unico has an MSRP starting at $1,899.99.

Remington

Remington’s first gas-operated, autoloading shotgun was introduced to American hunters in 1956. Called the Model 60, it was made by High Standard for Sears and sold under the J.C. Higgins banner. It was quite heavy and its forearm was oversized to house a bulky gas piston along with a huge action spring, but it was more comfortable to shoot than most recoil-operated guns of the day. Most gas-operated guns today are basically refined versions of the Model 60. Cycling is simple. During firing, gas flows through a port in the barrel, which is usually located inside its magazine tube loop. Gas enters a chamber to push on a piston and the energy is transferred to the locking bolt of the action by a long action bar. Year after year, decade after decade, Remington has withstood the test of time. A right-of-passage spanning generations, the soul of the American hunter forged in steel and proven afield, Remington autoloading shotguns are still one of the most popular on the market.

20 August 2018 | SPORTSMAN’S NEWS

VERSA MAX Remington’s Versa Max entered the scene in 2010. In the VERSA MAX, there are seven ports in the wall of the chamber of the barrel. All those parts sliding to and fro on the magazine tube are missing as well from the original. It’s called the Self-Cleaning Versaport Gas Piston System and when a 2 3/4-inch shell rests in the chamber, all ports are located forward of its mouth, allowing just the right volume of gas to flow to the operating pistons. The three-inch shell produces a higher volume of gas than is needed to operate the action, but since its longer case seals off three of the seven ports, the amount of gas flowing to the pistons is reduced to about the same volume as generated by a 2 3/4-inch shell. And since the 3 1/2-inch shell is even longer, it blocks off four of the seven ports when chambered. Rather than one large gas piston riding on the magazine tube, two smaller one’s rest inside their cylinders at the bottom of the chamber section of the barrel. As gas enters the two cylinders, their pistons push on both sides of the bolt face to shove the bolt through its operating cycle. The pistons are free to travel about ⅜ inch before coming to a stop and as they reach that point, two large ports in the sides of the cylinders are opened. At this point the gas has done its job, so it is exhausted outward and deflected upward along both sides of the barrel by the walls of the forearm. The reason I tell you all of this is that this process all adds up to possibly the best cycling system that I have tested, for any loads, in any order you can imagine. Also available in a left-hand model, the MSRP on the VERSA MAX starts at $1,455.99, but another version, the VERSA MAX Sportsman is a great alternative, with not quite all of the bells and whistles for under a thousand bucks.

Weatherby

The smell of rich leather and gun oil greeted every customer stepping into Weatherby’s Sporting Goods in California, where the legend began back in 1945. With a mind as fast as the cartridges he designed, Roy Weatherby relied on his trusty dictating machine to document his rapid-pace innovations. He was a stickler for detail with all of his notes, memos, ballistic data and photographs. Weatherby has also become well-known of late for their diverse and ever-changing line of shotguns, including the SA-08 semi-auto.

SA-08 The SA-08 semi-auto is a practical field gun available in 12, 20 and now 28ga. Models with wood stocks wear satin or high-lustre finishes; synthetic stocks are black or camouflage and metalwork is available in matte or high-gloss blue. All operate with Weatherby’s unique “Dual-Valve System,” designed to optimize the recoil impulse, depending on the load. Weatherby includes two gas valves or “pistons” with every SA-08, clearly marked “Light Loads” or “Heavy Loads.” The loads that function with each are clearly delineated in the owner’s manual. Besides reliability, another benefit of these valves is that they help manage recoil. This saves wear and tear on both the gun and the shooter. The balance point on the SA-08 is exactly at the barrel-receiver junction and comes to the shoulder very smoothly. The trigger on this gun was one of the best in my testing, breaking at a crisp 5 pounds, 10 ounces and a cross-bolt safety is located at the back of the trigger-guard behind the trigger, where I like it. MSRP is $649.99 for the synthetic and SA-489 Turkey Xtra Green models, $849.99 for the woodgrain Deluxe.


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Oregon: High School Ducks and Football When fall means passing the pigskin for a last-second touchdown and a watery waterfowl hunt the next morning. By Gary Lewis

S

t. Helens is in the playoffs - and we are taking eight veterans out to the duck blinds the next morning,” Scott Sneer said. Friday night under the lights and a Saturday in the duck blind? To do anything else would be un-American! When Scott Sneer and Spencer Waite invited me to a duck hunt on Deer Island and a football game in St. Helens, Oregon, a little town on the lower Columbia River, I couldn’t turn it down. The atmosphere was electric. The St. Helens Lions were ranked seventh in the state. In all the stores people were decked out in the school’s black and yellow. For a lot of people, fall means football and hunting. I once hunted ducks and deer with a former Denver Broncos player, Jason Elam, on his first fall without football. Elam said he started playing when he was 13 and for the next 29 years, he juggled his schedule to try to get into the field as much as he could. I thought about him when I handed over my ticket and walked into the stadium. My wife, Merrilee and I found a spot on the bleachers near the 50-yard line. Spencer Waite, a coach for the Lions, was on the sidelines. At halftime, the visiting team, the Hermiston Bulldogs, had a 7-0 lead. They looked like they

Photo by Gary Lewis

Every hunter was paired with a high school football player, duck caller, of which there is no shortage along the banks of the lower Columbia.

22 August 2018 | SPORTSMAN’S NEWS

Spencer Waite (foreground) and Cole Sherertz, of Battleground, Wash., watch a pair of ducks circling high above the decoys.

had the game in their teeth. Early in the fourth quarter, the St. Helens Lions scored and that put the game at 7-6, but they couldn’t convert on the extra point. In front of us, a gray-haired teacher shook his noggin with every blunder. At one point, he held his head in his hands. Then, with 16 seconds left, Levi Norton fired a cross-field pass to Ben Eldred in the corner. Eldred, with a Hermiston player draped around his body, pulled the ball in tight and careened into the end zone. St. Helens won the game.

Duck Hunting with the Duct Tape Patriots

Over the last dozen years, all over this land, grassroots Photo by Gary Lewis organizations have sprung up to serve the community of veterans who have served our country - in World War II, Korea, Vietnam, Desert Shield, Desert Storm, Iraq and Afghanistan. Duct Tape Patriots is Sneer’s and Spencer Waite’s effort to show local veterans they’re appreciated. “Spencer and I wanted to honor our grandfathers. My grandfathers used duct tape to fix everything and they were patriots,” Sneer said. “We honor our grandfathers by serving our veterans.” Sneer and Waite organized teenaged athletes to take the veterans into the field. Several of the athletes had been on the gridiron the night before. Those St. Helens football players can call ducks like crazy. When you get 43-inches of rain a year and you live in the middle of the best waterfowl habitat in the Pacific Flyway, you’d better learn to call ducks. The downpour started at dawn. We caught almost 2-1/2 percent of the annual rainfall between daylight and dark. The home team started slow. We were in a blind on the west end of a flooded field of corn. Waite knew the ground and knew where the birds would come from. Sixteen-year-old Cole Sherertz sat between us. Drake, the black Labrador, watched the sky and our body language. Around the swamp, the rest of our team - the athletes and veterans crouched in blinds while ducks swept in and out and circled high. We fumbled, we made bad calls and we drank coffee and told stories because that’s all part of duck hunting. It was so much fun we decided to go for biscuits and gravy at the Deer Island store. Dressed in our camouflage, Photo by Gary Lewis wearing waders and rubber boots, we took over the place. No one bragged about the good shots they’d made. We talked about everything else except the hunting. But everyone knew the second half was coming. We still had a chance for redemption. It was late in the third quarter when coach Waite put me back in the game, this time in a different position. Waite, Sherertz, Sneer and I squeezed into a blind on the north side of the corn with Drake and my pudelpointer, Liesl, who we had moved up to play varsity. When the opposing squad, a dozen teal, wheeled in off the Columbia, we huddled in the Coach Waite watches a flock of teal, blind. Drake by his side. “One more turn,” Waite said.


We spun 360-degrees, trying not to show our faces. The birds circled wide and we spun one more time with them while they tightened. “One more turn,” Waite whispered a third time. Then the birds set their wings, committed. “Take ‘em!” Sneer’s trigger clicked. Photo by Gary Lewis Waite couldn’t get his feet set, but his gun spoke first. Sherertz and I picked the same two birds on the right side of the cloud of teal. It was a team effort. Two teal folded and splashed down. Drake and Liesl crashed into the corn stalks in the hip-high water. Drake, the experienced senior, brought the first bird to hand. Liesl, the freshman, found the second bird and retrieved it like a quarterback crossing the finish line. She dances around too much in the end zone, but she’ll grow out of it. Gary Lewis is the host of An inch of rain in one day made for a wet Frontier Unlimited, a TV show on Pursuit Channel one in the duck blind. But in Oregon, duck huntand Hunt Channel. ing is better when it’s wetter.

Photo by Gary Lewis

Dan Mortensen, a veteran, with a drake mallard.

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The Problem Of Drones By Dan Kidder Managing Editor

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rones, sUAS, UAVs, quadcopters, model aircraft; whatever name they go by, these little flyers are becoming more and more common and with their prevalence comes problems. Aside from the general issue of drones crashing into things and potentially damaging property or people, there are a whole set of legal ramifications and requirements that can get you in a whole lot of trouble if you don’t know about them or choose to ignore them. The Federal Aviation Administration (FAA) oversees the use of drones and has created a list of regulations regarding their use. First off, drones fall into two main categories under the code of federal regulations (CFR). Under the Special Rule for Model Aircraft (Public Law 112-95 Section 336), a sUAS (small Unmanned Aircraft System) or just UAS, is treated like any other model aircraft. It must be registered and the same registration number can be used on all of your drones. Your registration costs $5 and is a simple and quick online process. Those who wish to fly their drones commercially and accept any payment for videography, journalism, photography or any other commercial enterprise are required to obtain a commercial drone pilot license called a Remote Pilot Certificate under CFR part 107. This license can cost hundreds and even thousands of dollars by the time you factor the lessons and training, as well as the testing fee of $150. Under both regulations the following limitations apply: • Unmanned aircraft must weigh less than 55 pounds, including payload, at takeoff • Fly in Class G airspace, which is airspace that has not been otherwise designated and regulated. • Keep the unmanned aircraft within visual line-of-sight so that you can maintain view of it at all times while in flight. • Fly at or below 400 feet above ground level. This altitude will decrease the closer you get to an airport. • Fly during daylight or civil twilight defined as 30 minutes before sunrise and after sunset. • Fly at or under 100 mph • Yield right of way to manned aircraft and notify the airport if you are flying within 5-miles of any airfield. • Do not fly directly over people. • Do not fly from a moving vehicle, unless in a sparsely populated area. Pilots have long been an esoteric bunch and a bit elitist, so it is no wonder that reading and understanding the myriad FAA regulations can be daunting and still not be a guarantee that you won’t make a mistake. The good news is


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that from an enforcement standpoint, they are willing to give warnings before they crush you under the hefty fines and jail time they have at their disposal for violating their regulations. If they pursue you civilly, the maximum fine for failing to register your drone is $27,000. If they pursue criminal charges the max jumps to $250,000 and three years in jail. The fine for operating a commercial drone without an RPC is $30,000. The FAA has issued very few fines and enforcements so far, but the registration requirement is less than five years old, which is fairly recent in legal terms, but you can expect them to increase enforcement as the infractions become more common. “The FAA also has a number of enforcement tools available to address unauthorized use of UAS, including warning notices, letters of correction and civil penalties,” said Allen Kenitzer, the FAA Northwest Mountain Region Spokesperson for the FAA. “FAA may take enforcement action against anyone who operates a UAS in a way that endangers the safety of the national airspace system. This authority is designed to protect users of the airspace as well as people and property on the ground.” The best and safest bet is to download the FAA B4UFLY App for Android and iOS or check online at faa.gov/uas. On top of legal enforcement from the FAA, you may run into state and local laws that regulate where and how you can use drones. In most states, it is illegal to operate a drone in an area where firefighting aircraft are operating. Even if the fire is miles away, the ingress and egress routes of these aircraft can take them low over areas that may endanger them if drones are also operating. Because these aircraft have to refuel and refill retardant frequently, they may cover a wider area than that just near the area of the fire. Additionally, these aircraft operate much closer to the ground than normal aircraft, putting them in danger of contacting a UAS. While the FAA may impose a temporary flight restriction (TFR) in the area around a fire, local fire officials can also restrict drone operation in a fire area, even if there is no federal TFR. Because you may not always know that restrictions are in place, it is safest to just avoid operating a UAS in an area where there is wildfire. Flying in restricted airspace during firefighting operations is a crime and will be prosecuted. If you cause a firefighting aircraft to divert or drop its retardant short of the target it is a more serious crime and impacting an aircraft, preventing an aircraft from operating to fight the fire and causing any injury by flying in the restricted airspace can be prosecuted as a felony. Additionally, flying in restricted airspace can cause the grounding of firefighting aircraft and result in civil penalties if property is damaged as a result of the aircraft not being able to protect structures from fire. “A good rule of thumb would be to avoid all active wildfires as there’s a good chance aircraft may be ordered to fight even smaller fires to prevent them from getting large” said Nickolas Howell, public affairs officer for the BLM Color Country Interagency Fire Center. According to the National Fire Center, “In 2017, there were more than 36 documented instances of people flying drones over wildfires without authorization, threatening the safety of firefighters – only a few less instances than the 41 that occurred in 2016. Though no collisions occurred, on several occasions, air operations were forced to land and cease suppression operations until the offending UAS could be located and removed. These incursions greatly endanger lives, cost taxpayers money and increase fire size while aircraft cannot work to suppress the fire.” August 2018 | SPORTSMAN’S NEWS

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28 August 2018 | SPORTSMAN’S NEWS


PRO'S TIP Another use that outdoorspeople have found for their drones is as a means to expand their scouting for animals before and during hunting season. The laws are different in every state and it frequently takes a while for laws and regulations to catch up with emerging technologies, but states are starting to place restrictions on the use of drones for scouting. In Utah, where I live, the Big Game Guide Book put out by the Division of Wildlife Resources (DWR) specifically bans the use of drones to scout for protected wildlife. This leaves open the door for scouting for coyotes and jackrabbits, but not much else, said Mark Hadley, a spokesperson for the Utah DWR. “Utah does not allow the use of any aircraft and drones are considered aircraft, for hunting or scouting,” said Hadley. “It is best if people check with their state regulations, because each state is different.” On top of that, the use of drones is regulated in state parks as well as National Forests and Parks. In Utah, ‘No Drone Zones’ are set up as needed to accommodate expected visitor traffic and animal migrations. At this time there is no blanket prohibition on the use of drones in Utah State Parks, but it can change and you need to check before you fly. Make sure to check with your State Park agency before your visit. “The FAA provides guidance on 'Flights Over Charted U.S. Wildlife Refuges, Parks and Forest Service Areas'. Per this guidance, federal laws prohibit certain types of flight activity and/or provide altitude restrictions over 'Designated Forest Service Areas.' UAS are considered to be 'mechanized' equipment and cannot take off and land in designated Wilderness Areas on National Forest System lands,” according to the National Forest Service. In 2014 the National Park Service issued a memorandum prohibiting any UAS from taking off or landing in a National Park. This means that as long as you maintain FAA line of sight requirements, you may take off and land outside of the park boundaries and fly into the park, but if you harass or annoy anyone you can be issued a ticket for disorderly conduct. Landing or taking off in the park is a misdemeanor punishable by up to a $5,000 fine and six months in jail. With all of the layers of regulation, it is very easy to get crosswise to the law, but the FAA has been very proactive in providing guidance on the subject. The

FAA website has reams of information available for UAS pilots and those looking to expand their drone adventures. It is well worth the time that you can spend reading as much as possible. At the end of the day, hysterics aside, drones can be used safely and even the FAA allows their use by children as young as 13-years of age. Using some common sense, flying away from people, avoiding flying over stadiums and sporting events, not chasing animals with your drones, being considerate will go a long way toward making sure you don’t get on the wrong side of the law. Kenitzer suggested that operators check before they fly at www.knowbeforeyoufly.org for the latest updated rules and best practices.

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30 August 2018 | SPORTSMAN’S NEWS


A Case for Conventional

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love to fly fish. I’ve been doing it since I was 12 years old, am decent at it and I have about 15 fly rods in my collection. I’ve tied flies, own all the assorted fly gadgets and have caught Chad LaChance everything from redfish, to bass, to trout, all on feathers and fur. Geez, I even live in Colorado - how much more fly is there than that? But this is my argument for conventional tackle - yep, even the fly fishing community needs spin-polers. Just about all fly anglers have a closet full of skeletons in the form of a spin fishing background. For some it was a regional thing; they grew up in bass fishing country or on the salty stuff where conventional angling dominates the time on water and only took up fly fishing later. Perhaps they took up fly fishing just because they found themselves in trout country and fly tackle is stereotypically how you catch them. Still others dabbled in “garden hackle” fishin’ as a kid and drifted away from the sport entirely while girls, college and jobs took priority. They came back to angling as a fly fisher for various reasons. Regardless of how or why they got to the “silly stick with spaghetti string”, their introduction to fishing occurred very likely with a Zebco 202, monofilament line and a tasty morsel of some sort impaled on a barbed hook hanging under a red and white bobber.

In short, if you’re a fly angler that can honestly say that you began your fishing habit with a fly rod in hand, you are a one-percenter, statistically speaking. And that is the root or at least one of the major roots, of my argument for conventional tackle. Fact: fishing needs more participants. Our demographic is getting older and recruitment of new anglers simply isn’t happening fast enough. Fly fishing, as a sub-category of angling, especially needs new blood. It’s well known within the industry that fly fishing participation peaked around the mid 90’s as Americans were reminded of the sport’s allure by A River Runs Through it. The stagnation in angling participation numbers is worrisome from the conservation standpoint; when people no longer feel value in a resource, they will no longer protect it. Anglers (and hunters), more than all others, see the true value in the outdoor traditions and are the first to protect the waters and woods. Notice I didn’t say the sport needs fly anglers, rather that the sport needs anglers, period - all kinds of anglers. We need more people buying fishing tackle, all kinds of tackle, to generate excise taxes for resource management. We need them buying licenses, visiting rural towns built on the outdoors and working with various conservation groups for not only their core cause, but recruitment as well. Well, if the majority of fly guys started with spinning gear, why not come full circle? Let’s recruit conventional anglers - the fly fishers will evolve from those that we successfully hook on our sport. I’ve been teaching angling professionally for more than 12-years and volunteered to teach kids for another decade or so prior. Do you know what is paramount to the enjoyment of their first couple of attempts at fishing? Catching fish and the ensuing grip-n-grin. These days people expect and demand success and despite Thoreau’s aphorism that it’s not really the fish we’re after, at least in our early experiences, it IS all about the fish. So, let’s catch fishermen and fish as simply as possible; people will always find a way to complicate it themselves. A barrier to entering any new sport is equipment and good fly tackle ain’t cheap compared to good conventional tackle. Sure, conventional tackle can get expensive, but to get a newby into that gripn-grin is cheaper and less complicated with simple spinning tackle that can be purchased at any big box store. That first rig, along with some easy access bluegill or stocker rainbow fishing, has probably resulted in more hardened fly fishermen than the fly industry would like to admit. Recruitment aside, there is another great and somewhat related argument for conventional tackle; catching fish is fun. I’m convinced that many anglers loose sight of that simple fact. One of my favorite emails to receive is from a guy that has solely fly fished for years and recently re-discovered the joys of conventional angling after watching Fishful Thinker TV. We preach to use the best tool for the job given the conditions and in many cases conventional tackle will keep you catching when you’d otherwise struggle. High, muddy rivers, heavy wind or deep fish all come to mind as cases where good spinning rod skills and the appropriate lures will keep you grinning. I watched a fly guy have a total melt down one time after battling the “breeze” for an hour, culminating in tossing his fly rod in the lake. If he had just calmly set his fly rod aside, picked up a spinning rod and tossed a jig instead, he would have caught fish just like we were instead of needing therapy. The case for conventional angling is strong; it’s a great way to get people hooked on fishing and also ensures that each and every outing has the highest chance for a satisfactory result, regardless of adverse conditions. Some may argue that fly fishing is the pinnacle of angling and it may well be, but the mountain is built with conventional tackle and thus its importance to the sport cannot be overstated. August 2018 | SPORTSMAN’S NEWS

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32 August 2018 | SPORTSMAN’S NEWS


Lure Lock Tackle Box By Dan Kidder, Managing Editor

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ot just your standard tackle organizer, the Lure Lock uses a sticky gel coating on the bottom to hold your tackle in place and keep it from sliding around during transport. The coating is amazingly resilient and withstands wide variations in temperature. I placed them in the direct July sun on my truck dashboard at 100-plus degrees the coating didn’t melt or change consistency at all. Then, I froze the organizer with the tackle still inside, and other than gripping harder, it didn’t become brittle. Additionally, the coating didn’t leave any residue on my tackle at any temperature. If they become dirty and lose their stickiness, a quick spin through the dishwasher cleans them up and reactivates the gel. The thicker plastic in the cases resists cracking yet stays flexible. It offers more rugged protection of the case and its contents. It is a high-quality organizer and doesn’t feel flimsy or delicate. Heavy duty hinges easily support the weight of the lid but also the weight of a fully loaded box if you hold it by the lid. The idea is that the Lure Lock not only has easy separate dividers to keep gear organized, but the coating prevents terminal tackle from sliding across dividers into other compartments or getting tangles up. It keeps hard baits looking new by protecting their paint job. Accidently drop your opened tackle box filled with sinkers, hooks, and all of the various and sundry things we shove in a tackle organizer, and the pieces stay put instead of dumping all over the ground. The Lure Locks come in three sizes, a large 4 cavity with up to 24 different compartments at 14x9x1.75 inches, a medium 3-cavity with up to 18 compartments at 11x6x1.75 inches, and a small 3 cavity with up to 18 smaller compartments at 9x4x1.25 inches. Each features a pair of heavy duty plastic clasps to keep them shut but are easy to open. The easy snap apart dividers cleanly separate without scissors or a knife for quick organization. All of the Lure Locks are proudly made in the USA. Find them in the fishing department at your local Sportsman’s Warehouse.

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PRO MEMBER UPDATE

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ach and every year, the Sportsman’s News Pro Membership Sweepstakes gives away a $12,000 trip to the 777 Ranch outside of Hondo, Texas. These hunts always take place the first few weeks of December, when most of our big game hunting out west is finished up and the schedule is a bit slower. However, the action in Texas at this huge private ranch is just heating up. This year’s lucky winner was Derrick Congdon from Alaska. Leaving Alaska in the dead of winter and heading to Texas was a great break for Derrick and when you have a choice between hunting big Texas whitetails or some of the sixty-plus species of exotic animals from numerous different countries, you know you are in for a great time. The 777 Ranch encompasses over 5,000 acres of some of the most pristine hunting Texas has to offer. Owner Jeff Rann, who made a name for himself as a dangerous game professional hunter for decades, purchased this great ranch about a dozen years ago. The 777 Ranch has been in existence for over fifty years and Jeff’s vast knowledge of Africa and hunting in general helped to take this already great ranch to the next level. We look forward to spending 3-4 days a year with Jeff and his crew every fall. Derick grew up in Canada and had harvested plenty of whitetail deer, but some of the vast number of exotic animals were on his bucket list. With about $2,500 of his $12,000 credit spent to cover meals and lodging for him and his brother, he decided that the aoudad was his most prized trophy, followed by the Iranian red sheep and the Armenian mouflon. The plan would be to hunt in the areas where these animals reside and harvest whatever trophy presented themselves first. We would be hunting safari style in jeeps and driving around the ranch to cover as much ground

Big Game Bonanza at the 777 Ranch By Michael Deming as possible. It didn’t take long before we found a herd of Armenian mouflon. However, they knew that Derrick had bad intentions and made it into the thick cover before he could even consider a shot. The thick brush in this area proved to be very troublesome to get an already jumpy sheep to stand still long enough to judge the trophy quality, get on target, as well as allow me, the cameraman, to start rolling tape. We spent the better part of our first day playing cat and mouse with this herd of mouflon before we finally gave up on them and moved to another area of the ranch. Luck finally prevailed soon after lunch and we got a group of a dozen unsuspecting mouflon walking our way to get a late afternoon drink on the hot December day. We were able to all get on the same page as to which one to shoot and get setup for the shot without the sheep knowing we were there. When you have a guide, hunter, guest and a cameraman, this isn’t an easy task. Derrick made one well-placed shot on the ram and he only went a few yards before piling up. Mouflon have such massive horns compared to their body and we were shocked when we walked up to this great ram and saw that they are only about 80-100 pounds. It was an amazing trophy and worthy of a great mount. The 777 Ranch has its’ own in-house taxidermy shop, so we loaded up the ram and headed to the shop. The skinners arrived just as we pulled up and made short order of the task of prepping the ram for a full body mount. We toured the facility and looked at the awesome work the shop had done for other successful hunters on the ranch as well as gathered some ideas for the future aoudad we hoped to harvest over the next couple of days. Derrick said that he really wanted to spend some major time finding a

August 2018 | SPORTSMAN’S NEWS

35


PRO MEMBER UPDATE big aoudad. He had been studying these animals since he had won the contest and he had seen a few of our shows from west Texas where we hunted them and he really wanted one. I told him that we had spent four days the year before trying to get my buddy, Dave a great ram down here and it was really tough and we might get it done, but would probably struggle getting it on film. He was set on making it happen. We spent the entire next day trying to do just that and we were having the same luck as the year before. These animals have some of the best eyesight imaginable and they are extremely cautious, so hunting them with our big group and mostly out of a vehicle was going to require a bit of luck and some quick shooting. We decided that maybe sitting a blind might be the best way to make it happen. The afternoon of day three found us all piling into a blind that was more meant for two people than four, which made for a cramped afternoon. However, it was a very active time of feeding and we were seeing a lot of the animals of the ranch. A small group of aoudads poked their heads out of the brush at four hundred yards and stared us down. They waited nearly thirty minutes before making a move. All we could see were females and young

36 August 2018 | SPORTSMAN’S NEWS

rams in the group. They kept coming out of the brush and finally the last one came out but wasn’t what we were looking for. We had been watching them for nearly an hour, when out of nowhere came a single ram from our left. Nobody had seen him coming across the open field and we scrambled around to move the shooting sticks and get setup for a shot. The big ram had great chaps and long horns and was just what Derrick was looking for. We couldn’t get on target while he was all by himself and when he got near the water, he was surrounded by other animals. It took nearly ten minutes to get a clear shot and big D dropped him in his tracks. He was elated and when we stretched the tape over those long dark horns, he was almost 32” inches. This truly fulfilled the dreams of this lucky winner. Derrick was able to tag out on his Iranian red sheep the next day as well, completing his trifecta of sheep, all the while escaping from the Alaska cold. We will give away this great hunt again in the spring of 2019, so don’t forget to sign up to be a Pro Member at www.promembershipsweepstakes.com We give away a grand prize every ten days as well as lots of bonus prizes. The center page spread of this issue shows all of the great prizes we will give away over the next twelve months.


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Video Product Reviews

SIG SAUER ROMEO8H Ruggedized Mil-Spec Red Dot Sight

F

or rapid target acquisition, large field of view, wide open visual dominance of the battlespace, and rugged reliability, the new ROMEO8 from Sig Sauer Electro-Optics has you covered, whether your life is on the line or you are looking to take down fast food on the hoof. Boasting an amazing 100,000 hours of runtime on its single CR123 battery, the ROMEO8 uses Sig’s MOTAC motion activated technology to enter inactive standby mode when not in motion, but instantly spring to life when raised to the eye. This extends the battery life and ensures the red dot is ready when you need it. The 38mm rectangular viewing window provides a wide field of view with minimal obstruction by the streamlined aluminum housing. This wide view of the battlespace eliminates blind spots and provides better situational awareness with both eyes open. Though it looks like a holographic sight, the ROMEO8 is a closed reflex red dot sight. While there are a few differences in technology, the biggest is that a red dot uses an LED projected on a reflective lens and a holographic sight uses a laser on a specially printed hologram. The ROMEO8H is designed for hunters with a quad ballistic circle dot reticle that provides hold-over calibrated for 5.56 and .762 calibers. Coupled with .5 MOA adjustments for shooting at distance. The ROMEO8H has also been streamlined for lighter weight and reduced visual footprint to provide a stealthier form factor Scan this QR Code with for the hunter while shedding weight. The ROMEO8T your smart phone to view has a steel reinforcing shroud over the aiming window the Sportsman's News to provide a ruggedized combat sight. YouTube Channel.

The integrated mount will easily and quickly attach to any Picatinny Mil-STD 1913 rail and features a large ½ hex bolt capable of 85-inch pounds of torque so it won’t lose zero. The small 2 MOA red dot has 10 visible brightness settings and two that are only visible with night vision devices. Even at the higher settings, the ROMEO8s will run more than 10 years on a single battery. In addition to the single center aiming dot, the user can choose to add a 65 MOA red dot aiming circle, a single center dot with three hold over dots, or all three together. Designed for harsh environments, the ruggedized Mil-spec red dot sight is IPX-7 Waterproof up to 1 meter for 30 minutes and designed to remain accurate no matter the temperature differentials. This means you won’t have to worry about point of impact shift in extreme environments. And while the internals are literally bombproof, the external lenses have Lensarmor and Lenshield to protect the glass from scratching and keeps them fog, dust, oil, and gunk free. And if something should ever happen to the ROMEO8, it is covered by the incomparable Sig Electro-Optics limited 5-year electronics warranty and Infinite Guarantee so you know it will be taken care of. We have one of the first production units and are the first to get our hands on this amazing optic, so make sure you scan the QR code with your smartphone or go to sportsmansnews.com to watch the video of us putting the ROMEO8H to the test.

Franchi Momentum Bolt-Action Rifle

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ollowing a history composed of well over a century of metalworking craftsmanship and known worldwide for the reputation of enduring quality and precision, Franchi has finally released their first iteration of the bolt-action rifle, called the Momentum and they’ve knocked it out of the park in terms of accuracy, quality of parts and reliability. Typically, I’d shy away from any company’s first attempt at a bolt-action rifle, however the experience and reputation of Franchi gave me the confidence to try out this rifle and I was pleasantly surprised by everything about this gun. The first and most distinct feature about this rifle is the ergonomic design and Franchi has done this properly with a specially designed stock, available in both a black synthetic material and a wood stock. If you decide to go with the 150th Anniversary Edition, it comes chambered in .30-06 Springfield with a special wood stock and a 22” non-threaded barrel. The rifle is designed to be light and maneuverable, yet solid and reliable; essentially the Momentum feels like an extension of the body, regardless of shooting position and feels like it was simply designed to be a tack driver that is also extremely comfortable. The stock is designed to fit comfortably, utilizing a TSA Recoil Pad that reduces recoil by 50%, as well as a checkered recess near the base, designed to give your hand a place to sit when bench shooting. Scan this QR Code with The Momentum comes in six different and popuyour smart phone to view t h e S p o r t s m a n ' s N e w s lar hunting calibers, from .243 Win all the way to the YouTube Channel. mighty .300 Win Mag. However, it’s also available in

40 August 2018 | SPORTSMAN’S NEWS

three rifle-only configurations (black synthetic, threaded, or plain barrel) or you can buy it as a package with a 3-9x40mm Burris scope. The versatility and compatibility of this rifle are great features and make this affordable rifle more useful in a wider selection of scenarios. The bolt on the Momentum is spiral fluted, featuring three large locking lugs to stay secure and has a 60-degree throw, meaning that in those intense hunting scenarios where you need to get a second or even third shot off, you can do so with this gun. I personally took this gun out to the range and the resulting accuracy that I discovered with the .30-06 Springfield model was incredible. The comfortability of shooting this gun from a bench was largely a result of the free-floating, cold hammer-forged precision barrel, which also features a threaded end cover for attaching muzzle accessories and the Momentum’s super light 2- to 4-pound adjustable trigger made squeezing off rounds a breeze. Lastly, every single rifle is protected by Franchi’s industry-leading 7-year parts, labor and shipping warranty, meaning that you don’t have to worry when taking this gun out on a backcountry hunt. In a sporting goods field that’s full of rifles in a similar price range, Franchi has proven once again that they know exactly what they’re doing when it comes to assembling high quality firearms and in their first iteration of the highly-popular bolt-action hunting rifle, they’ve knocked it out of the park.


Zeiss Conquest Gavia 85 Spotting Scope

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arl Zeiss Sports Optics, the world’s leading manufacturer of high performance sports optics, is pleased to announce the new ZEISS Conquest Gavia 85 angled spotting scope, specially developed to meet the needs of sportsmen and wildlife/nature observers. The powerful 60x magnification combined with a wide-angle field of view, the Gavia 85mm spotting scope makes tricky identification of wildlife no problem, even at great distances thanks to highly detailed image rendition. Outstanding optiSPECIFICATIONS cal performance and Magnification 30-60x brightness along with an intuitive and Objective Lens Diameter 85 mm dynamic focusing Exit Pupil Diameter 2.8-1.4 mm mechanism enables fast and smooth foFocal Length (Objective Lens System) 494 mm cusing during obserField of View at 1,000 yds 99-69 ft vation. The Gavia’s compact and lightClose Focus 10.8 ft weight design makes Lens Type HD packing this spotting LotuTec® /T* scope in remote loca- Coating tions comfortable and Fogproof Nitrogen Filled effortless. 400 mbar Made in Germany, Waterproof the Conquest Gavia Lens Thread M 86x1 owes its outstanding Length 15.6 in image quality and optical resolution to Weight (incl. Eyepiece) 60 oz its 85mm objective Order Number (with Eyepiece 30-60x) 528048-0000-010 design and its unique

Video Product Reviews

HD glass system. This phenomenal optical concept offers unrivalled low light performance. All external lenses are protected by LotuTec coating for easy cleaning and clear visibility in any weather situation. Experience the sheer brilliance of the ZEISS Conquest Gavia, backed by an industry-leading limited lifetime transferable warranty and a 5 year No Fault policy. With specs and a warranty like that, the Zeiss Conquest Gavia is sure to find its way in many back packs for years to come. Scan this QR Code with your smart phone to view the Thanks to impressive precision, low weight and a robust Sportsman's News YouTube Channel. design, the ZEISS Conquest Gavia is a companion you’ll always want when making discoveries off the beaten path. To observe the natural world without causing a disruption, you need the right equipment: the new Conquest Gavia 85 spotting scope from ZEISS is the ideal travel companion thanks to its compact design and low weight, so you can capture all the wonders of nature from just the right angle. When you factor in the size, weight and all the specs, the Zeiss Conquest Gavia 85 is sure to be a hit. Definitely worth the look if you're in the market for a new spotter.

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3:55 PM


Video Product Reviews

ALPS Hybrid X Pack

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he ALPS Outdoorz Commander X meat hauler + Pack was a huge success and took the hunting world by storm, especially for those hunting in the wide open fair chase environs of the west. The one thing hunters repeatedly asked for is the same concept in a smaller daypack. ALPS listened, and this fall they will release their new Hybrid X pack. Featuring the same ability to remove the pack and expand the meat shelf as the Commander X, the Hybrid X provides a lighter and smaller high-speed option for the western bow hunter or rifle hunter who likes to travel light. The Hybrid X features the molded foam backing that allows air flow to keep your back dry but also provides a comfortable surface for contact when fully loaded, as well as the wide belt and padded suspension system that ALPS users have come to love. It also features the rugged nylon construction in coyote brown that is the hallmark of all of the ALPS Extreme line of packs. The internal frame weighs in at 4 pounds 5 ounces and provides dual aluminum supports for extra strength without too much weight. The meat shelf can be used by itself to haul meat, or the pack can be removed, the shelf loaded with meat to be hauled out, and then a series of compression straps allows the pack to be reinstalled over the meat so you can pack out what you packed in. Go in light, come out heavy. The wide belt features anti-sway straps to keep your load balanced and has two roomy zippered belt pockets, perfect for a rangefinder. Sewn nylon straps are ideal for a pistol holster or knife sheath. An internal elastic pouch on the meat shelf is ideal for transferring your hydration blad- Scan this QR Code with der from your pack to the hauler. your smart phone to view the Sportsman's News The gear pack itself, though smaller than the ComYouTube Channel. mander, still has plenty of room. The 2,750 cubic inch pack doesn’t sacrifice any functionality, and still retains a top loading port with front access so you can easily get to your gear anywhere in the pack. A bow and rifle drop-down pocket helps you keep your weapon out of the way, but also supports it and keeps it from flopping around. A pull-out raincover ensures your spare socks and other gear stays dry as well, but folds up out of the way into its own internal pocket when not needed. Outside mesh pockets as well as internal mesh organizers help you keep your gear where it is easy to find. A top attic lets you keep your most-used gear in easy reach. The pack portion weighs just 1 pound 13 ounces, bringing the total weight of the system to just 6 pounds 3 ounces for a robust but surprisingly lightweight workhorse. For the hunter looking to get in and out swiftly with their kill and the gear they hiked in with, the Hybrid X provides a valuable tool to get the job done without too much weight or bulk. Check out the Hybrid X and the full ALPS Extreme line of packs at your local Sportsman’s Warehouse.

42 August 2018 | SPORTSMAN’S NEWS


MARK

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Simple, ONE BUTTON Takedown

While the heavily redesigned Ruger® Mark IV™ maintains the same classic outward appearance as the Ruger® Mark III™, it incorporates a significant improvement customers will love – a simple, one-button takedown for quick and easy field-stripping. A recessed button in the back of the frame allows the upper receiver to tilt up and off of the grip frame without the use of tools. The bolt simply slides out of the receiver and the barrel can be properly cleaned from chamber to muzzle.

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43


Video Product Reviews

Nikon BLACK FX1000 6-24x50SF First Focal Plane Rifle Scope

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etting a first focal plane riflescope for under a $1,000 is a fete unto itself, but getting one with all of the features of the Nikon BLACK FX1000 is truly amazing. Being a first focal plane scope means that the reticle will stay proportional to the target, no matter what magnification you use. Because it appears to get larger or smaller, this makes it easier to use the holdover subtensions for adjustment. A second focal plane reticle remains the same size and is only correct at a set magnification without a complicated mathematical formula. Typically a first focal plane scope will be much more expensive than a second focal plane, so the fact that Nikon is able to deliver a scope of this configuration for under $800 is a great leap forward. Designed for the longrange precision shooter, the Nikon BLACK FX1000 offers an illuminated reticle with the Nikon’s proprietary FX1000 MOA reticle for easy adjustments on the fly to various ranges. The reticle allows quick computation with known thickness subtensions without adjusting your turrets. The FX1000 is also available with an FXMRAD reticle.

For more range of adjustment, the high-speed tactical turrets provide crisp tactile clicks for easy adjustment. An integrated zero stop gives you the ability to rapidly return to your zero distance and with 60 MOA of total adjustability and 25 MOA of adjustment per rotation, you have plenty of ground you can cover quickly. The reticle is illuminated with 10 intensity levels and an off position is placed between each one so you can have your reticle spring to life on your desired setting with a single click of the dial. The addition of a Quick Focus Eyepiece and side parallax adjustment means you can use your focus as a quick and dirty rangefinder and then make sure your reticle is crisp in the eyepiece. Nikon’s multicoated lenses repel dust, fog, dirt, water, and oil as well as enhance viewability and clarity in a variety of lighting. O-ring sealed construction and nitrogen purging, keep out moisture on the inside as well. The aircraft-grade aluminum 30mm tube protects the lenses from bumps and bangs and the matte black finish makes it stealthy. The constant generous eye relief provides ample room between your brow and the scope, even when shooting prone and downhill. And if something should happen to your scope, Nikon offers its lifetime repair/replace No Fault Policy warranty. Scan this QR Code with See the Nikon Black FX1000 First Focal Plane scope your smart phone to view in action by clicking on the QR code or check it out for the Sportsman's News yourself at your local Sportsman’s Warehouse optics YouTube Channel. counter.

Aguila Hollow Point .22 Long Rifle Ammunition

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or small game hunting, more explosive damage to soft reactive targets, and improved accuracy and reliability, or super quiet low recoil, the newest line of hollow point rimfire rounds from Aguila have you covered. Achieving velocities up to 1,700 feet per second all the way down to subsonic speeds of 1,024 FPS, and a wide range in between, these new rounds cover the entire rimfire gamut giving you a wide range of uses and capabilities. Each features the patented Aguila Prime technology, engineered and tested to meet stringent Olympic shooting standards, for reliable ignition and steady burn of the powder. These rounds use premium components for cleaner burning more reliable and consistent performance and better accuracy, all at a price that beats the pants off the competition.

Supermaximum Hollow Point

Zipping along at 1,700 feet per second, the Supermaximum Hollow Points from Aguila deliver 109-foot pounds of energy on target at 100 yards. The 30-grain copper plated bullet screams downrange, retaining speeds of nearly 1,200 feet per second at 100 yards. Perfect for stretching out small game or varmint hunting distances beyond what you would normally achieve with a rimfire .22, the Supermaximum gives you greater capability and

blistering speed and terminal performance on small game, letting you take larger animals at greater distance.

Interceptor Hollow Point

For small game and target practice, the Interceptor Hollow Point provides a high-speed round that is less effected by the wind, extending your range over standard velocity rounds. The hollow point 40 grain copper plated bullet delivers more energy with 116-foot pounds at 100 yards. Leaving the muzzle at 1,470 feet per second, it retains a lot of its speed coming in at 1,056 FPS at 100 yards. Even though the heavier bullet eats more energy, it still has a lot left in the tank when it gets there to do the job, and plenty of accuracy to stay on target.

Scan this QR Code with your smart phone to view the Sportsman's News YouTube Channel.

Super Extra Hollow Point

Faster than a standard speeding bullet, the Super Extra is my go-to target practice round. Giving me the match aerodynamics of a match bullet, the hollow point 38 grain copper plated bullet slices through the air with amazing performance. It is my favorite for steel spinners popping metal with 94-foot pounds of energy, which is plenty to set them to motion. They leave the muzzle at 1,280 feet per second and arrive on target at 100 yards at 1,010 FPS. Accurate, reliable, and inexpensive, the Super Extra Hollow Point is the perfect target round, but the hollow point and controlled expansion also make them an excellent round for varmint control.

Subsonic Hollow Point

For suppressed shooting or just a quieter round with less recoil unsuppressed, the Subsonic Hollow Point provides a 38-grain uncoated hollow point bullet at a quiet muzzle velocity of 1,024 feet per second. Despite its low speed it still delivers plenty of punch downrange with 72-foot pounds of energy at 100 yards. Combined with reliable and consistent expansion, it is a great tool for pest control in populated areas or practice for those influenced by noise and recoil.

44 August 2018 | SPORTSMAN’S NEWS


Sig Sauer Electro-Optics BDX System

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early all of us carry a rangefinder as well as have a riflescope. Some of us are well trained, long- range shooters and some of us still utilize good old-fashioned Kentucky windage/holdover in hopes we hit that target that is out past our zero. Imagine you are sizing up the buck of a lifetime with your riflescope, with your good buddy by your side, ready to give you the range. You are nice and settled in behind the rifle and this buck is big. He is 30” plus and has points coming from everywhere. However, your good buddy gathers the range data three different times and each time, it is hitting 520 yards. The wind is dead calm and the buck has no idea that you are anywhere in the country. Unfortunately, there is a big canyon between you and him and there is no way to get closer. You don’t shoot enough to have gotten a custom turret for your scope and you just don’t like messing with the dials. You know the exact yardage, but the holdover is a guess and you have about a 12” kill zone on the buck of a lifetime. Well there is a solution to this scenario. Sig Sauer’s Electro-Optics division has developed a family of products which can eliminate this problem for all hunters without breaking the bank. Now just think, if you could just hit that range button and the crosshairs were right where you needed them to be, you could take the guesswork out of this stressful situation. That exact product is what we are talking about here and ready for you to use. Hit the range button on the rangefinder and it transmits the appropriate holdover and lights up one of 76 different hold marks within the riflescope. In our testing, the results Scan this QR Code with were quick, accurate and unbelievable. Every shot was your smart phone to view right on target, which means that the ballistic data as well the Sportsman's News as the exchange of this corrected data to the riflescope was YouTube Channel. complete. It totally took the guesswork out of where to

Video Product Reviews

hold and better yet, it eliminated the need to adjust the turret. This reduction in time and steps could be the difference between filling a tag or going home empty handed. Nearly everyone that spends a lot of time in the field knows that they need a rangefinder as well as a riflescope and why not make it a Sig Sauer ElectroOptics BDX. The rangefinders look identical to the previous versions of these Sig rangefinders and process data just as quickly. You would think this added technology would increase the price, but this isn’t the case. The rangefinders will be available in the KILO1400BDX, KILO1800BDX, KILO2200BDX, KILO2400BDX and KILO3000BDX. The SIERRA3BDX riflescopes will be available in 3.5-10X42, 4.5-14X44 and 6.5-20X52.

Winchester SX4 Shotgun

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inchester Super X autoloading shotguns have a worldwide reputation for speed, reliability and handling. The Super X3 was a tough act to follow and making the Super X4 evolution of this popular shotgun series even better than its predecessor was a real challenge. But, that’s exactly what the gifted design engineers at Winchester Repeating Arms have done. The new Super X4 is lighter, faster cycling, smoother swinging and more ergonomic than ever before. One of the first things experienced shooters notice about the new Super X4 is the gun’s improved ergonomics. It’s lighter overall and the pistol grip is slimmer and more ergonomic, regardless of which hand you use to pull the trigger. The gun’s overall balance point has been moved slightly forward to create a more fluid swing, better target tracking and smoother follow-through. The fit and balance of a shotgun stock are critical factors of how well you’re able to shoot it. The new SX4 comes with polymer length of pull spacers that fit between the stock and the recoil pad. When adjusted properly, you shoulder the shotgun with a smooth confidence and “felt recoil” is greatly diminished. Synthetic stock SX4 models come with one spacer already installed to provide a standard 14 1/4” length of pull and include one additional spacer in the box. Wood stock models include two length of pull spacers in the box. When you remove or add a spacer, you change the length of pull by 1/4”. Additional spacers are available from your Winchester repeating arms dealer, allowing you to custom fit the Super X4 to your exact length of pull. The new Super X4 features a larger bolt handle and an oversized bolt release button for easier engagement and faster operation; two very important features when your hands are cold and wet or when you’re wearing gloves. The shell carrier and

bolt release button are coated with nickel Teflon to reduce friction and help prevent corrosion. The larger, easier to operate ambidextrous safety button is located at the rear of the angular-profile trigger guard and is easily reversible for both right- or left-handed shooters. The opening on the trigger guard is generously sized for easier access, even when wearing heavy gloves. The newest evolution of the Inflex Technology recoil pad on the Super X4 further reduces “felt recoil.” Specially shaped rib structures located inside the pad help direct and channel the recoil impulse, moving the comb down and away from your cheek to reduce “felt recoil” to very manageable levels, even when shooting heavy magnum loads. The new pad’s larger footprint spreads recoil forces over a wider area for further cushioning. Like the original SX3, the SX4 uses the proven Active Valve Gas System that automatically self-adjusts to allocate the exact gas pressure necessary to reliably cycle a wide range of loads commonly used for hunting or target shooting. When firing the heaviest magnum loads in 3 1/2» models, gases vent upward and a portion of them are vented forward out the quadra-vent ports in the forearm to help regulate bolt speed. Both 3» and 3 1/2» Super X4 shotguns will reliably cycle even 1 1/8 oz., 2 3/4” light loads. Excess gases from heavy loads are channeled through the forward quadravent™ ports for cleaner and more reliable operation. Load diversity means an SX4 can reliably shoot them all, from light factory field shells to heavy magnum waterfowl and turkey loads. That’s why the proven Active Valve on the SX4 makes it the most versatile autoloader on the range, in the marsh and in the field. If you are looking for a new shotgun, one that is verScan this QR Code with satile enough to cover all of your shooting needs, check your smart phone to view out the new Winchester SX4 at your local Sportsman’s the Sportsman's News YouTube Channel. Warehouse. August 2018 | SPORTSMAN’S NEWS

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BX-5 SANTIAM HD

Knowing your surroundings and being able to spot the finest details in tough lighting conditions can make or break your hunt. That’s where our BX-5 Santiam HD comes in. We designed the generous eyebox for long glassing sessions. The Abbe-Koenig prisms and elite optical system ramp up light transmission and redefine low-light performance, clarity, and resolution at extreme long range

OVER 90 LOCATIONS

Shop in-store or online at sportsmanswarehouse.com

46 August 2018 | SPORTSMAN’S NEWS


PRO'S PICK

Browning Citori CZX Over-Under

A perfect blend of beauty and performance.

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he Citori is more than a shotgun, it is the quintessential representative of the quality of the Browning brand. Wood-to-metal fit is paramount on the Citori and with tight, consistent junctions it doesn’t disappoint. Action components are machined to exacting tolerances, heat-treated for greater strength and fitted using the traditional lampblack-and-file method to ensure the precise fit of critical components prior to being assembled to the action. It is this extreme level of craftsmanship that leads to the dependable function, impeccable looks, championship performance and respect from both Citori owners and the competition alike.Whether you are looking to break a few clays or drop some birds, the new CXS has got you covered. It is pretty enough to take to the range, but rugged enough to pack behind your favorite retriever. Yes Browning just keeps adding to their exceptional line of firearms. Construction is key to a great firearm and Browning is one of the best in the business. Hammers are powered by powerful coil-type mainsprings for positive primer ignition. The convenient barrel selector allows you to choose which barrel fires on the first pull of the single trigger and the second pull fires the remaining barrel. Ejectors are activated by a sharp hammer blow for a more positive ejection than the push imparted by competitors’ ejectors. The automatic ejectors eject fired shells when the breech is opened and elevate unfired shells for easy removal. The Citori CXS utilizes a transverse-mounted, full-width tapered locking bolt in its construction. The tapered locking bolt engages a full-width tapered recess in the rear barrel lugs. The taper allows the bolt to seat deeper over the years. The hinge pin extends from one side of the receiver to the other for maximum strength. It’s the reason people say a Citori wears in, not out. All Citori shotguns feature chrome-plated chambers that resist the toll thou-

sands of rounds can take on lesser quality guns. Corrosion resistance is also greatly improved to ensure years of non-stop use. The CXS Crossover comes equipped with the Triple Trigger system, which allows you to fine tune the length of pull and switch between a wide checkered, a narrow smooth and a wide smooth canted trigger shoe. • Lightweight profile, high-polished blued barrel • High-post rib with vented top and side ribs keeps the barrel cool • 50/50 point of impact suitable for sporting clays, skeet and the field • 3” chromed chamber boasts durability and easy cleaning • Triple Trigger System to fine-tune the length of pull • Invector-Plus Choke Tubes – full, modified and improved cylinder No over-and-under has more fans than the original Citori and it continues to reign supreme in top performance and incredible durability. Check out the new Citori CXS at your local Sportsman’s Warehouse.

World Class Waterfowl Hunting in Saskatchewan, Canada & Oregon

It’s time to reserve your spot, space is limited for the coming season!

Four Day/Five Night Waterfowl Package The Central Fly Way provides the ideal combination of water, food and wide open spaces to create the “perfect storm” of waterfowl. Standard package includes the following: Lodging · Meals · Guides · Decoys · Blinds Transportation to and from the field

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541-771-4976 For Pricing

www.DuckCreekOutfitters.com August 2018 | SPORTSMAN’S NEWS

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Presents Wild Game Recipes of Steve Mayer "The Wine Guy"

Salmon Poke

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almon season is peaking right now, and here is a simple way to enjoy this tasty fish that is sure to be a hit in your home. You can use any type of Salmon for this method, fresh or frozen. I used a prime sockeye and it was perfect. Poke bowls are all the rage now, sort of a new age sushi form. Poke (pronounced POH-kay) is bite-size pieces of raw fish doused in a marinade with seasonings. These are then tossed in a bowl with rice and other condiments. Avocado, seaweed salad, fried garlic or shallots, vegetables, and various microgreens are all at home here. This dish begs for experimental side dishes, so get creative with the vegetables and garnishes to compliment the succulent fish.

Ingredients

• 12 ounces long grain white or jasmine rice • 2 pounds Salmon Fillets • ¼ cup soy sauce • 4 teaspoons sesame oil • 2 scallions, thinly sliced • 2 tablespoons sesame seeds • Fresh ground pepper

48 August 2018 | SPORTSMAN’S NEWS

Preparation Method

First of all cook the rice and let it cool. Inspect the Salmon fillets and remove any pin bones with needle nose pliers. Remove the skin from the flesh with a sharp knife. Slice the fish into cubes about ¾ inch square. Combine the fish chunks, soy sauce, and sesame oil in a medium bowl. Next in the bowl are the sliced scallions and sesame seeds. Using a large spoon, mix everything well and add pepper to taste. You do not need to add any extra salt as the soy sauce is salty enough already. I substituted some baby garlic greens for the scallions and they worked really well also. You could add some fish sauce, red chili flakes, sriracha, or your favorite hot sauce at this point. Let this marinate for at least a half hour. (You can even do this in advance and let marinate in the refrigerator overnight, or even a few days. In a large serving bowl, pile up the rice to form a mound. Spoon the marinated fish over the top, and garnish with whatever accoutrements you decide to use to highlight this healthy meal. It really pairs well with a seaweed salad which you can get in most Asian markets. Serve with an icy Sapporo or Ichiban Beer for optimum enjoyment. Cheers!


MOMENTUM

FRANCHIUSA.COM

INTRODUCING THE FRANCHI MOMENTUM RIFLE FLUTED BOLT BODY, 3 LOCKING LUGS

Feels right: like no other rifle before, the Franchi Momentum was created from the ground up on ergonomics, fit and feel. With its 150-year tradition of crafting fine Italian firearms, Franchi knows that when the gun feels right, the day, the camaraderie and the whole outdoor experience will also feel right.

HAMMER-FORGED PRECISION BARREL, THREADED MUZZLE

Features: Contoured stock giving perfect hold in 5 common shooting positions; glass-smooth action; 1-piece bolt body; adjustable trigger (2-4 lbs.); recoil- soaking TSA pad; free-floating, hammer-forged barrel; threaded muzzle.

The Momentum is available as a rifle only or as a scoped package. Available in the following calibers: .243 Win, .270 Win, .30-06, .308 Win, .300 Win Mag & 6.5 Creedmoor.

August 2018 | SPORTSMAN’S NEWS

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Adventures On A Budget

First Shots!

Dove Season Opens Another Eventful Fall for Many Sportsmen

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By John N. Felsher

hile early September temperatures could approach 100 degrees in some states with legal mourning dove hunting, opening day unofficially marks the transition between summer and a new season of fall outdoors adventures. Usually held in September, early dove seasons traditionally open before most other seasons, thus giving many sportsmen their first opportunity to hunt in months. One of the most widespread, popular and numerous game bird in North America, mourning doves can provide intense action in the right place. Extremely swift and agile fliers, doves frequently embarrass even the most skillful wingshots. The streamlined birds can fly faster than 55 miles per hour, but always seem to go much faster. With twisting, erratic flight patterns that any jet fighter pilot would envy, a dove almost seems to anticipate where shot might fly and uncannily dodge the stream. To hunt doves, most people scout for a concentration of birds. Thousands might populate a field one day, but disappear by the next, particularly as hunting pressure increases. Doves usually congregate in agricultural fields, grasslands and savannas dotted by occasional trees, but might also appear on powerlines, forest clearings or food plots made by

50 August 2018 | SPORTSMAN’S NEWS

deer hunters. To find doves, look for the four main things they require – food, cover for safety, water and grit. Food comes easy. Doves mostly eat small seeds such as sunflower, millet, sesame seeds, wheat, corn and many native grass seeds. They may consume their weight in seeds each day. The small birds usually like to pick seeds off bare dirt, but under some leafy canopy cover that can hide them from hawks and other predators is preferred. Sunflowers provide an excellent combination of good food at dirt level plus overhead concealment. “When feeding, a dove likes wide-open bare ground and big clean fields,” advised Vandy Collins, a dove hunter from Faunsdale, Alabama. “I plant corn and sunflowers in different strips around a field and leave some areas with clean dirt. Doves love standing sunflowers with bare ground under them because they can get away from hawks and other birds of prey. If doves get down under those sunflowers, they feel a little more secure in that cover, but they can still find seeds on the bare ground under that canopy.” For decades, most people simply picked a good area along the edge of an agricultural field and hunkered down in cover by a fencerow or tree line to wait for the birds. Many people bring buckets or folding chairs to make the wait more comfortable. Sometimes, whole families bring food and refreshments with them to make a picnic of the hunt. In recent years, more dove hunters began taking tips from waterfowlers by placing decoys to attract the birds. As with ducks, doves typically feed at first light, usually arriv-


ZEISS Conquest V6 Riflescope The new precision scope for wide-open pursuits. Made in Germany for the rugged demands of any hunting or shooting style, the new Conquest V6 with 6x zoom, 30mm center-tube and up to 103 MOA elevation adjustment is engineered to reach beyond expectations. ZEISS FL (Fluoride) Glass, enhanced T* lens coatings and LotuTec ÂŽ protective coating provide industry-leading resolution and shooter accuracy. Three models: 1-6x24 / 3-18x50 / 5-30x50. Available with new ballistic turret and ballistic reticles ZMOA and ZBR for long-distance hunting or shooting. Protected by the ZEISS 5-Year No Fault Policy and Limited Lifetime Transferable Warranty. www.zeiss.com/ConquestV6

August 2018 | SPORTSMAN’S NEWS

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Adventures On A Budget ing in the fields before daylight. For a morning hunt, try to locate where birds want to feed and place some decoys. Just like in waterfowl hunting, decoys help bring the birds in close and make them slow down for a landing among their brethren. Sportsmen can stick some decoys on fences or branches to give birds an illusion of safety, particularly in a large area with heavy pressure. “Like ducks, doves stay in groups because there’s safety in numbers,” explained Mike Morgan, a hunter from Florence, Miss. with Mojo Outdoors. “If they see birds moving in one area, they figure that’s a safe place, so they go to that area. People can clip dove decoys on a barbwire fence or tree branch. Some people might even put up a string of decoys, maybe eight to 16 static ones.” Where legal, some dove hunters place spinning wing decoys on poles above the ground to simulate a bird landing to feed. The spinning wings create a strobe effect that looks like wings flapping. When feeding, doves normally congregate in numbers. Lonely doves might see the wing flash from miles away and come to investigate. “We use a lot of spinning-wing decoys for dove hunting,” said Levi Howell, a guide with the Pintail Hunting Club (979-966-7732, pintailhuntingclub.com) in Garwood, Texas. “Sometimes, doves almost land right on top of the decoys. We put them where we want to shoot the doves.” Do not place spinning wing decoys directly in front of a hunter. The motion of the decoys will focus a bird’s attention. Place the motion decoys facing into the wind about 20 to 30 yards off to the side, forcing birds to look in that direction and away from the hunter. Doves feeding on the ground typically gather in a circle, so they can watch for danger coming from every direction so place a few static dove decoys to simulate feeding birds. Add a few more in low bushes, fences or other places to mimic lookouts. “Spinning-wing decoys have always been about attracting birds from a distance that would otherwise never see the spread,” instructed Terry D. Denmon with Mojo Outdoors (www.mojooutdoors.com) in Monroe, La. “In most places, doves come in from multiple directions. If we want to shoot doves at 25 yards, we put a spinning decoy out 25 yards. I usually add about a dozen static decoys around the spinning-wing decoy. I place them in about a 10- to 15-yard circle as if they are feeding. If I’m sitting on a fencerow or tree line, I’ll scatter a few static decoys up and down the line.” After feeding for a while, the full, happy and content birds look for a place to rest and digest. While “nooning,” they perch in tall trees, electrical wires or other places that give them a good vantage point for spotting any danger. Frequently, other doves join birds on a high line. They might stay in their nooning area for most of the day unless something disturbs them. To provide good perches for doves, some people install mock telephone poles and string dummy powerlines between them next to their dove hunting fields. To place doves on such phony phone wires, sportsmen use old-fashioned push-buttoned spin-casting rod and reel outfits. Rather than a tempting bass lure, they “bait” each fishing rod with a dove decoy. Toss the decoy over the line and reel it back up to it. Try to make the decoy look as much as possible like a live dove perching on the wire, exactly what birds expect to see. However, even if the decoy sits a little crooked, the silhouette of it might still attract birds from long distances. A little breeze creates some movement that completes the illusion as long as the decoy doesn’t swing like a pendulum. Sportsmen might want to add a few more decoys beneath the wires to mimic birds feeding on the ground. People can also use this technique to place dove decoys over high tree

52 August 2018 | SPORTSMAN’S NEWS

branches or other places where the birds might hope to spot their cousins, BUT NEVER TRY THIS WITH ACTIVE ELECTRICAL WIRES! “Doves commit when they see that decoy on the wire,” Collins detailed. “At a distance, it looks like a dove sitting on a wire. When doves see that decoy on that wire, they just come right to it. Some people might put eight to 10 decoys on the line between the poles. That will simulate a lot of doves on the wire. When the wind blows, the doves on the wire move a little and that makes them look alive.” After nooning for a few hours, birds might want to feed again in late afternoon. With no teeth, the birds cannot chew their food and must swallow seeds whole. To break up hard, rough seeds, doves also swallow small pieces of gravel or sand. Sportsmen might spot them “dusting” around grit piles or sandy patches, making such places good areas to set a few decoys in the afternoon. Before sundown, birds usually seek water again. They must drink water every day to help digest the seeds they consume. In late afternoon, doves generally congregate around shallow streams, stock tanks or ponds where they can drink. Ponds with sandy or gravel shorelines also give them opportunities to swallow grit. A small bird like a dove does not need to visit Lake Michigan to get water. Just a tire rut filled with water in a gravel or dirt road could suffice in an arid area. When going to water, birds fearful of bobcats, foxes, raptors and many other predators typically don’t go directly down for a drink. They normally find a high vantage place to perch for a while to look for predators before dropping to the ground. Hunters looking for more active, adrenaline-pumping excitement might try jumping doves. Almost like quail hunting, but without the dogs pointing coveys for them, hunters walk along tree lines, fencerows, through low brushy savannas or high grasslands to flush birds from cover. The birds habitually flush only when necessary. Their broad, elliptical wings make a distinctive fluttering clatter, instantly alerting hunters to the action. Sometimes, several people might spread out a safe distance from each other to scour an area for birds. Occasionally, doves only fly short distances after flushing to land in high trees. Lucky hunters might possibly jump them again. When flushing doves, use a light, fast shotgun with a modified or improved cylinder choke loaded with number 7.5 or 8 shot. In many states, sportsmen can also hunt Eurasian collared doves and white-winged doves. Native to Asia, Eurasian collared doves arrived in Florida in the 1980s and spread across the continent from there. Much larger than mourning doves, collared doves sport their namesake black bands around their necks. Native to the southwestern United States, Mexico and Central America, white-winged doves began expanding their range northward and eastward in recent years. Now, the birds with the distinctive white wing patches occupy fields from Kansas to Florida. Many states set long seasons with liberal limits, but after the opening weekend enthusiasm fades, many sportsmen forget about doves as other seasons begin. Therefore, some of the best dove action occurs in late season, particularly in the Southern states. As cold fronts hit, birds migrate southward, augmenting resident populations. In late season, sportsmen might even find themselves alone on the best fields as hunters shift their focus to other game. With the potential for incredible shooting in the right place, hunting these challenging game birds provides an excellent way to introduce children to the outdoors. And, dove hunting is one of the most cost-effective activities that you can take part in. Light game loads can be found at your local Sportsman’s Warehouse for under $6 per box and just about any shotgun you may have at your disposal will do the job. Just remember one thing – if you do venture out to pursue these little devils starting next month, make sure you take along plenty of ammo, just in case your early season skills need a little refining!


August 2018 | SPORTSMAN’S NEWS

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Elk Stalking for Rookies By Lee Ann Alexander

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ll my life I remember my Dad dreaming of elk stalks out West. Some would call it a bucket list trip, but for our working-class family in the piney woods of Louisiana, elks in the Rockies may as well have been leprechauns in Ireland, or at least red stags in Austria. It was one of those things we would do someday, right up there with the Calgary Stampede rodeo and snow skiing. We would get to it. Someday. And then Dad turned sixty and retired after forty-two years of slinging wrenches and leading crews. He had me set up a winter trip to Wisconsin to try snow skiing, a monumental fail in skiing but a trophy in memories. Next he and Mom went to Canada for the Calgary Stampede. That’s when the hunt for an elk hunt began in earnest. True to his dream, Dad set up a hunt in southern Colorado for him, me, my brother, and our cousin with all the spouses coming along to have a family reunion of sorts since hundreds of miles separate us all. The fourteen months after I mailed the check straggled by slowly, but we filled the time with that joy of preparation hunters understand. After years of only the occasional tag-along on a deer hunt, I realized I had almost no trigger time and not a thread of camouflage in my closet. The shopping came easy, and even the marksmanship training was enjoyable. On countless calls we speculated on the terrain and weather, and even my brother joined in the camaraderie by sending diagrams of elk anatomy complete with crosshair marks. When we finally descended on the lodge, emotions ran high and that giddy camp talk sauntered late into the night. It was disappointing then when the herd we had glassed in a valley the evening before turned out to be all cows on opening morning. The evening hunt seemed unproductive too until our guide spotted a herd with at least two bulls grazing on a steep ridge across a canyon. We quickly surmised we had no hope of getting to them before sundown, but confident we had their location pegged, we began day two by splitting up. Dad and I walked the northern ridge, and my brother and cousin took the long walk to the southern ridge. The plan was simple: walk along the ridge until we got eyes on the herd in the valley between us. In old military terminology, we would open an enfilade like shooting fish in a barrel. The elk did not understand the plan. Or maybe they did and that was the trouble. What I do know is that ten minutes into our moderate hike, our guide Antonio hissed, “Freeze!” I craned my neck at the seemingly empty draw below and the nondescript rocks and junipers dotting the opposing ridge. Antonio stood stock still, giant binoculars pressed to his eyes. “Oh no,” he whispered, “they are headed right to him!” “What is it?” Dad whispered back. “Put your glasses on that giant rock at the top of the ridge,” he directed. “Now go down three stands of juniper and over to the small opening. See him?” I followed his directions meticulously and squinted at the unremarkable tawny splotches,

54 August 2018 | SPORTSMAN’S NEWS

Sportsman’s News Outdoor Writing Contest Finalist See pg. 4 for entry details.

until one such tawny splotch moved. He genuinely took my breath. He seemed every bit the bull the Rocky Mountain Elk Foundation logo has made immortal. Brow tines rose far over his muzzle and whale tails kicked out over his back. “He’s watching them!” Antonio groaned and eased his phone to his ear to try to warn our partners. With their phones on silent, they unknowingly snaked their way toward the bull, his head turning almost imperceptibly to follow their movements. When they reached the point he deemed trespassing, he spun and cantered west, the herd with him. Elk rookie or not, I knew their flight was bad news, and I felt the group’s emotions plummet. It was a long ride back to the lodge. Had the herd spooked so badly they were in another county? Would they return to the draw at evening? The afternoon sun found us circling the draw again, but this time casting a much wider net. Dad and I were opposite the ridge we’d last seen them while the other group began far to the south, walking toward us with the hopes of getting a shot or at least jumping them our way. My perch was picturesque, and I couldn’t help but admire what a perfect picnic spot it would make any other day. As it was, I pulled together deadwood and made a ground blind before checking several points along the ridge with my rangefinder. The afternoon drug on with Dad heading back to the eastern edge of the ridge and restless Antonio working back and forth along the ridge. And then I heard it. The taletell clap made my head pop up. I whispered a prayer it would be our guys and stared all the harder at the ridge. Minutes drug on before Antonio called softly behind me, “Your brother got one.” Antonio smiled as I folded my hands and mouthed a genuine thanks heavenward. With the sun sliding down and leaving a lavender haze at the edge of the ridge, Antonio announced, “Let’s head back to the water tower. The guys think they might have pushed them that way.” I swung my rifle and shooting sticks to my shoulder and hustled to keep up with Antonio’s long stride. I was so busy trying to keep my feet under me at a half-jog, I almost didn’t hear Antonio’s command, “Get down!” I looked up to see him dropped to a crouch and instinctively did the same. I threw my sticks into place and rolled the scope wide to start scanning the ridge for whatever he had spotted. Every nerve pulsated, and I struggled to hear him over the pounding of my heartbeat in my ears. “A little bull is out front with a couple cows,” he whispered. I swung the .300 until I picked him up. He was in a break between the junipers at the top of the ridge around the 250-yard range I had measured earlier. All visions of bagging a mammoth were gone; I wanted an elk, and the glint of a little horn was all the invitation I needed. “Can I shoot him?” I asked breathlessly.


Antonio turned tortured eyes to me. I felt his desperation to see our family celebrate a kill collide with the wisdom of a sportsman as he whispered, “Let’s wait and see if there’s another one.” As hunting stories go, it felt like an eternity. I watched the cows pass my providential shooting lane and was scanning the ridge when Antonio announced, “There’s a shooter! Take him!” I swung the crosshairs back to the lane just as he walked into frame. Instinctively I locked on his shoulder where those diagrams advised, let out a breath, and squeezed on the trigger. The rifle jumped and I shook my head to clear my ringing ears and blurred vision before looking back in the scope to see the bull spin and dart behind junipers. My gut twisted as I threw the bolt and exclaimed, “I can’t believe I missed! I rushed the shot!” I swung the scope frantically trying to spot him when an explosion of snaps and pops brought my head up from the scope and to Antonio. He dropped his glasses and beamed, “You got him!” Antonio slapped five and was off, leaving me pacing the rocks and offering up prayers. Dad appeared seconds later, breathless, and eyes full of questions. “I think I got one,” I wheezed, and he was off toward the ridge now shrouded in darkness. “We got him,” Antonio yelled down minutes later, and I ran on adrenaline across the draw and scampered up the rock-strewn ridge. Somewhere near three hours later we pulled up to the lodge with two bulls—the modest 5x5 I took and the stout 5x6 my brother stalked. Mom and the girls piled out of the lodge with cameras, flashlights, and the insistence we eat before beginning the long night of meat cleaning. My favorite moment? Maybe it was the way Dad’s voice broke as he gave thanks for our good day before we ate and started to work. Maybe it was the emotion as he clapped Antonio’s shoulder at the sight of me and my brother standing over bulls taken minutes apart, somehow happier than if he’d taken one himself. Maybe it was those two hours Dad and I sat on the ridge with my bull, waiting for the truck, watching those outrageously bright stars, retelling the story, and thinking of all the people back home who would be excited. What I do know is each of those moments burrowed down in a place in my heart. Experts say the average adult forgets at least three things a day. These moments risk no danger of that for me.

August 2018 | SPORTSMAN’S NEWS

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56 August 2018 | SPORTSMAN’S NEWS


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