SUBSCRIBE    ARCHIVES MONDAY, MAY 11, 2026

- AUCTIONS -

Pope & Young, North America's bowhunting conservation organization, is hosting an online-only auction on May 15th featuring archery governor's tags, premium hunts, and products from industry leaders including Big Shot Archery, Garmin, Redneck Blinds, Xpedition, and Camp Chef, with pre-bidding now live.

- AWARDS & HONORS -

The Indiana DNR Division of Law Enforcement held a ceremony honoring seven fallen officers and recognizing current officers for outstanding service. Awards were presented to Tyler Brock as Conservation Officer of the Year, Lt. Brent Bohbrink for leadership, Steve Kinne for brotherhood, and multiple officers for specialized achievements in boating, waterfowl, wildlife, and emergency response.

Elite Archery's Varos compound bow has been named Outdoor Life's 2026 Bow of the Year after a three-day evaluation of seven flagship hunting bows. Outdoor Life called it "the most accurate bow we tested," praising its accuracy, user-friendly tuning features, and value. The Varos averaged 2.79-inch groups at 50 yards and outperformed competitors in the final shootoff.

- COMPETITION -

SHIELD Sights highlights competition results from the EHC Warm Up Cup 2026 in Hungary, with SHIELD-equipped shooters securing multiple podium finishes including 1st place finishes by Bartosz Szczesny in Optics Division and Miroslav Zapletal in Production Optics Division, ahead of the European Handgun Championships in June.

- FISHING -

Montana Fish, Wildlife & Parks is seeking public input on 41 preliminary proposals for 2027–2028 fishing regulations through May 31. FWP will host a Region 2 meeting May 21 in Missoula at 6:30 p.m. to present proposals, answer questions, and discuss ideas for regulation changes.

The Michigan Department of Natural Resources is partnering with MyCatch by Angler's Atlas for a statewide walleye fishing challenge running May 15-June 28. Anglers report catches via the mobile app to help fisheries biologists assess walleye populations while competing for cash prizes and weekly challenges across six Midwest states.

- FORESTRY -

The Michigan Department of Natural Resources has added two Fire Boss aircraft to its firefighting fleet, each capable of scooping 800 gallons of water in 15 seconds. Leased through early June and based at Gaylord Regional Airport, the planes will work alongside Michigan State Police helicopters equipped with Bambi buckets to combat wildfires intensified by debris from the 2025 ice storm.

- GRANTS -

Pass It On - Outdoor Mentors received a grant from Alliant Energy to support its mission of connecting Wisconsin youth with outdoor mentors for hunting, fishing, and conservation experiences. The funding will help remove barriers to participation and build the next generation of conservationists.

- HUNTING -

The Arizona Game and Fish Department (AZGFD) is providing guidance for hunters applying in the 2026 Fall Draw for deer, turkey, javelina, bighorn sheep, bison, and sandhill crane. Applicants must create or update AZGFD portal accounts, maintain valid hunting licenses, and download the Arizona E-Tag app before the June 2, 2026 deadline.

Montana Fish, Wildlife & Parks announces drawing results for moose, bighorn sheep, mountain goat, and bison licenses. Applicants can check results via fwp.mt.gov, MyFWP Login, or by calling 406-444-2950. The MyFWP mobile app allows hunters to access licenses, permits, and E-tags for field validation.

North Dakota's 2026 deer season opens November 6 with 39,100 licenses available, down 3,200 from last year due to habitat limitations and disease recovery. The North Dakota Game and Fish Department, led by wildlife division chief Bill Haase, is implementing conservative allocations to encourage population growth while maintaining hunting opportunities. Online applications close June 3.

Late season turkey hunting offers excellent opportunities with less pressure and leftover tags available. Nate Hosie, Randy Birdsong of HeadHunters TV, and Jason Powell of Jason Powell Outdoors share tactics including softer calling, patience, and strategic decoy placement for success on pressured birds.

- INDUSTRY UPDATE -

Derya, a Jacksonville-based precision firearms manufacturer, launched an advanced AI customer service agent available during business hours, supporting over 30 languages. Vice President Dustin Jones emphasized the company remains committed to hiring and live agent support for complex inquiries.

CMC Triggers Corp announced Aaron Banks' appointment as US Field Sales Manager-West. Banks brings 16 years of firearms industry experience, including previous roles at Remington Outdoor Company, Beck and Associates, and Primary Arms Government, to lead regional expansion and dealer support across the Western United States.

- ORGANIZATIONS -

The Council to Advance Hunting and the Shooting Sports and the International Hunter Education Association (IHEA-USA) released PUP AI, an interactive chat tool designed to help users access information from the National R3 Clearinghouse. The tool makes recruitment, retention, and reactivation research more accessible to agencies, organizations, and professionals working to strengthen hunting and shooting sports participation.

SLG2, Inc. released its Q1 2026 Report highlighting the Grand Safety Tour's impact across four states with 1,155 participants. The tour visited five premier destinations and reported that 39% of guests improved their attitude toward firearms, while 72% indicated plans to purchase a firearm following their experience.

Turkeys for Tomorrow is leading a four-year predator-prey study across nine states with researchers including Craig Harper and David Buehler from the University of Tennessee, Marcus Lashley from the University of Florida, and others to assess predator impacts on declining wild turkey populations.

The Council to Advance Hunting and the Shooting Sports (CAHSS) and International Hunter Education Association-USA (IHEA-USA) released PUP AI, an interactive chat tool providing quick access to National R3 Clearinghouse research on Recruitment, Retention, and Reactivation. The tool helps agencies and professionals explore hunting and shooting sports data more efficiently.

- PODCASTS -

The latest episode of the award-winning "Wildtalk" podcast features guest host Shelby Adams and co-host Eric Hilliard discussing an ice storm's impact on wildlife habitat, the northern shrike, and elk. Listeners can participate in a wildlife quiz for a chance to win exclusive podcast merchandise.

- POWERSPORTS -

Maine Game Wardens are investigating a fatal ATV crash in Vassalboro on May 8th. Cobey Schmidt, 52, was operating a side-by-side ATV in his yard when his left front tire struck a rock, causing him to partially eject and be rolled over by the vehicle. Speed is suspected to be a factor in the crash.

- PRODUCT NEWS -

Liberty Safe, America's #1 safe manufacturer, introduces the Presidential Signature, an ultra-premium safe featuring Pro-Flex™ modular shelving for customizable organization. The safe combines robust protection with refined interior finishes, premium fabrics, and contemporary design, available in high-gloss colors and proudly made in the USA.

DeSantis Gunhide introduces the Intruder 2.0 holster featuring Red Dot Ready cut out, precision-molded Kydex body, and premium steerhide construction. The versatile IWB/OWB design offers adjustable cant and tuckable setup for discreet concealment, retailing at $114.99.

Walker's has introduced the Razor Junior Muffs, youth-sized hearing protection designed for younger shooters. The muffs feature dual Hi-Gain microphones, HD speakers, sound-activated compression, and a 23dB Noise Reduction Rating, now available online and through select retailers nationwide.

- PUBLISHING -

Hook & Barrel Magazine, the lifestyle magazine for modern outdoorsmen, has tripled its in-store presence with Range USA, expanding from 5 to 15 locations across the Midwest and South. The partnership reflects shared values in shooting sports and responsible firearm ownership.

- SPONSORSHIPS -

Lapua has renewed its partnership with U.S. Biathlon as the official ammunition supplier for the upcoming Olympic quadrennial. The partnership supports U.S. Biathlon athletes competing in the winter sport that combines cross-country skiing with rifle marksmanship using .22 LR ammunition.

- STATE AGENCIES -

The Montana State Shooting Facilities and Improvements Development and Oversight Task Force will meet May 15 in Great Falls to discuss preliminary survey information. The public is invited to attend and participate in the feedback session.

Maine Search and Rescue Dogs (MESARD) K9 handler Nikki St. Pierre and K9 Kenny located 76-year-old Dennis Beckwith in woods near Trescott after he became disoriented during a morning walk. Beckwith survived overnight temperatures in the mid-30s and was transported by Maine Forest Service helicopter to Downeast Community Hospital, where he is expected to make a full recovery.

Montana Fish, Wildlife & Parks is accepting lottery entries through May 18, 2026, for three available commercial fishing and floating permits on the upper and West Fork Bitterroot River. The drawing will be randomized, with successful applicants notified via email. Contact FWP Bitterroot District Recreation Manager Jess Martin for more information.

- TELEVISION -

Ralph, Vicki, RJ, and Aubrey Cianciarulo invite viewers to their 26th season of The Choice on Pursuit Channel, airing Monday May 11th at 6:00AM EST. The family continues chasing turkeys with multiple family members on the board, competing for a slam.

Outdoor Channel presents "Taste Of The Wild" programming block every Monday in May featuring Chef Mike Robinson, Daniel Vitalis, Steven Rinella, Scott Leysath, Pat Martin, and Chef Jean-Paul Bourgeois showcasing wild game cookery and outdoor culinary adventures from field to table.

The High Road with Keith Warren premieres a new thermal hog hunting episode featuring co-host Johnny Piazza and guests from Sticky Holsters using Shaw Barrels AR-10 rifles and Bering Optics thermal scopes in South Texas. The episode airs on Pursuit Channel and online at highroadhunting.com.

Congress is moving bipartisan legislation to confront a forest health crisis that hunters, conservationists, rural communities and land managers have warned about for years.

The U.S. House of Representatives passed the NSSF priority H.R. 471, the Fix Our Forests Act—sponsored by House Natural Resources Committee Chairman Bruce Westerman (R-Ark.), earlier this session. Chairman Westerman knows of what he speaks since he holds a master’s degree in forestry from Yale University. The U.S. Senate companion, S. 1462 and sponsored by Sen. John Curtis (R-Utah), has also advanced, with the Senate Committee on Agriculture, Nutrition and Forestry reporting the bill out favorably and placing it on the Senate Legislative Calendar. The bill is well positioned for consideration by the full Senate.

That is meaningful progress. America’s forests are not suffering because they are being managed too aggressively. Too often, they are suffering because needed work is delayed until overgrown and diseased and fire-prone landscapes become fuel for the next catastrophic wildfire. This is the result of land management agencies dismissing scientific evidence and instead kowtowing to anti-hunting, environmentalist special interest groups.

However, hunters, recreational shooters and the firearm and ammunition industry members understand what real conservation requires. It takes active stewardship, sound science, public access and the resolve to manage wildlife habitat before disaster strikes.

Hunters, after all, are America’s original conservationists.

Active Management Is Conservation

The Fix Our Forests Act would improve forest management activities on National Forest System lands, public lands managed by the Bureau of Land Management (BLM) and tribal lands to return resilience to overgrown, fire-prone forests.

That is conservation in action.

Healthy forests don’t happen by accident. They require thinning, prescribed fire, removal of hazardous fuels, watershed restoration, fuel breaks and coordinated work across federal, state, tribal and local boundaries. When that work is delayed by duplicative processes, endless review or litigation, the results are predictable.

Fires burn hotter. Watersheds are damaged. Roads, trails and public land access points close. Wildlife habitat is lost and animal populations are harmed. Rural communities are left to absorb the cost.

The House Natural Resources Committee, led by Chairman Westerman, appropriately describes the bill as legislation to restore forest health, increase resiliency to catastrophic wildfires and protect communities by expediting environmental analyses, reducing frivolous lawsuits and increasing the pace and scale of forest restoration projects. That is not a shortcut around conservation. It is the work conservation requires.

Wildlife, Access and Rural Communities Are on the Line

For sportsmen and women, this debate is not academic. Forests provide habitat for elk, deer, turkey, grouse, bear and countless other nongame species. They protect headwaters and fisheries. They sustain hunting access, outdoor recreation and the rural businesses that rely on public land use.

When catastrophic wildfires rip through unmanaged landscapes, they do not just burn trees. They destroy cover, damage watersheds, displace wildlife and can close public access for months or even years. Hunters know that lost access and habitat are not easily restored and recovery can take several years. The firearm and ammunition industry has a direct stake in this debate.

Hunters, recreational shooters and firearm and ammunition manufacturers are the backbone of American conservation funding. In 2026 alone, $804,790,385 of nearly $1.3 billion distributed to state conservation and wildlife access programs came directly from firearm and ammunition excise taxes paid by manufacturers. Since 1937, more than $31 billion (when adjusted for inflation) in Pittman-Robertson excise tax monies, paid by the firearm and ammunition industry, have been distributed to states for wildlife management, habitat work, public access and hunter education.

Those investments work best when federal land managers are able to manage the land. Those conservation dollars should be matched with policy that allows meaningful work to be completed on the ground, in a timely manner.

Delays Have Consequences

Federal agencies often know which landscapes face the greatest risk. Local communities know where fuel loads are building. State wildlife managers know where habitat is stressed. The problem is not a lack of warning. The problem is a federal process that too often moves slower than the threat.

H.R. 471 would establish a more focused approach for high-risk firesheds and improve coordination among agencies. It would also support better assessment, prediction and mapping of fire risk so managers can prioritize work where it matters most.

That is important because wildfire risk is not just a forestry issue. It is a wildlife issue, a public access issue, a watershed issue and a rural economy issue.

Congress should not wait for another catastrophic fire season to prove what land managers and conservationists already know. Responsible forest management is not optional. It is necessary.

The House has acted. The Senate has moved its companion bill forward. The next step is for the full Senate to take up the Fix Our Forests Act and keep this bipartisan effort moving.

If the Senate passes its version, S. 1462, lawmakers will need to reconcile differences with the House-passed bill before final legislation can be approved. That is the normal work of Congress. It should not become an excuse for inaction.

The firearm and ammunition industry, hunters and recreational shooters have done their part for conservation for generations. They fund wildlife restoration, habitat improvement, hunter education and public access through excise taxes that remain the gold standard of conservation funding.

Congress should match that commitment with policy that allows forests to be restored before they burn, habitat to be improved before it is lost and public access to be protected before gates are closed.

The Fix Our Forests Act is a serious step in that direction.

– Larry Keane

Larry Keane is SVP for Government and Public Affairs, Assistant Secretary and General Counsel of the National Shooting Sports Foundation.

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