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‘Road Trips’ Star Shares Turkey Tips

Posted on Mar, 05 2010 in News No Comments »

Michael Waddell, star of the Outdoor Channel’s “Realtree Road Trips” and “Bone Collector” shows, is one of the headliners at this weekend’s Dixie Deer Classic.

The husband and wife duo of Minnesota’s Lee and Tiffany Lakosky of the Outdoor Channel’s “The Crush with Lee and Tiffany” also will appear at the show.

Waddell, whose first outdoors love is turkey hunting, will talk generally about hunting and his documentary-style TV shows, and he will take questions from the audience, he said in a telephone interview this week.

Waddell’s “Road Trips” is a documentary-style show that puts more emphasis on storytelling and sharing the nuances of hunting camp than what’s typically seen in most TV hunting shows.

“We knew we needed to do a better job of documenting what camp life was about,” Waddell said.

Waddell, a Georgia native whose activities are highlighted on his Web site at www. michaelwaddell.com , said he has never hunted in North Carolina but hopes to pursue turkeys in the Tar Heel State one day.

“I never have,” said Waddell, whose “Road Trips” show has taken him all over the country to pursue various game. “I hate to admit it.

“I’ve always wanted to hunt the rolling hills down to the hardwood bottoms.”

Waddell, who said he got into the hunting media industry through his talents as a turkey caller, gets excited about hunting strategy, from the calling to the stalking.

“You get to talk and learn a new language,” he said. “You get to move around. You get to call your own shots. You’re getting responses, and you’re not depending on luck. You have to develop a game plan to fill your tag.”

With the spring turkey hunting season looming, he said, beginning turkey hunters need to find one good box call and master clucking, yelping and cutting.

“Get some confidence,” Waddell said. “Don’t overcall but don’t be scared to call.”

How do you know what’s the right amount of calling?

“A lot of it comes with experience,” he said. “Don’t be afraid to learn. It’s learning to take a turkey’s temperature. …

“Early in the season, they typically aren’t call shy, but they might not respond.

“Every time a turkey doesn’t gobble doesn’t mean he’s not responding. He could be walking right towards you.”

Learning to talk turkey takes time, Waddell said.

Wild Turkey convention is Coming Soon

Posted on Jan, 05 2010 in News 1 Comment »

The National Wild Turkey Federation’s 34th annual Convention and Sport Show is approaching quickly,

Forget about winter weather — bring the family to the National Wild Turkey Federation Convention and Sport Show at the Gaylord Opryland Hotel and Convention Center Feb. 18 to 21 in Nashville.

For only $12, you can visit 545 booths with the latest hunting gear and see the work of master taxidermists and callmakers. You can also meet and get autographs from some of the biggest names in hunting.

Welcoming guests to Nashville will be Brenda Valentine, NWTF spokeswoman, “First Lady of Hunting (TM) and host of the federation’s “Turkey Call” TV show, airing on Pursuit Channel in January 2010, along with Michael Waddell, NWTF spokesman and host of “Realtree Roadtrips” and “Bone Collector” TV shows.

Three-day passes are $25. Children 10 and under are admitted free.

For more information, call (800) THE-NWTF or visit www.nwtf.org.

The Convention hall will be filled with over 550 booths from industry reps., and loaded with the latest in hunting gear.

The Wild Turkey Bourbon/NWTF Grand National calling, gobbling and owl hooting championships will be held and the NWTF’s new Open live and silent auctions can be attended throughout the weekend featuring incredible hunting and fishing trips, trucks, boats, furs, NWTF exclusive guns, knives, art, jewelry and much more.

TV personalities and experts during hunting seminars and autograph signing sessions are available.

There will be White-tailed deer and wild turkey taxidermy displays and contests.

Custom call makers and callmaking competitions, Bass Pro Shops King of Bucks Collection, Celebrity Autograph signing sessions and fun, hands-on activities for the kids are sure to delight all.

Live entertainment from country music’s finest stars including Little Big Town, Colt Ford, funnymen Paul Harris and the Cleverly’s, Jeff Foxworthy and inspirational music from Music by Nashville’s Premier A Cappella Gospel Singing Group Vocal Union are scheduled.

Register now to make sure you reserve the best seats at the shows (which have additional registration fees) and get your hotel room locked in. Don’t wait another minute to call the Gaylord Opryland Hotel to make your reservations now.

NWTF is Raising Funds to Preserve Outdoor Sports

Posted on Nov, 05 2009 in News No Comments »

The National Wild Turkey Federation, in cooperation with an outdoor television star, is looking to raise money toward its efforts to preserve and foster outdoor sports.

On Nov. 19, the local chapter is holding a banquet with the attraction of Michael Waddell, host of the Bone Collector and Realtree Roadtrips television shows on Outdoor Television.

Waddell has been described as the face of the modern hunting world, but outside of his television duties, he travels the country proclaiming his love for the outdoors and his support of the NWTF.

“There aren’t a whole lot of events that could get me out of the woods during hunting season, but the NWTF’s Edgefield banquet is one of them,” said Waddell. “I tell people around the country about all the great work the federation does for wildlife and hunters, and, anytime I get the chance, I like to stop by and help out however I can.”

Tickets are $50 for adults, $80 for couples, $20 for youth ages 6 to 17, and kids 5 and under are free. Tickets include dinner, entry into all door prize drawings, a NWTF membership and a one-year subscription to Turkey Country magazine. Attendees that purchase tickets by Friday will automatically be entered into the early bird drawing for a Ruger 10/22 semi-automatic .22 caliber rifle.

In Edgefield, the NWTF has remained active in the community by hosting local events, donating to local causes, awarding scholarships to local students and more.

The NWTF is a national nonprofit conservation organization that is dedicated to the conservation of the wild turkey and the preservation of hunting heritage.

Through partnerships with state, federal and provincial wildlife agencies, the NWTF and its more than 350,000 members have helped restore wild turkey populations across the country, raised and spent more than $286 million and conserved nearly 14 million acres of habitat for all types of wildlife.

Michael Waddell to Write for Petersen’s Hunting

Posted on Oct, 23 2009 in News 1 Comment »

If you like hearing more about Michael’s hunts you may want to pick up a copy of Petersen’s HUNTING magazine.  Starting in 2010 Michael has signed an exclusive writing agreement with Petersen’s HUNTING to become a regular monthly contributor.  According to Waddell, “This is going to be a great opportunity to share more of the hunt.  When you have to compress an entire hunting trip down to thirty minutes for television you don’t always capture the full flavor. Petersen’s HUNTING will give me the venue to share more from the field.”

“I’m extremely excited about bringing Michael into our magazine.  I’ve known and worked with Michael for a long time and he is the ‘real deal’. He has the hunting credibility that makes Petersen’s HUNTING so widely respected.” Says Petersen’s HUNTING Editor Mike Schoby.

Published ten times a year Petersen’s HUNTING is the nation’s premier hunting publication.  Featuring such writers as Craig Boddington, Wayne Van Zwoll, John Barsness, Lane Simpson and photographers John Hafner, Mitch Kezar and Dusan Smentana.

If you would like to receive a subscription of Petersen’s HUNTING click here www.petersenshunting.com

Michael on Outdoor Talk Radio

Posted on Oct, 09 2009 in News 1 Comment »

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Hunting Communications a Major Focus of Justices’ Questions

Posted on Oct, 08 2009 in News 1 Comment »

WASHINGTON, D.C. – Hunting communications were a central focus of the United States Supreme Court on Tuesday as the Justices heard arguments in the case U.S. v. Stevens, 08-769.

At issue in the case is a 1999 federal law that makes it a crime to create, sell or possess videos and other depictions of cruelty to animals. The case arose over the conviction of a Virginia man, Robert Stevens, who received a three-year prison sentence from a Western Pennsylvania court for selling videos that included scenes of hunting with dogs. The Third Circuit Court of Appeals overturned the conviction, stating it was in violation of Steven’s First Amendment rights.

In addition to working with the Washington, D.C., Jones Day Law Firm to file an amicus curiae brief on behalf of its members, the Professional Outdoor Media Association (POMA), headquartered in Johnstown, Pa., coordinated a larger group of amici from a wide range of constituencies, including numerous large organizations and more than 600 individual journalists, outdoor industry professionals and sportsmen.

POMA Executive Director Laurie Lee Dovey was in the courtroom to hear the arguments.

“The Justices were highly engaged,” Dovey said. “Clearly, their queries were focused on testing the limits of the First Amendment. The questions were direct and at times extreme.

“Patricia Millett, the plaintiff’s attorney, represented Mr. Stevens, the hunting and fishing industry and traditional outdoor sports journalists at the highest level,” Dovey added. “Patricia understands how the statue could criminalize the communication and promotion of legal hunting and fishing activities. She directly argued the overreach and chilling effects of the existing statute.”

Testing the wide net cast by the language of the law, hunting-related questions were debated. Deputy Solicitor General Neal Katyal often stated hunting imagery did not fall within the parameters of the statute. Justice Antonin Scalia seemed to disagree. Scalia concentrated on the language in the statute that says, “… a visual or auditory depiction … in which a living animal is intentionally maimed, mutilated, tortured, wounded, or killed.”

“Kill” has one meaning, which is kill,” Scalia told Katyal, plainly indicating concerns about the legal actions of hunters. Katyal responded with a statement citing cruel killing versus hunting. Scalia countered with a question about an accidental low shot on an animal by a hunter, which he said was completely legal. Justice John Paul Stevens also asked about bow-and-arrow hunting or hunting with knives. Katyal backpedaled, saying, “So, there may be certain hunting examples that fall within it (the law).

Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg looked at another aspect of the law, the separation of the filming of a criminal act and participation by a photographer in a criminal act. The abuse of the dog and the filming of the act are different, she said. The abuse would go on with or without the photographer. The comparison being made was to image-makers in child pornography cases – where the photographer is an actual participant in the criminal act.

In response to questions by Justice Stephen Bryer about Congress simply writing a statute that actually aims at the “frightful things they were trying to prohibit,” Millett agreed Congress must use a scalpel, not a buzz saw, when crafting statutes that restrict free speech.
Justice Samuel Alito posed the most difficult hypothetical of the day to Millett. He asked if the First Amendment would cover “a human sacrifice channel”. The discomfort in the courtroom was palpable.
Taking a few moments to collect her thoughts, obviously taken aback by the extreme nature of the Justice’s example, Millett responded.
“I don’t want to watch this channel, and people should fight with their wallets and their votes and not support these things,” she said. “But, under the First Amendment, if the only rationale Congress is giving is we are here to shield your eyes for you, we will make this censorial decision, it has got to find some basis to think that was never freedom of speech under the First Amendment, in the way that obscenity was. You don’t get to make it up as you go along. We are interpreting a constitution.”

The United States Humane Society, which pushed the original prosecution of Robert Stevens, claimed this case was and is about animal cruelty. POMA, National Rifle Association, Safari Club International, National Media Coalition, American Society of Media Photographers, National Press Photographer’s Association and dozens of other groups, which filed amicus curiae briefs in the case, strongly disagreed. They defined U.S. v. Stevens as a First Amendment case that could have potentially devastating consequences on journalists and Americans’ right to information.

A decision could come sometime after the first of the year, but the Court’s final deadline is July 1, 2010.

###

The Statute – 18 U.S.C. § 48

(a) Creation, Sale, or Possession.- Whoever knowingly creates, sells, or possesses a depiction of animal cruelty with the intention of placing that depiction in interstate or foreign commerce for commercial gain, shall be fined under this title or imprisoned not more than 5 years, or both.
(b) Exception.- Subsection (a) does not apply to any depiction that has serious religious, political, scientific, educational, journalistic, historical, or artistic value.
(c) Definitions.- In this section-
(1) the term “depiction of animal cruelty” means any visual or auditory depiction, including any photograph, motion-picture film, video recording, electronic image, or sound recording of conduct in which a living animal is intentionally maimed, mutilated, tortured, wounded, or killed, if such conduct is illegal under Federal law or the law of the State in which the creation, sale, or possession takes place, regardless of whether the maiming, mutilation, torture, wounding, or killing took place in the State; and
(2) the term “State” means each of the several States, the District of Columbia, the Commonwealth of Puerto Rico, the Virgin Islands, Guam, American Samoa, the Commonwealth of the Northern Mariana Islands, and any other commonwealth, territory, or possession of the United States.

POMA Mission … The Professional Outdoor Media Association is a group of individual communicators and Corporate Partners who believe in, defend, support and promote the heritage of hunting, fishing, shooting and traditional outdoor sports through writing, photography and other means. By doing so, members hope to educate the general public about these sports and encourage more participation in them. The organization serves the membership by helping members grow professionally, improve their skills, better their working environments and enhance their businesses.

Gamo Precision Airguns launches Tactical Socom Air Rifle Series

Posted on Sep, 23 2009 in News No Comments »

Gamo Outdoor USA, recognized as the leader in adult precision air guns, is introducing a new series of tactical, high performance airguns. The new SOCOM series incorporates the latest advancements in spring power engineering, optics, noise reduction and stock designs. Giving shooters maximum flexibility for all hunting and shooting operations. The three gun series consists of the SOCOM CARBINE, the SOCOM TACTICAL and the SOCOM EXTREME air rifles. The SOCOM CARBINE and SOCOM TACTICAL models are powered by an advanced spring power plant which pushes the new PBA Platinum .177 caliber ammo at nearly 1300 FPS, and 1000FPS with standard lead ammo. The SOCOM EXTREME, which has a larger spring power plant than the other two air rifles in the series, will shoot this new Platinum PBA at an astounding 1700 FPS and 1250FPS with lead ammo.

Each of the new SOCOM models are spring piston, break barrel single shot air rifles. They are fitted in newly designed all weather tactical synthetic stocks. Special adjustable combs are available on the TACTICAL and CARBINE models. All the barrels are precision rifled steel with composite jackets.

To learn more about GAMO Outdoor products and accessories, visit: www.gamousa.com. Gamo is the largest air gun manufacturer in Europe and among the top rated all over the world. Shooters in over 50 countries worldwide use Gamo air rifles and air pistols.

GAMOUSA.COM Launches New Web Site

Posted on Sep, 10 2009 in News No Comments »

Davie, FL… Gamo USA announces the launch of its new and updated interactive web site www.gamousa.com. Featuring a dynamic state of the art design and layout, the main website navigation has been simplified and accelerated giving users the fastest track to new Gamo products, video experiences and service options. Users can instantly interface with other Gamo customers by logging on to the on-site blogs and community forum.

Among the many enhanced features are –

* Enhanced graphic design utilizing the latest “Web 2.0” standards.

* Fast, simplified navigation with product search functionality for instant acquisition of information

* Video and editorial theatre for television segments, news and topics regarding air guns and the hunting industry

* Website blogs and Community Forum including easy sharing and bookmaking via RSS feeds and other social
media options.

“Customer satisfaction is the important part of our business,” said CEO Lou Riley. “We strive to provide excellent customer service in addition to a broad spectrum of quality products. Each Gamo product featured on the site is tested for maximum reliability. Now Gamo gives users the speed they need to quickly browse our site and acquire their targeted need.”

New features will continue to be added to the site over the coming months.

About Gamo USA, Inc.; Founded in Spain in the 1860’s as a metals producer, Gamo has led the quality spring-piston airgun market for over 60 years. With steady investment in technology and manufacturing processes, Gamo is now the dominant force in airgun design. Gamo products are found in 54 countries worldwide. For more information contact info@gamousa.com and www.gamousa.com.

To learn more about GAMO Outdoor products and accessories, visit: www.gamousa.com. Gamo is the largest air gun manufacturer in Europe and among the top rated all over the world. Shooters in over 50 countries worldwide use Gamo air rifles and air pistols.

NRA Free Membership

Posted on Sep, 01 2009 in News 2 Comments »

The NRA is giving FREE 1-yr memberships to everyone who wants to join.

They are trying to build up their membership to fight pending legislation that impacts our right to keep and bear arms.
It is very important that anti-gun congressmen see how many people they will have to fight to get their legislation through.

PLEASE PASS THIS ON TO EVERYONE YOU KNOW!!

This can include spouses and children also
https://www.nrahq.org/nrabonus/accept-membership.asp

SIGN UP TODAY!! It only takes 2 minutes.

Michael Waddell Visits Hoover Academy Sports + Outdoors

Posted on Aug, 13 2009 in News 2 Comments »

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Television show host and professional outdoorsman, Michael Waddell, will sign autographs at the Academy Sports + Outdoors this Friday at 2810 John Hawkins Parkway in Hoover, Alabama, from 3 p.m. to 8 p.m. and this Saturday at 8610 East Chase Parkway in Montgomery, Alabama from 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. Waddell will appear as part of the Bushnell Brotherhood of the Bone Collector Tour in celebration of the new Bushnell DOA scopes now available at Academy. Academy Sports + Outdoors customers are encouraged to get their Bone Collector hats and t-shirts autographed by Waddell.

“I am excited to partner with Academy,” says Waddell. “Bushnell will be giving away free product with every Bushnell purchase. Everyone needs to come out and celebrate Academy Sports + Outdoors. It’s a great place to shop.”

Since joining Team Realtree in 1994, Waddell has moved from cameraman to host of “Realtree Road Trips” and most recently co-host of “Bone Collector”. Both shows air on The Outdoor Channel all year long. Waddell’s knowledge and wittiness have made him one of the most entertaining and successful outdoorsmen in the hunting industry.

For more details, check out the event section at academy.com.