Summer 2012 Flushes & Noteworthy Points – The Upland Almanac

Humane Society for Shelter Pets

The National Shooting Sports Foundation reports that Richard Berman has established a group called The Humane Society for Shelter Pets (HSSP). Berman, a longtime opponent of the Humane Society of the United States (HSUS), an anti-hunting group that erroneously claims to support local animal shelters, established his group to counter the efforts of the HSUS. While working at an animal shelter in California, Berman states he tried to enlist the support of the HSUS to put an end to national groups whose TV ads were confusing individual donors who thought their money would be used for their local shelters.

“Instead, the powers that be at HSUS decided to copy the TV ads. So, here I am, years later, still convinced that the confusion needs to be addressed,” Berman says.

The HSSP will work to educate Americans about the need to support local pet shelters as well as address the misperception that national animal charities work locally. The HSSP is a non-profit charitable organization dedicated to fostering a broad base of support for America’s local pet shelters and humane societies.

For more information: www.humaneforpets.com.

Speaking of the HSUS …

In an odd twist of trying to gain control ofAmerica’s stomachs, the Humane Society of the U.S.has purchased stock in the Hardee’s and Carl’s Jr. restaurant chains. It appears the country’s leading animal rights organization purchased the shares to leverage and promote its animal welfare agenda … and again try to force its agenda onto all Americans.

According to a story on the HSUS website, they purchased stock in Apollo Global (Hardee’s parent company) with the hope of forcing CKE Restaurants, operator of the Hardee’s and Carl’s Jr. restaurant chains, to meet HSUS animal treatment standards in its supply chain. There are more than 3,000 Hardee’s and Carl’s Jr. restaurants across America.

HSUS intends to stop Hardees from purchasing eggs from caged hens and pork from systems that confine breeding pigs to gestation crates.

Odd Birds

The Rolling Plains Quail Research Ranch (RPQRR) is asking quail hunters to keep their eyes open for any “weird quail” that may offer clues as to what’s going on with Texas’ quail population.

“We’re asking hunters to report any observations of strange acting quail, or ideally any recent carcasses of sick or dead quail,” says Dr. Dale Rollins, RPQRR’s Director. “Several specimens have been submitted, and these samples may indeed be ‘witnesses to the crime,’ so we’re acutely interested in having such birds examined.”

Hunters who encounter sick quail are asked to contact Dr. Rollins at 325-650-0311, or e-mail him at d-rollins@tamu.edu.

Calling All Women Hunters

The NRA Women on Target Hunt will be held from Oct. 19-21 , 2012, at the Oak Creek Sporting Club in Brainard, Neb. The hunt will be limited to 24 participants for ladies of all levels of experience, with a focus on providing new shooters with a safe and informative experience.

The cost for the event is $350 and includes safety orientation, sporting clays, five-stand, and trap warm-ups; two half-days of hunting for pheasant and chukars; licenses, bird cleaning and packaging; and all meals. What better way to spend a weekend than working pointers and retrievers across 1,500 acres of prime habitat? For more information contact NRA Field Hunt Coordinator Barb Kolodge at Bkolodge627@msn.com or 218-729-5448.

Michiganders to the Rescue

With help from grants received from the Ruffed Grouse Society (RGS), members of the society’s Robert J. Lytle Chapter are embarking on a three-year habitat improvement project that is designed to improve the Deford State Game Area in Tuscola County, Mich.

According to chapter spokesman John Paige, the project seeks to improve the quality of the area’s woodcock singing grounds. “In year one, we propose to mow up to 21.8 acres; in year two, approximately 15.2 acres; and in year three, 22.3 acres. Once cleared, these openings can provide quality singing and roosting habitat for breeding woodcock for years to come if they are mowed on a rotational basis at least every three years.”

The Cass City Field Office of Michigan’s Department of Natural Resources (DNR) is a large proponent of the plan. After the initial mowing, the DNR will work with RGS to maintain the openings. For more information, contact John Paige at jhpaige@chartermi.net.

Both participants in and guides for a recent bird hunt at Primland Lodge in Virginia had a chance to see an intriguing gun in action and to test shoot it if they wanted. Steve Comus, Director of Publications for Safari Club International, unsheathed his 12-gauge French-made Darne shotgun with its unique sliding breech action. In 1897, Regis Darne, a gunsmith from St. Etienne started producing guns with this action. Comus figured his gun was about 100 years old. (Photo/Tailfeather Communications, LLC.)

Strong Holiday Gun Sales Continue Well into the New Year

Reports from around the globe reflect an increase in gun sales. According to USA Today, gun dealers submitted nearly half a million names for background checks in the six days prior to Christmas. From January through November 2011, the FBI processed 14.6 million checks, an increase of 70 percent over 2003 numbers.

According to the National Shooting Sports Foundation (NSSF), 180,000 Americans are employed in the firearms and ammunition industry, which does $4 billion of business per year. Of importance is the fact that contrary to other business sectors that are struggling, the demand for fund has continued growing since 2008.

At the January 2012 Shooting, Hunting, and Outdoor Trade Show (SHOT), overall attendance records were set. NSSF reports more than 61,000 attendees, of which 36,383 were buyers and 2,466 were media, gathered at the Sands Expo and Convention Center in Las Vegas. Industry professionals represented 50 states and 100 countries.

While many hunters and shooters welcome firearms as presents, some critics add a level of caution. “I’m bothered by, especially at the holiday time, how many people think that these things (guns) ought to be holiday gifts, said Toby Hoover, executive direct of the Ohio Coalition Against Gun Violence. “Firearms and weapons don’t seem to go with holidays and peacefulness to me. I think we have a problem.”

“L.L.Bean Bootmobile” Hits the Road in Celebration of 100 Years in the Outdoors

As part of the celebration of its lOOth anniversary, outdoor retailer L.L.Bean introduced the “L.L.Bean Bootmobile” – a larger-than-life embodiment of its most iconic product. The vehicle was revealed to employees at the Brunswick, Maine, manufacturing facility where the popular Bean boots are made, stopping at the L.L.Bean flagship store in Freeport before embarking on a tour of major cities in the U.S. Throughout 2012, the Bootmobile will surprise people in various locations throughout the country, inspiring them to get outside and providing an opportunity to try a new outdoor activity with the help of L.L.Bean’s expert Outdoor Discovery Schools guides.

Leon Leonwood (L.L.) Bean founded his company 100 years ago with a single product, the Maine Hunting Shoe. Having returned from a hunting trip with cold, wet feet, he had a revolutionary idea for a boot design. This innovative “Bean Boot” changed outdoor footwear forever and began one of the most successful family-run businesses in the country. The success of the company is due in part to L.L.Bean’s legendary quality guarantee, which began with L.L.’s first product. Of the first 100 boots be created, 92 were defective, and he refunded the cost to each customer. From there, he went back to the drawing board and re-engineered his boot, which has since stood the rest of time and become the company’s most popular product.

Today, as always, L.L.Bean Boots are manufactured by hand in Maine. In honor of its lOOth anniversary, L.L.Bean will re-introduce a special-edition version of the Maine Hunting Shoe. Designed to closely replicate the very first pair built by L.L., they even feature the red brick-colored bottom found on the original pair.

Recently, the duck boot has become a youthful fashion statement. According to L.L.Bean’s Senior Public Relations Representative Mac McKeever, sales in the past four years have increased from 150,000 pairs per year to about 400,000, with 2012 projections calling for another increase to half a million pairs. “The increase in boot sales has been tremendous,” said McKeever. “We’ve created over 125 new jobs to fulfill the demand, a welcome addition in this challenging economy.”

The newly unveiled Bootmobile is also true in likeness to the original L.L. Bean Boot, yet sports a tan rubber sole found on contemporary versions. The Bootmobile is true to scale, 20.5 times larger that a traditional 12-inch tall boot. A few fun facts about the Bootmobile:

–If the Bootmobile were an actual boot, it would be size 747.

–The Bootmobile is 13 feet tall; 20 feet, 6 inches long; and 7 feet, 6 inches wide.

–The Bootmible generates 0 percent CO2 emissions thanks to a diesel engine with urea tank and particulate filter.

–If an actual person were to wear the Bootmobile, the person would be 143 feet tall, 32 feet taller than the Statue of Liberty.

–The Bootmobile laces are made of 12-strand braided mooring rope, capable of towing 106,000 pounds.

–The driver enters and exits through the heel.

–A camera provides visibility for the rear and top of the Bootmobile.

SportDOG gives back to Sportsmen

SportDOG, a leading manufacturer of remote dog training products, has announced the recipients of five conservation grants totaling $21 ,000. The annual grant program is part of the company’s SportDOG Brand Conservation Fund.

“It’s rewarding to see this program continue to grow,” said Eleanor Marshall, the program’s director. “We’ve seen an increase in the number of applicants for these grants every year. The program generates a tremendous amount of internal support because we believe in supporting conservation initiatives that our employees and customers care about. Over the years, SportDOG has taken part in several great projects, and we look forward to even more in the future.”

The 2011 winners were selected with game birds in mind. The North Dakota Game and Fish Department grant will study sharp-tailed grouse nesting outside of oil and gas development areas in western North Dakota. Down South, the Mississippi Department of Wildlife, Fisheries and Parks will use its funding to assist with the state ‘s prescribed-bum program to improve bobwhite quail habitat. In Iowa, the Marion County Pheasants Forever is in the process of launching a conservation and habitat education program for kids. Delta Waterfowl will support a study of more than 10,000 waterfowl nests for use in future management efforts, and Pheasants Forever will purchase a no-till native grass drill for habitat improvements in North Dakota’s Prairie Pothole region.

To donate to the SportDOG Brand Conservation Fund or to propose a project for grant consideration, visit www.sportdog.com and click on the Conservation Fund in the “About” tab.

This article originally appeared in the Summer 2012 Flushes & Noteworthy Points column of The Upland Almanac.

A Cluttered Desk Started it All

The other day I cleaned my old roll-top writing desk.  What prompted me to clean it was that I could no longer see the chipped and stained wood because it was littered with scraps of paper.  The desk was chock-a-block with notes and ideas for future pieces and character sketches, and I found a setting description for a novel I’m writing.  There were a few short stories, and a mess of fish/hunt ideas that hopefully would find a home somewhere someday.

My regular desk was filled up, too.  On it was body copy for eblasts, a content calendar for social media posts, text for press releases, drafts of editorials, spec creative and outlines for brochures.  While I tried to determine how I’d sort it I realized that we are living in a Golden Age of Content that remarkably resembled what occurred during the early part of the last century.

From the 1920’s through the 1950’s, writers, artists, illustrators, and designers were busier than ever.  Print media like books, magazines, and newspapers spread all the news that was fit to print.  Many towns published both morning and evening newspapers that communicated the local-regional goings on in a timely fashion.  Advertising grew in leaps and bounds and copywriters and commercial artists were hired in leaps and bounds.  Radio scripts were badly needed, and as film grew in popularity screenplays were in high demand.  Other types of writing were needed like plays for live theatre and text books for schools, but suffice it to say there was a tremendous need for content.

The digital age has reawakened that demand.  From websites to eblasts to ezines and youtubes and blogs, written and visual content is in high demand.  Read it on a desktop computer or in your car on your smartphone, there is no shortage to the volume of words and pictures that are consumed by audiences every day.  Everyone has a voice, and many are choosing to use them.  And like in the past, the better ones find themselves in high cotton.  Ours is a very exciting time indeed.

Timing is Everything

It’s late July and I took my English setter Rowdy for a pre-season workout. It’s been hazy, hot and humid, so our sessions are very early in the morning and then again in the evening. There isn’t anything more miserable for a setter wearing a fur suit than to run hard, so I pick the cooler times of the day for our training.

After her run we returned to the shade found in our front deck to cool down. I sat next to Rowdy while her huffing and puffing slowed, and I stroked her back. Every time I pet her a clump of white fur with brown spots pulled off. She was shedding.

Shedding normally occurs when spring becomes summer. The continuously rising temperatures combined with the increased daylight trigger their hair disassociation. For whatever reason Rowdy missed shedding earlier in the year. Her fur was falling off in big clumps at a time that was approaching the autumnal instead of the spring equinox.

I told my wife about it as she passed me a curry comb. Every three strokes filled up the comb to a point where I needed to clean it, and then it was back for more. In short order there was about as much dog hair as would fill up a small pillow. If we were in Colonial times we’d save it and stuff a mattress or use it to patch a hole in a wall.

And it occurred to me that Rowdy’s shedding fur was a lot like good writing. Some times it happens when I want it to and sometimes it does not. The game is long. Patience is key as is knowing when the time is right. I think that’s called Grace.

The Real Media Skinny – Angling Trade

Several years ago a fall hurricane dumped six inches of water in my basement. After ripping off a sequence of expletives that would rival those spoken by a stevedore, I attempted to save more than four decades worth of materials threatened by the rising indoor tide.

In one box I found the last catalog produced by the H.L. Leonard Rod Company (Johnson Wax owned them at the time), and there was also a receipt for a Hardy Featherweight that I bought after a summer of bailing hay (retail price $88.00). I found an early Thomas & Thomas catalog along with a lost pack of moose mane that cost 90 cents. Included, too, were very early issues of a new magazine called Fly Fisherman as well as the first copy of a magazine called Rod and Reel that was later renamed Fly Rod & Reel. There were a number of versions of Fly Tyer magazine from when they moved the magazine from a typed newsletter format to a glossy publication. And tucked within the early Gray’s Sporting Journals were vintage tackle newsletters offering Seamasters and Fin nor Wedding Cakes for $250. The magazines and catalogs made me smile as I remembered my early fly fishing days, and also lament the fact that they were longer ago than I cared to remember.

At the bottom of the box was a copy of The American Sportsman. Depending on one’s mood, the three-ringed red, white and blue O in the word “sportsman” may have resembled a perfectly aligned peep sight or a Patriotic Vietnam-era Bull’s Eye, take your pick. I remembered watching episodes of that show on a black and white television with tubes that required several minutes to warm up so as to properly display the picture. Sometimes I would head across the street to my friend’s house to watch the show because theirs was a family of sportsmen and they had a color TV.

The American Sportsman was the most interesting to me because it was a hardback magazine. It was published by The Ridge Press, Inc. and the American Broadcasting Company Merchandising, Inc. division to accompany the Curt Gowdy-hosted television show of the same name. The American Sportsman was wonderful to hold and to read, and its production quality meant it was not disposable; like a book its quality would stand the test of time.

Our generation bears witness to the newcomer that is vastly different from traditional print media. Joining fly fishing books and magazines is a brave new world of digitally published blogs and ezines. In the past few years, many businesses have retooled their sales and marketing expenditures by reducing print advertising. In many circles, print is perceived as costly with no ROI while digital has gained favor because of its perception as “free.” In January, 2012, Business Insider reported that CEO Robert McDonald of powerhouse Procter & Gamble laid off 1600 marketing personnel and staff after finding out that Facebook and Google were either free or relatively free. There is a tremendous cost savings to the $10 billion annual ad budget, but are customers turning to social media for information on Old Spice or Tide laundry detergent? Mark Twain once said “common sense ain’t that common,” and with marketing budget-cuts occurring in such an expedient fashion, I beg the question: has digital replaced print in the fly fishing and sporting sectors?

With the increasing crop of fly fishing and sporting ezines, blogs, and social media threads it would seem so. The similarities are that print and digital are both for-profit business models that respond to a particular customer base. Historically, and as evidenced by the print Big Three sporting magazines (Field & Stream, Outdoor Life and Sports Afield), sportsmen were sportsmen. The lion’s share of the angling demographic favored conventional tackle and then gravitated towards spin tackle. FIy fishing was perceived as an elitist sport until Shakespeare’s Wonderrod, Pfleuger’s Medalist series, andCortland’s 333 reduced the financial entry point. Fishermen also were highly likely to be hunters and their diverse fishing methods were mirrored in their pursuit of big game, upland birds, and waterfowl. Fly fishing coverage was a small percentage of total editorial but that was destined to change.

The first customer change occurred somewhere between the Summer of Love and Watergate, and it came with a quest for more and specific information. In certain sporting sectors there was a customer base that began to focus on specific sporting disciplines. The all-purposes sportsman gave way to narrowly aligned user groups who thirsted for greater coverage and more information about their favorite activities. The pattern is reflected across many sporting categories. With regards to fly fishing, Don Zahner lead the pack with the l969 launch of the niche publication he called Fly Fisherman. A number of start-up niche publications sprouted through the mid 1970’s and established a velocity of new magazines that continued to launch throughout the next few decades. Each new magazine had a particular focus, with some keying in on sporting art and literature, others with destination and how-to’s, and still others with techniques and products. Fly Fisherman, Fly Rod & Reel, and American Angler focused on all facets of fly fishing, while Wild Salmon and Steelhead or Warmwater Fly Fishing addressed a specific species or two. Saltwater Fly Fishing and later Fly Fishing in Saltwaters addressed an environment while others, like Eastern Fly Fishing, Northwest Fly Fishing and Southwest Fly Fishing provided a regional approach.

Fly fishing market retraction and the struggling domestic and world economies have caused many magazines to lose subscribers and advertisers. A number of publications have not survived. A new hurdle for print magazines to overcome comes back around to the emergence of digital publishing and social media. When I finished bailing water in my basement and returned to my office I was likely to find one of the newest fly fishing publications ready for my perusal.

So while the world continues to turn toward digital technology for their information, I wonder if sportsmen in general and fly fishermen in specific prefer print or digital as the way they’d like to receive their information. Digital publishing and social media have emerged as mainstays in our everyday world. But does that trend hold true for sporting activities in general and specifically fly fishing?

To answer that question I turned to publishers and editors who represent more than a century of experience. It goes without saying that each began their careers in print, but every one has significant experience in print and in digital and are able to provide an unbiased opinion on the values and limitations of each.

I first spoke with Ed Gray, the founder of Gray’s Sporting Journal. In recognition of the changing audience which led to ABC shuttering The American Sportsman in 1974, Gray launched a perfect-bound magazine of no less than 96 pages that was printed on 50-pound stock, and featured a 70/30 editorial-to-advertising ratio. His preliminary issue was launched on Halloween Night 1975, and nearly four decades later Gray’s Sporting Journal (now owned by Morris Communications) is thriving. Why? Gray focused on a special interest audience.

As businesses grow and expand, niche models increase,” said Gray. “A very specific audience of sportsmen exists and they favor print. Many will read digital, but the primary customer base who spends money on products and trips read print. The last century showed us a similar pattern in live theater, film and then television. As film and television emerged as new markets, live theater suffered a slight retraction. In our time, small movies have been replaced by those with tremendously large budgets. That said, live theater is still vibrant, and in many instances, actors are not considered “real actors” unless they have been on Broadway. It is a quality versus quantity issue, and customer buy quality magazines. Talented writers and photographers combined with quality print magazines properly address the sporting customer demographic. It might not hit the youthful sector, but it addresses the largest percentage of the total market, and that is what is important.”

Jim Butler, the former editor of Fly Rod & Reel, began working on Down East Enterprise’s fly fishing magazine in 1986, seven years after it was founded. “Historically, there was a tremendous spike in the sporting customer base after World War II,” he said. “Magazines expanded to cater to the growing niche-consumer demand, with Fly Fisherman being one of the front-runners to offer expanded fly fishing coverage. Fly Tyer came aboard in the 1970’s and regional magazines in the 1980’s through the 1990’s.”

“With all of the technological enhancements, digital has become more popular. An online magazine with a staff of one or tow and desktop publishing can produce a magazine that will service one niche of the niche market. To stay in business during this difficult climate, publishers need to study changes in how readers want to receive information as well as what type of information they want to receive. Fly rod 7 Reel has print and soon-to-be-launched digital platforms (and our sister publication, Shooting Sportsman, already boasts a digital-only pub called Sporting Shot). When we monitor successes and failures we find many clear examples of what works. Pure information like knot tying and the latest fishing conditions are great for the digital market. Videos explain knot-tying far better than print, and fishing reports reach more anglers more quickly on the web. But if a customer is looking to experience the sporting lifestyle then they are likely to find that level of quality in a magazine they can hold as opposed to view on a screen.”

Digital publishing guru Marshall Cutchin from MidCurrent doesn’t attach any perceived magazine subscription declines to digital. “Many magazines started to decline before Google appeared on the scene,” said Cutchin. “From an expense-side, magazines have always been big-budget projects that are content, subscription and advertising models. While I’ve seen consumers moving away from magazines that supply mass-market information they continue to find room for those that provide content for specialty subjects. Still, the challenges of the future for print are well known and scary. For digital? Their successes are becoming more apparent. Digital has the chance to embrace change in a way that print never did because it doesn’t rely on expensive production and distribution models.

“With digital comes an appealing low-entry cost which partly explains the dramatic increase in digital sporting publications. And with that low-entry cost comes a second issue, which is the vetting process. In the 1990s, bulletin boards were a tremendous vehicle for disseminating information, though much of it was suspect. Blogging software enabled publishers to produce and distribute content very inexpensively and it changed everything. But it also didn’t guarantee quality. The Internet has proven that the loudest people are often the least knowledgeable.”

Cutchin doesn’t think a shift to digital means the death of magazines, and he doesn’t think the “flipbook” concept answers an important need. “In some ways, a medium that allows anyone to assemble content works against information quality. Print gets more expensive all the time, so smart publishers are focusing on what print does best, which in my opinion is delivering a tactile experience—high-resolution photography and art on nice thick paper, for example. The look and feel of a magazine is distinct, and ‘flipbooks’ can’t replicate that electronically. On the other hand, subscription-based magazines can’t achieve the audience reach they once had, both because of competing channels and because consumer behavior is changing at an accelerating pace. Digital is learning to survive without print, I think, but print can’t survive without digital.”

John Frazier, editor of the niche of a niche Fly Fishing in Salt Waters represents an interesting twist. Before converting to digital, Frazier got his start in print. “Digital is a highly profitable endeavor, and the advertising revenues versus the cost centers are favorable to the publisher. Digital isn’t a fad, it’s here to stay.

“That said, the most important question is not what will the P&L look like or what will the accounting department say. The question is how do your readers want their content delivered? Web is great as it was intended, and that is to provide short, quick hits. But print has more longevity and quality attached to it. Fly fishing consumers favor quality over quantity, and while the younger market enjoys the social component delivered relatively immediately in a conversational tone, print is the dominant business driver.

“No one has cracked the digital code yet, so it’s wise to offer both versions to customers and to let them decide. But now that I’m involved in print magazine I’m in it to stay. And so are my readers.”

Kirk Deeter has an interesting 360-view of the fly fishing industry. Like Jim Butler before him, Deeter edits both a consumer trade magazine (TROUT and Angling Trade, respectively). Deeter also is a book author, a Field & Stream editor-at-large, a blogger for Field & Stream (“FlyTalk”) and for the RBFF’s Take Me Fishing program.

“The question of print versus digital reminds me of film,” he said. “I’ll watch some movies on an iPad, and others on a television. But them there are just some that I have to see on the big screen. And so it goes with digital and print applications.

“Simply put, good content sells. With that question answered, the real issue is what vehicle best matches the words and images? It’s a match-the-hatch of content, and the content is dictated by your audience. To simply take content that is best suited for a print publication and offer it in digital form doesn’t solve the issue.

“I think of blogs and social media like open-mic night. The quality of blogs and posts range from excellent to beyond the pale of acceptable. To think that a customer who spends $5,000 on a 5-night/4-day fishing trip or $750 on a fly rod is posting on Facebook or reading flipbooks is not likely. He’s probably working hard to be able to afford a quality trip or quality tackle. That demographic is likely to favor print. Products that appeal to a younger audience or are price-point driven may do well with digital. But each group must know their audience. TROUT magazine, for instance, consists of a 50+year old demographic. To shift from print to digital for a cost savings would be great for the P&L, but disastrous to all other facets. So by adding a digital application, I can disseminate information to a younger audience so as to increase their participation in Trout Unlimited while maintaining my core constituency. Again, it’s match-the-hatch for your customers.”

Ross Purnell, the editor of Fly Fisherman, the largest circulation fly-fishing print magazine for 40 years, actually began his publishing career in the digital world. Purnell was the first employee of the revolutionary website, The Virtual Flyshop (1996). Fly Fisherman magazine acquired The Virtual Flyshop in a strategic move designed to capitalize on the digital platform and to offer readers and advertisers a state-of-the-art publishing arm that was additional to the industry-leading print publication. Purnell joined the editorial staff of the print magazine in 2001.

“The reality is that nobody has to choose. Almost everybody I know takes advantage of both. You prefer digital if you need a fly recipe quick—you Google it. If you want to banter with fellow fly fishers on bulletin boards you know where to find it. Up-to-date industry news? The Internet wins. But sometimes you want to sit in a big easy chair and read a good magazine with quality editorial you can depend on. Some people keep their stack of magazines in the bathroom. Or they pick up a magazine before they get on a plane. There will always be a place for print magazines.

“We don’t expect consumers to have to choose. Fly Fisherman began publishing a website back in 1996, we’ve got the best fly-tying app in the iTunes store, we’re developing relationships with our readers through social media, and we’re working on the iPad version of Fly Fisherman right now. We listen to consumers and plan to provide the best fly fishing information however they choose to consume it. And right now, they want it all.

“Print publications have many advantages that ensure their longevity. I think the backbone of any good printed magazine is credibility. Readers trust what they read in Fly Fisherman because the information comes from a very select list of experts, the information has been vetted, and you don’t have to wad through millions of pages of garbage to find what you’re looking for. Trust is a big issue when you’re asking people to take out their wallet and buy something. According to a 2011 Southwick and Associates study, print advertising is still number one in terms of influencing purchasing decisions and that’s something smart advertisers are already aware of. Our readers paid money for the magazine which identifies them as not just serious fly fishers, but as serious consumers. And the way you consume a printed magazine—from front to back with no goal other than absorbing each page—assures advertisers that the ad has much great value. It’s being carefully read by the right people. It’s not just flashing by on a computer screen.”

Sporting businesses in general and fly fishing businesses in specific do well to include a balanced marketing approach, loaded mostly for print and secondarily for digital. Oh, yeah, back to the basement. As I finished bailing water and set about to packing up my box I found several floppy discs from an old Mac 128, and it made me think. I sure wish I had printed the contents of those discs back in, how shall I say, 1984.

Winter 2012 Flushes & Noteworthy Points – The Upland Almanac


Nebraska Bird Hunters get Great News

According to Brian McClintock at www.gohuntn.com, Nebraska bird hunters received some great news about the pheasant and quail populations in their fair state. A survey sponsored by the Nebraska Game and Parks Commission reports a 2 percent increase in the ring-necked pheasant population. While that number is refreshing, the real story is in the 175 percent increase in the bobwhite quail population.

Harsh weather patterns during the past few years are the main reason that pheasant and quail populations have declined. While wet springs were partially to blame, the main culprit was the harsh winter in 2009 that devastated both species of birds, particularly the bobwhite quail that favor a more temperate climate.

Jeff Lusk, the Program Manager for Upland Game with the Nebraska Game and Parks cautions against misleading interpretations. The dramatic comeback in both species is in comparison to atypically low populations. That said, any increase in gamebird populations is welcome news and is a foundation on which to build.

Skeet Shooter Sets Olympic records, sponsored by Safari Club International

According to USA Shooting, Kim Rhode’s gold medal in women’s skeet shooting was one of the biggest days in Olympic shooting history. In winning the gold, Rhode became the first American to take an individual-sport medal in five consecutive Olympics. She also tied the world record and set an Olympic record with an impressive total of 99 points.

Rhode is no stranger to Olympic competitions. She collected two gold medals in the Women’s Double Trap event in 1996 and 2004 and a bronze in 2000. She also took silver in Women’s Skeet in 2008. With the addition of her 2012 gold in Women’s Skeet, Rhode is now the most decorated shotgun shooter in history.

According to Rhode’s comments on the official Olympics website, ” I do not see myself quitting any time soon. I’m looking forward to 2016 and a few more after that. The oldest Olympic medalist was a shooter and he was 72, so I still have a few more in me.” Rhode shoots between 500 and 1,000 shells per day and figures that she has fired two million rounds in her life.

Teammate Corey Cogdell did not receive a medal in the London Olympics, but she did receive death threats. Anti-hunters responded to the grip-and-grin images she posted to her website. Anti-hunters became outraged over her images posed with big game animals that she shot, and they voiced their threatening opinions via a number of social media sites. Cogdell was unflappable and responded appropriately. She also receive an outpouring of support from hunters, so much so that she trended as a top Twitter pick.

John Whipple, President of Safari Club International, is a proud sponsor of Rhode and Cogdell and oculdn’t be more pleased. “We could not be happier than to have these two Olympians as representatives of Safari Club International. Their ability to promote the organization’s advocacy and hunting heritage programs to millions of people worldwide is truly a gift for Safari Club International.

Men’s teammate Vincent Hancock made some noise of his own by becoming the first Olympic shooter to win consecutive gold medals in Men’s Skeet. His record-setting performance eclipsed the records that he set in 2008 in Beijing.

In his real life ,Hancock is a soldier in the U.S. Army marksmanship Unit stationed in Eatonton, GA. “This is what I love to do every single day,” Hancock said. “I wanted to come out here and win another gold medal and just keep going – win as many gold medals as possible.” Hancock will soon leave the Army and plans to open a shooting school with his father. Their focus will be on teaching kids to shoot.

The Rumor Mill Grinds to a Halt

Thanks to technology, rumors circulate faster than ever. Thanks to technology, too, rumors are clarified faster than ever. Information reported by the National Shooting Sports Foundation allows firearm owners to breathe a sigh of relief when they hear George Soros’ name as well as Senate Bill 2099.

Anti-gun financier George Soros was listed as having the controlling interest in the Freedom Group. Freedom Group owns a wide variety of firearms and shooting sports companies such as Remington, Bushmaster, Marlin and others. The thought that an anti-gun proponent owned those marquee companies was revealed as false information. Soros is neither connected to Freedom Group nor is he connected to Cerberus Capital Management, the firm that owns Freedom Group. Instead, the company is a privately owned corporation run by sportsmen, shooters and firearm enthusiasts.

Senate Bill 2099 was reported to require gun owners to list their firearms on their tax documents…and pay upwards of $50.00 per gun owned. This rumor, believed to have started back in 2009, has recently been disproved.

Tables Turned on Humane Society

Reported by Jim Matthews, Daily News, Los Angeles: The Humane Society of the United States (HSUS), an organization that does next to nothing for animal shelters but sues, badgers, and lobbies politicians and businesses into adopting its radical animals rights agenda, is getting a taste of its own medicine.

In a little-reported ruling by a judge in the District of Columbia, the HSUS is facing allegations under RICO statues on racketeering, obstructions of justice, malicious prosecution, and other claims for a lawsuit it brought and lost against Ringling Brothers Circus’ parent company Feld Entertainment, Inc.

After winning the case alleging mistreatment of elephants in its circuses brought by Friends of Animals (later merged into HSUS), the American Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Animals )ASPCA) and the Animal Welfare Institute (AWI), lawyers at Feld filed a counter-suit with a litany of claims ranging from bribery to money laundering to racketeering. The attorneys for the animal rights groups asked the judge to dismiss all of the claims, but most survived.

District Judge Emmet G. Sullivan did dismiss allegations of mail and wire fraud, but he did so only because Feld didn’t have standing to file this charge. His ruling all but set the stage for a class action RICO lawsuit against HSUS for misrepresenting itself in its fundraising campaigns across the nation. This lawsuit easily could bankrupt HSUS, put it out of business, and send some of its top executives to prison.

For the first time, a group has fought back against the animal rights and environmental extremists who have been setting policy in this country for the past 20 years or more. Now, instead of getting rich off their lawsuits and fundraising schemes that misrepresent their efforts and accomplishments, they could be driven out of business. These groups have cost the farming and ranching industry jobs and raised the price of products we buy every day. They are behind the efforts to ban sport hunting across the nation. They have forced state wildlife and fishery agencies to waste countless millions of dollars on lawsuits and have spearheaded policies and legislation like the Marine Life Protection Act (MLPA), which has ruined livelihoods in recreational and commercial fishing without helping marine resources.

These groups operate with surly arrogance and believe they are above the law. Thankfully, that is not the case. Stay tuned.

Hunter Numbers Up 9 Percent Between 2006 and 2011

The number of hunters age 16 and older in the United States increased 9 percent between 2006 and 2011, reversing a previous downward trend, a preliminary report from the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service (USFWS) and Department of the Interior shows.

Preliminary figures show an increase from 12.5 million hunters in 2006 to 13.7 million in 2011. Final data will be included the upcoming USFWS 2011 National Survey Report. USFWS has conducted a national survey every five years since 1955, with the last being the 2006 National Survey, released in 2007.

“This increase in hunters mirrors what our members are telling us – strong sales to an expanding consumer base,” said Steve Sanetti, president of the National Shooting Sports Foundation, the trade association for the firearms, ammunition, hunting, and shooting sports industry. “There is increased interest in firearm ownership – from customers new to the market to existing customers looking for the newest products. Purchases are being made for the enjoyment of recreational target shooting sports – such as sporting clays, IDPA and 3-gun competitions – as well as for personal protection, and, as these figures show us, for hunting.”

The preliminary report also shows that hunters pent an average of 21 days pursuing wild game in 2011. Additionally, the report shows that hunters spent $34 billion on trips, firearms and equipment, licenses, and other items to support their hunting activities in 2011.

The national survey is pad for by sportsmen through the use of Pittman-Robertson Federal Aid dollars. This year is significant as it is the 75th anniversary of the Pittman-Robertson Federal Aid in Wildlife Restoration Act.

This article orignally appeared in the Winter 2012 Flushes & Noteworthy Points column of The Upland Almanac.