Cleveland Hunts Lead

The Hunts of President Grover Cleveland

Grover Cleveland is remembered by most Americans as the only president to serve two non-consecutive terms, but along with Teddy Roosevelt he also was a president who hunted. Before Roosevelt, Cleveland set aside millions of acres of Western habitat for public use.

The Mississippi Diversion

A coon hunt in the Deep South leads the author to reminisce about his youth in the Northeast, his first coon dog and more.

How to Hunt Turkeys in Any Weather

Unpredictable weather is something spring turkey hunters know all too well. Use these tactics to improve your odds of bagging a bird come rain or shine, or snow or wind for that matter.

Hunters May Soon Get Grizzly Bear Tags in the Greater Yellowstone Area

Earlier this month, the USFWS announced that after 41 years of Endangered Species Act protection, the grizzly bear population in the Greater Yellowstone Area has recovered, prompting it to delist the iconic species and turn over its management to the states.

The Animal Time Forgot

The author wanted no part of a muskox hunt in temperatures below zero. But in Greenland, she learned she could almost hunt in her shorts.

Green Energy Backfires on Ducks and Upland Birds

It seems America's "green energy" policy has already proven disastrous for prairie habitats, and the mainstream media is finally catching on.

Memorable Misses

Every hunter blows an occasional shot on game. It’s the unexplained misses that keep us up at night.

Of Windmills and Wildlife

If wind farms get contracts to build on large tracts of federal lands, could public areas become de facto no-hunting areas?

Climate Change and Hunting

FWS' Tells Hunters What We Can Do; Some Do Their Part

Of Meat and Global Warming

A tax on meat would help prevent future global-warming-related natural disasters by encouraging a decrease in meat consumption.” Ingrid Newkirk, PETA President

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