![]() Friday, September 14, 2007
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Events The California Department of Fish and Game's Advanced Hunter Education Program is hosting a waterfowl hunting clinic in Riverside County on October 6. More » The Denis Sullivan, a 137-foot, three-masted re-creation of a 19th century Great Lakes schooner, will dock in Michigan City, Indiana on Saturday for open deck tours from 9 to noon CDT, this Saturday, September 15 as a highlight of Indiana Lake Michigan Coast Week, Sept. 8-16. More » Arizona residents and visitors are invited to experience the great outdoors and learn about hunting, fishing and wildlife at several free events held around the state September 17-22 in celebration of National Hunting and Fishing Day, which is September 22. More » Georgia Sonny Perdue has signed a proclamation in honor of the conservation efforts led by America's hunters and anglers as part of the September 22 nationwide celebration of National Hunting and Fishing Day. More » Fishing The Florida Fish and Wildlife Conservation Commission (FWC) approved rules on Thursday to make it easier to recover or remove lobster and crab traps from state waters under certain conditions. More » The International Game Fish Association (IGFA) Board of Trustees has voted to discontinue the organization's direct involvement with running or sponsoring fishing tournaments. The Annual Inshore and Offshore World Championship events will conclude with the 2008 events. More » Hunting Vermont hunters are seeing the benefits of antler regulations put into place in 2005. More big, mature bucks sporting impressive antlers are being seen throughout the state, creating considerable optimism about the 2007 deer hunting seasons. More » Squirrel hunters and wildlife watchers across the state are questioning the health of some of Georgia's squirrel population. Many have observed small lumps or "warbles" protruding from underneath the skin of squirrels and wonder if there is a cause for alarm. Officials say there is not. More » Hurricane Announcements BigFoot Bat reminds outdoorsmen a BigFoot in one of four sizes offers carry-anywhere, store-anything capabilities. More » Industry Beretta U.S.A. announces a statewide contract to supply Benelli Nova Tactical shotguns to the Georgia State Patrol. The contract will supply 1,000 Benelli Nova shotguns for the entire state police force, the largest single sale of Benelli shotguns to a law enforcement agency in the history of the Company. More » Media Hunting Lease Magazine is launching on three new outlets this fall: The Sportsman Channel, FOX Sports Net Southwest and Lonestar Channel. HLM TV began negotiations for clearances following the closure of MOR in August. More » The September 14 issue of Lone Star Outdoor News is available for downloading today at www.lonestaroutdoornews.com. More » The Bass Zone, a weekly one hour show featuring professional bass fishermen and tournament results, will focus on pro angler Guido Hibdon of Gravious Mills, Missouri on a segment set to air September 16, 2007. More » "Tom Gresham's Gun Talk" radio show has added Houston and Dallas, the number six and number five markets, to the growing list of stations carrying the nationally-syndicated live talk radio program. More » MyOutdoorTV.com has named Jim Ferguson the September recipient of its Golden Microphone award. More » Organizations Residents in Osage County have formed Missouri's newest Quail Forever (QF) chapter, the Four Rivers Chapter of QF. the eighth chapter to form in the state in 2007 and the seventeenth Missouri chapter. More » Television With Maryland's Eastern Shore as the location and the Chesapeake Bay as a backdrop, Federal Experience host Tim Abell and guide Mali Vujanic hunt the Chester River for geese and mallards on this week's episode of "The Federal Experience" on VERSUS. More » Wildlife As Kentucky's wild bull elk enter their bugling season, their calls not only attract mates but adventure seekers. "Kentucky Afield" TV showcases the state's elk this weekend, September 15 and 16, on Kentucky Educational Television. More » Kentucky wildlife officials are confident that the first hard frost in the coming weeks will end the outbreak of Epizootic Hemorrhagic Disease (EHD) in the state's whitetail deer population. More » Briefly WILDLIFE...
Virginia is the latest state to report outbreaks of Epizootic Hemorrhagic Disease (EHD) among the state's whitetail deer population. The insect-borne disease is being blamed for the deaths of nearly 200 deer across the state. Officials expect the toll to rise until the onset of cold, wet weather kills off the biting gnats or midges that spread the disease. PEOPLE... At the Marine Trades Association of Maryland (MTAM) Annual Conference on September 12, maritime photo-journalist Bob Slaff of Annapolis was officially named Chesapeake Bay Ambassador by Governor Martin O'Malley, the first such designation under the O'Malley Administration. Slaff, a veteran of World War II, is a well known journalist whose work appears regularly in The Capital, the Maryland Gazette, The Mariner, Nor'Easter and The Baltimore Sun. ORGANIZATIONS In advance of the 2007 Association of Fish & Wildlife Agencies Annual Meeting, SCI and Ducks Unlimited are sponsoring a meeting of all 50 state fish and game directors. SCI Litigation Counsel Anna Seidman, will be on hand to meet with the directors and discus various issues of interest at the state level. The 2007 Annual meeting is being held in Louisville, Kentucky from September 15-21.
Jeff Foxworthy on The Outdoors
Editor's Note: Next week, we'll be celebrating National Hunting and Fishing Day across the country. To help spread the word, National Hunting & Fishing Day has had a number of notable celebrities serve as honorary chairman of NHFD. It might be that none of the prior selections have been so unabashedly about the outdoors as this year's honorary chairman, Georgia native son Jeff Foxworthy.
Hunting and fishing. "It just drives my wife crazy," laughs Foxworthy. "She goes, 'We get invited to the Oscars. You turn that down. We get invited to the Grammys. You turn that down. But you never turn down a hunting or fishing trip.' I always explain, 'Well, if I have my choice of putting on a tuxedo and going out to L.A. and sitting around with people I have nothing in common with, or going out to Kansas to hunt a monster whitetail...uh...it's not much of a chin-scratcher.'" It's Foxworthy's rare combination of box-office starpower and bait-shop modesty that makes him a perfect honorary chairman for this year's National Hunting and Fishing Day, set for Sept. 22. "I'm flattered to be asked to serve as 2007 honorary chairman of National Hunting and Fishing Day. Without question, sharing hunting and fishing trips with my family had a profound impact on my life, and undoubtedly shaped and molded the person I am today," he said. Foxworthy grew up in Georgia, hunting and fishing with his father and grandfather. Squirrels and quail were prime quarry until the day young Jeff spotted his first deer track. It was at that precise moment that a self-professed "deer-hunting nut" was born. "I was only 14, but I can take you right now and show you where that deer track was, on the edge of a soybean field out behind our barn. I was totally fascinated that an animal that big could survive on its own without someone taking care of it," he said. Later, Foxworthy would discover that someone is taking care of deer, as well as squirrels, quail and every other wildlife and fish species. And that someone is conservationists. Across North America, sale of hunting and fishing licenses, along with special excise taxes on hunting and fishing equipment, provide virtually all funding for conservation programs. Wildlife biologists, conservation officers, land managers and others who take care of America's wildlife resources couldn't do their jobs without hunters and anglers. "As a teenager, I strongly considered being a wildlife biologist," says Foxworthy. "But I guess God had other plans for me, and he conveyed it through my grades in school." He jokes, "Now the difference between me and a wildlife biologist is, in the course of an average day, a wildlife biologist will ponder the protein levels of different legumes, discuss recruitment rates, measure the pH levels of soil, and debate the pros and cons of introducing a new crop or food plot in a given area, as opposed to me, whose workday consists of sitting in an office and pondering, 'What rhymes with booty?'" But Foxworthy has indeed come a long way since finding that first deer track, and three years later taking his first whitetail buck on that same family farm. Today, he's well versed in deer biology and is always studying to learn even more. His Georgia land is intensively yet lovingly managed, and he was even the keynote speaker at a Quality Deer Management Association convention last year. Through it all, his love for hunting has never waned. He told the convention crowd, "I love doing comedy. I'm a blessed man because it has never seemed like a job. But the biggest downside is that I didn't get to deer hunt for over a decade because I was always on the road." Now that his career has skyrocketed, Foxworthy is making up for lost time. He has hunted all over the country, taking trophy-class deer in several states, and enjoys hunting other types of big game as well as turkeys. And he shares his passion for the outdoors. "A wise person once said, 'Hunt with your kids today, and you won't have to hunt for them tomorrow.' I think there's a lot of truth in that saying. And I try to take my girls hunting and fishing with me whenever the opportunity arises. The outdoors offers a perfect avenue for building strong relationships and bonds that will last a lifetime," he said. For all his extraordinary accomplishments -- caring for the land, learning about fish and wildlife, enjoying hunting and fishing with family and friends, utilizing nature's bountiful resources in an ethical, sustainable way, and supporting conservation -- Jeff Foxworthy would be the first to tell you that he's not unique at all. He's just one among millions of sportsmen and women, from all walks of life, who share a very special heritage that America celebrates on the fourth Saturday of every September, National Hunting and Fishing Day. It's not necessary to wait for next weekend to introduce someone to the outdoors - tomorrow is Saturday- get someone outdoors and introduce them to your world.
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