Roughly once per decade a new design changes the archery industry. Did Mathews do it again with its No Cam HTR? Field Editor Jeff Johnston takes a closer look.
Mathews Archery proprietor Matt McPhearson has never stood idly on past merits. He’s a natural innovator, as seen in his once-revolutionary Solo Cam bows that dominated the hunting market for nearly two decades. His company’s new bow, the No Cam, aims to correct perhaps the Solo Cam’s only flaw—notably a relatively new term created by Mathews competitors called nock travel.
Nowadays, you’d be hard pressed to find a hunter unfamiliar with game cameras, if not their use. Like the rise of cell phones among our ranks, serious hunters don’t remember what they did without them.
Archery season is rapidly approaching, and Stealth Cam is trying to help you gear up. The company has recently launched its Ultimate Archery Sweepstakes, which will carry on throughout the summer.
Be their tails white or black, be they donkey-eared with wide crowns or basket-racked desert dwellers, the pursuit of deer across this land is as American as it gets. Here’s a look at the new gear that will get you there, keep you there and, we hope, return home stained a little red.
Well, this is an odd one. Video has surfaced online of a young, 6-point buck "attacking" a New Jersey motorist just moments after being struck by her SUV.
Stealth Cam is inviting its users to submit their trail camera photos of gobblers—and the company is offering plenty of incentive. The Turkey Photo Shootout Contest is backed by over $6,000 in prizes.