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# Monday, January 19, 2009
Video: Boxing Bucks
Posted by DDH Staff

Boxing isn't just for kangaroos anymore.



bucksboxing1.mpg (3.46 MB)


Monday, January 19, 2009 5:29:15 PM (GMT Standard Time, UTC+00:00)  #  Comments [2]
SHOT Show Signals Start of Good Year
Posted by DDH Staff

The DDH staff returned today from the SHOT (shooting, hunting and outdoor trade show) Show down in Orlando. By all accounts, the journey was well worth it, although the staff's feet are still aching from the miles of booths visited (no really, miles).

The NSSF (National Shooting Sports Foundation), which hosted the event, is predicting a great year for the outdoors industry. Here's what it had to say:


ORLANDO, Fla. -- Buyers, exhibitors and media from around the globe flocked to Orlando for the shooting, hunting and outdoor industry's largest trade show, the National Shooting Sports Foundation's SHOT Show. 

Though many trade shows have seen a decline in attendance, SHOT Show attendance remained strong this year, rising 3 percent when compared to its last visit to Orlando in 2007. According to preliminary figures, this year's show attracted 25,384 attendees, 22,098 exhibiting personnel and a record 1,425 members of the media for a total attendance of 48,907. 

"This has been a tremendously successful show from a number of standpoints," said NSSF President Steve Sanetti. "Exhibitors and buyers were very upbeat, the products sold well, and I'd say the industry begins 2009 with a sense of cautious optimism in this challenging economy." 

The show, held Jan. 15-18 at Orlando's Orange County Convention Center, comprised 715,000 square feet of exhibit space, with 1,800 exhibiting companies. 

Business was brisk on the floor throughout the show, according to exhibiting companies and retailers. 

"It's been a good show, and, in fact, it's been above my expectations," said Phil Murray of Houston-based clay target maker White Flyer. "It's really exciting to see so many people being so positive about the industry. It is very encouraging for the rest of the year." 

Not only was total attendance up from the last Orlando show, but the number of buyers increased 5 percent. 

"Our meeting rooms were booked, and the quality of the buyers at the show was very good. We saw good volume in our law enforcement booths, and we're very pleased with the media turnout," said Al Russo of Remington Arms Co. 

First-time buyers were impressed with the new products and the size of the show. 

"I came to see what was new, and I absolutely have," said Bruno Leone, salesman at Aflaherty's Outdoor Store in Toronto, Canada.  "I have been impressed with the new camo patterns and with some of the innovation in rifles that I have seen. I never was at a SHOT Show before, and I am awed by the size of the show and the number of people in attendance. The concentrated energy of the industry is exciting to witness." 

High-tech rifles and handguns have seen a recent jump in sales heading into 2009. 

"It's been a good show," said Scott Grange of Browning. "With all of the interest in high-tech arms, it good to see that the interest in our over/under shotguns was also up. The SHOT Show specials we laid out for retailers were very well received. The success here has helped position us for the expected upturn in the economy." 

New products highlight the show's offerings each year, which is one reason attendees say the show is always a can't-miss event. 

"The most important reason for anyone to come to the SHOT Show is to see the latest and greatest," said Ken Jorgensen of Sturm, Ruger & Co. "They're going to see the new products that they may not hear or read about for weeks or months." 

The SHOT Show, owned and sponsored by the National Shooting Sports Foundation (NSSF), is the world's largest showcase of firearms, hunting and outdoor products. It provides a forum like no other for the industry to show off its newest products that will adorn the shelves of gun and sporting goods shops in the coming year.
 
Revenue raised at the SHOT Show funds NSSF's many programs and services that promote, protect and preserve hunting and the shooting sports.
 



Monday, January 19, 2009 5:20:03 PM (GMT Standard Time, UTC+00:00)  #  Comments [0]
# Monday, January 12, 2009
Mule Deer has In-Grown Antlers
Posted by DDH Staff

This rack goes beyond atypical into a category all its own. The mule deer was harvested in North Dakota.
















Monday, January 12, 2009 10:12:05 PM (GMT Standard Time, UTC+00:00)  #  Comments [2]
# Thursday, January 08, 2009
Can You Spot the Albino Deer?
Posted by DDH Staff

I (Ben Sobieck, your friendly DDH administrator) received these photos via e-mail from an acquaintance in Minnesota. Whether the images are actually from Minnesota is unknown, as are who took them. The e-mail was a forward of a forward. Once I know more details, I'll let you know.

The pics are interesting regardless. The albino deer is a bit hard to find in some shots. It blends into the snow really well, like a "Where's Waldo" for deer hunters. Can you spot it?


















Thursday, January 08, 2009 3:38:22 PM (GMT Standard Time, UTC+00:00)  #  Comments [1]
# Monday, January 05, 2009
Wisconsin Hunters Tell of Perilous Canada Trip
Posted by DDH Staff

Source: Wausau Daily Herald

KENORA, Ontario — Two central Wisconsin hunters say they were harassed, shot at and feared for their lives while pursuing trophy bucks in the Canadian wilderness.

"We were scared," said Rick Koenig, 60, of Wausau. "I've never had anything like that happen to me before. I won't go back. That was a little too much for me."

Koenig, along with his son, Brad, 31, of Wausau, son-law Chris Laska, 28, of Dale in Outagamie County, and Dennis Webb of Edgar, traveled to the Kenora area in northwestern Ontario at the end of October.

Deer hunters from the United States have traveled to portions of Manitoba and Saskatchewan in search of trophy whitetail bucks for several decades, but in recent years, northwestern Ontario has become popular. Wisconsin hunters are attracted to the region because it is within relatively easy driving distance.

"I shot a really nice buck in the Kenora area two years ago, and my cousin went to the same area last year and got a nice buck," Rick said. "We didn't have any problems."

The quartet spent their first day in Ontario this year scouting public "crown lands" for likely hunting spots, he said.

"We had parked along the road and when we got back to the truck, a car pulled up in front of us and another pulled up in back. They parked us in. A guy got out, shook his finger at us and said we couldn't park there.

"We said 'OK' and the next day — we had another vehicle — we parked way off the road in a ditch about a quarter mile away. When we got back to the car we found a note on it that read, 'Get this (expletive) car out of here.' "

Wanting to avoid conflict, Koenig said his group opted to move their hunting efforts nearer the Manitoba border about 50 miles from their motel.

"We had a four-wheel ATV along and took it about 3-4 miles down a trail we found," he said. "It looked like an old logging road or trapper's trail. We came to a beaver pond with fingers of land between rocky cliffs and water. There were buck rubbings, on trees, the size of your thighs. We split up and took stands.

"All of a sudden, there was a round of shots — bing, bing, bing, bing, bing. It was a .22 rifle. At first, we didn't think anything of it. We hadn't seen anyone and we were dressed in blaze orange. Then one of the shots whizzed over our heads ... and we said, 'Let's get out of here.'

"I moved as we started to leave and a shot hit right where I had been sitting. That really shook us up. There would be a round of shots, then silence as the guy apparently reloaded. Then the shooting would start again."

Koenig wanted to fire a round from his deer rifle into the air to let the hidden shooter know he was firing in the direction of people but Laska quickly talked him out of it.

"He'll think we're shooting back at him," Laska pointed out.

In all, 40-50 shots were probably fired, the two men said, with bullets "hitting the ground, rocks and trees all around us."

"In blaze orange, it's pretty hard to hide," Laska said. "I hollered, 'Hey, there are hunters in here! Quit shooting!' But the shots kept getting closer. Finally, I yelled, 'Please stop shooting at us. We'll get out of here.'

"I was laying on the ground with my GPS trying to figure out the closest way to get back to our ATV. We took off running. The guy didn't shoot again."

The two men reported the incidents to local officials of the Ontario Provincial Police. Koenig said they later heard reports of other incidents where hunters had been physically chased from the woods or had tires slashed.

"I think it's important that people know it's not the wonderful place it used to be," Laska said. "I don't know if people don't want foreign hunters in their hunting areas ... or what the problem is."

Colleen Ross, owner of the Kenora Inn Motel where the Wisconsin hunters stayed, said this is the first year hunters have complained of problems gaining access to public hunting lands.

"I think some (local) people have this idea that if you are from out of the country you ought to have a guide or tourist outfitter with you," she said. "If you don't, they feel it's taking money out of their pocket."

Laska said a police official suggested the shooting incident may have been an encounter with a hermit who didn't want anyone in his neighborhood.

Constable David Lovell of the Ontario Provincial Police said there have been minor incidents involving other hunters "but Americans are not being harassed more than anyone else."

He said the most common disputes involve hunters from outside the area hunting on land that is not open to public hunting or hunting public land where other hunters "feel the area is theirs."

Joan Hubay, enforcement supervisor of the Kenora Ministry of Natural Resources enforcement unit, said there has been an increase in complaints caused by "conflict between hunters and hunter ethics.

"In general, it's hunters targeting the rut and being concentrated in a short period of time. They're all trying to get the best areas to hunt and they're stepping on each other's toes."

Problems have grown in recent years as deer hunting's popularity has increased, she said, adding that the conflict involves residents versus residents as well as non-residents. Although there is plenty of public land, the favorite areas for hunting typically have relatively easy access, she noted.

Laska said he's not ready to abandon Ontario deer hunting.

"I'd love to go back," he said, "but I probably won't go to the same area."



Monday, January 05, 2009 7:52:03 PM (GMT Standard Time, UTC+00:00)  #  Comments [1]
# Friday, January 02, 2009
Youngsters Turn Out in Droves for New NY License
Posted by DDH Staff

Source: www.newsday.com

ALBANY, N.Y. - Conservation officials say more than 15,000 youngsters got licenses this year to hunt deer and bear in New York.

New York's new law, meant to help reverse a decline in the numbers of hunters and increasing numbers of deer, allows teens ages 14 and 15 to hunt big game with a firearm when supervised by an experienced adult hunter. Previously, children 12 to 16 could hunt small game with a gun or longbow, and 14- and 15-year-olds could shoot big game with a bow.

Preliminary Department of Environmental Conservation reports show the new licensees killed almost 3,700 deer in 2008.

The agency says hunters took more than 217,000 deer in 2008, approaching the 219,000 killed last year. They killed almost 1,150 bears this year, compared with about 1,100 in 2007 and almost 800 in 2006.



Friday, January 02, 2009 7:58:56 PM (GMT Standard Time, UTC+00:00)  #  Comments [1]
# Tuesday, December 23, 2008
"Scruffy" Deer Decoy Nabs Roadkill Poacher
Posted by DDH Staff

Source: Oregon Mail Tribune

Police say a Wasco County man tried to reap his own personal bumper crop of mule deer, but instead ended up sowing the latest set of misdemeanor charges for targeting a decoy deer.

Brian LaFaver allegedly rammed "Scruffy," Oregon State Police's decoy deer, with his pickup off a Forest Service road during a Wildlife Enforcement Decoy operation Dec. 7 in southern Wasco County.

The impact sent the decoy flying 12 feet, severely damaging the decoy named for its bullet-tattered hide from past poaching cases, police said.

LaFaver, 34, of Tygh Valley, was cited on charges of unlawful take of a deer in closed season and second-degree criminal mischief for damaging the decoy, police said.

LaFaver, who had his wife and two small children in the pickup, also was cited for driving without a valid operator's license.

Investigators believe it was the second time someone has tried to turn Scruffy into roadkill, but ended up in court.

"I think we charged the guy with criminal mischief in that one, too," says Lt. David Cleary, who supervises wildlife enforcement for OSP's Fish and Wildlife Enforcement Division.

"It's not real common, that's for sure," Cleary says.

Troopers were in the Rock Creek/Wamic area of the northeast Oregon county on Dec. 7 after several large bucks had been poached there recently, with only their heads or antlers removed and the carcasses left to rot, OSP said.

The decoy was placed about 30 feet off a Forest Service roadway in a clearing that included some trees, police said.

LaFaver, who told police he was Christmas tree hunting, allegedly drove the pickup off the road and through a ditch before ramming the decoy, OSP Senior Trooper Swede Pearson says.

"Sitting there watching it, I'm thinking, 'Is he going to do it? I think he is. Yep, there he goes,' " Pearson says.

The impact knocked Scruffy's antlers off and broke two of its legs, Pearson says.

Pearson says LaFaver told him at the scene that he was not trying to hit the decoy. LaFaver claimed he thought it was a real deer and wanted his kids to get a closer look at it, Pearson says.

Reached by telephone at his home, LaFaver said he had no comment this week about the case and hung up.

LaFaver was set to appear Monday in Wasco County Circuit Circuit Court on the misdemeanor charges, records show.



Source: Oregon Mail Tribune


Tuesday, December 23, 2008 3:49:00 PM (GMT Standard Time, UTC+00:00)  #  Comments [1]
# Monday, December 22, 2008
Dual Bond sabot slug review
Posted by DDH Staff



Submitted by Jim Schlender, publisher


This nasty-looking thing is Winchester Ammunition’s latest entry in the lighter/faster sabot slug wars: the Dual Bond. I got a sneak peek at it during a recent hunt in Alabama but, alas, missed my opportunity to try it out on a deer. The Dual Bond will be offered in time for next deer season as part of the company’s Supreme Elite line. It will be available in 23/4- and 3-inch versions in both 12 and 20 gauge. The 12-gauge slug weighs 375 grains and the 20 weighs 260 grains.

Think of the “Dual Bond” design as a bullet within a bullet; it’s a basic hollow point design but with a heavy outer jacket to protect the inner bullet as it penetrates hide and bone. As the slug penetrates, both parts expand, creating 12 petals instead of six and, presumably, creating an indescribable mess of any deer’s insides.

This slug is so new that I don’t have official velocity numbers from the factory, but I believe it will be around 1,900 fps in the 3-inch, 12-gauge version.
The Dual Bond bullet will also be available in large-bore handgun calibers. The 260-grain slug will be used in the 454 Casull and 460 S&W Mag, while the 375-grain bullet is used in the 500 S&W Mag.

Jonathan Harling, who handles public relations for Winchester, introduced me to the new slugs, and we went to the range together to sight them in using a Knight KP1 with the 12-gauge slug barrel.

Harling only had a precious handful of the new shells, which I’m sure he had to wrestle away from an engineer at Winchester headquarters. So I got on the paper using Winchester RackMaster slugs, then switched over to our small supply of Dual Bond shells. I put three shots into a 2-inch group at 100 yards, which is outstanding accuracy for any combination of shotgun barrel and slug. The impact difference between the two types of slugs was negligible, so I was ready to hunt.

I wish I had a pretty picture of a slug recovered from a deer, but the mature doe I missed in the waning light of my last evening in Alabama is still running around somewhere unscathed. She was at about 120 yards, and I think I subconsciously held a little high and sent the slug right over her back. I was hoping for a shoulder hit so I could see how the slug performed. Guess it’s hard for me to get used to slugs that fly more like centerfire bullets than big, heavy chunks of lead.

Oh well, for now all I can say is that it looks great on paper. By this time next year we’ll all know how the new Dual Bond products are performing for the legions of deer hunters who use shotguns.




Monday, December 22, 2008 5:22:09 PM (GMT Standard Time, UTC+00:00)  #  Comments [1]
A New Way to Rattle
Posted by DDH Staff

Submitted by Jim Schlender, publisher

Honestly, how do you come up with a new way to rattle? More than 25 years ago when rattling a set of antlers together to call deer caught on, we used the real thing. Then we graduated to synthetic “rattling horns.” Then came the still-popular rattle boxes and rattling bags. Done, right? Well, not so fast.

On a recent hunt in Alabama, Knight & Hale Game Calls’ engineering manager Greg Burcham told me he wanted to show me a new rattling system he’d patented. I was prepared to be underwhelmed, but after playing around with the company’s new-for-2009 Pack Rack for couple minutes, all I could say was this: Cool!

The Rack Pack comprises two pieces of a super-tough polymer. With the halves nested together, the Rack Pack is completely silent and takes up no more space in your pack than a softball. Pull the two halves apart, grab the handles and you’re ready to rattle. Look at the pictures and you’ll get the idea.

What’s really neat about the Rack Pack is how easy it is to change the tone and volume. Grip the halves tightly with cupped hands and crack them together to produce the sounds of large, heavy antlers. Loosen your grip and gently clink the ridged half against the rounded half and you can imitate the sounds of light sparring.

Burcham said it took a lot of trial and error to come up with the consistency of polymer that would make the most realistic sounds, but finally he was satisfied. I think it’s safe to say that if you like to rattle, you too will be pleased with his effort.







Monday, December 22, 2008 5:15:49 PM (GMT Standard Time, UTC+00:00)  #  Comments [1]
"Ironic" Hunt Yields Success
Posted by DDH Staff

Submitted by Jim Schlender, publisher

I had to laugh at the irony. The last time I’d hunted with a Knight KP1 muzzleloader it was 26 degrees with 25 mph winds and a steady rain that froze everything it touched, including me. That was in Iowa. Now, a year later, I was sitting comfortably in a shooting house in southwestern Alabama, watching a food plot. Temp: a balmy 60. Wind: none. Sunshine: bright. Ah, yes, I thought. I could get used to this.

I was enjoying my low-stress hunt on property leased by The Shed Hunting Lodge (www.shedhuntinglodge.com). Shed owners Larry Norton (of champion turkey calling fame), Gray Mosley and Henri Billiot have 10,000 acres of great deer and turkey habitat available for their guests. I’d come to The Shed along with several industry writers and photographers to review new products from Knight and its sister companies Knight & Hale Game Calls and Summit Treestands, along with some new ammunition designs from Winchester.

We liked the forecast for the next day even thought it meant an end to our personal comfort. A powerful cold front was coming through, and we hoped it would boost deer activity. Sure enough, that’s what we got. That night we hung four bucks on the camp meatpole.

I shot this bruiser a half-hour before dark. The buck acted like he owned the place, hooking branches as he walked the field edge, and then stopping to paw at a scrape. I was wondering if I would have to try a shot at 180 yards, but finally he started meandering up the hill toward me. When he turned quartering to me at 130 yards, I sent a 285-grain Knight Ultimate Slam bullet on its way.  The Barnes-designed Spitzer Boattail hit just high and behind the shoulder and went all the way through, dropping the buck in his tracks. Norton later aged the 190-pound, goofy-racked deer at 41/2 years old.

I was really excited to finally take a buck with the KP1. In the past year I’ve experimented with its 12-gauge slug barrel, the muzzleloader barrel and the .30-06 barrel, all with good results, but hadn’t had many chances to actually hunt with it. This spring I plan to outfit it with the 12-gauge smoothbore barrel and take it turkey hunting.

I’ll have more product news from this hunt in upcoming posts.






Monday, December 22, 2008 5:12:20 PM (GMT Standard Time, UTC+00:00)  #  Comments [0]