Archive for November, 2009

U.S. Attorney General Eric Holder seeks to erode gun liberties

Posted in Government on November 24th, 2009 by Arthur – Be the first to comment

This does not bode well for gun owners:

Holder tells Senate committee Justice Department supports more ‘gun control’

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“In unmistakably clear admissions before the Senate Judiciary Committee on Nov. 18, Attorney General Eric Holder signaled strong administration support for additional “gun control” edicts.”

If you create a national database and a politician can revoke your right to keep and bear arms simply by declaring you an enemy of the state, then you have no right to keep and bear arms.

David Michaels, anti-gun politician appointed to head OSHA

Posted in Government on November 23rd, 2009 by Arthur – Be the first to comment

More evidence the current administration is not a friend of the second amendment:

“Obama has nominated David Michaels, an anti-gun activist, to head the federal Occupational Safety and Health Administration (OSHA), a powerful agency that regulates real and perceived hazards in the workplace. This raises the specter of federal restrictions on the storage or carrying of firearms in or near workplaces.”

Mr. Michaels is part of the movement to make gun confiscation a ‘workplace safety’ issue:

Mr. Michaels is on the record as being hostile to gun-rights and maintains a close relationship with anti-gun groups such as the Center for American Progress.

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…security of a free state…

Outdoor Adventure University

Posted in Conservation on November 22nd, 2009 by Arthur – Be the first to comment

Outdoors activity are now offered as academic disciplines available over the web.

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Outdoor Adventure University: Hunting, Fishing, and Survival Training for the Professional Sportsman

“Outdoor Adventure University is the first to bring together renowned field experts and sportsmen, industry leaders, respected outdoor educators, prolific outdoor life writers, and outdoor media personalities to create this ground-breaking curriculum of the highest academic standard. Program tracks include: Hunting, Fishing, Wilderness Survival, and Wilderness First Aid. Over 100 courses are in development right now, many of these courses will be available in January 2010.

This revolutionary distance learning program develops new courses regularly, using up-to-date information and technology. OAU allows students to tailor their distance learning education to their personal recreational interests to help them achieve their goals. And every course is certified by the U.S. Outdoor Council.”

Outdoor education video.

Game Processing from Hi Mountain Seasonings

Posted in Camping, Hunting on November 21st, 2009 by Arthur – Be the first to comment

HiMountainSeasonings

The good people at Hi Mountain seasonings have released a DVD series on the proper processing of harvested game.

“Riverton, Wyoming — Working in conjunction with Outdoor Edge and renowned meat processor Brad Lockwood, Hi Mountain Seasonings is pleased to announce the immediate availability of three new instructional DVDs that will help you process your own big game harvests.”

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Idaho extends wolf hunting season

Posted in Conservation, Hunting on November 20th, 2009 by Arthur – Be the first to comment

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It appears the wolf hunt in Idaho is a success. An orderly, organized culling of wolves to decrease predator pressure and properly manage the species which they prey upon.

“In what may be an effort to assure quotas are reached, the Idaho Fish and Game Commission has decided to extend the wolf-hunting season through March 31 in all zones.

This will lengthen the season in seven areas which previously had a Dec. 31 closure. Hunting was already set to end March 31 in two other zones.

Of course, if a zone limit is reached prior to March 31 that area will close to further wolf hunting.

As of this morning, the number of wolves reported killed in Idaho was 111 — just over half of the statewide quota of 220.
Three areas have already reached the limit and have closed, and three are nearing theirs.

All other rules remain unchanged, and hunters are required to report a wolf kill within 24 hours, and must present the skull and hide to a regional office or a Fish and Game conservation officer within five days.

Also, those planning to hunt wolves after Dec. 31 must purchase a 2010 license and wolf tag.”

Predator

Gettysburg Address Anniversary

Posted in Culture on November 19th, 2009 by Arthur – Be the first to comment

Today marks 146 years since President Abraham Lincoln delivered the Gettysburg Address.

This memorial to troops who died in the US civil war is considered perhaps the greatest speech ever given by a US president.

Abraham Lincoln proved that brevity is the soul of wit:

“Abraham Lincoln was the second speaker on November 19, 1863, at the dedication of the Soldiers’ National Cemetery at Gettysburg. Lincoln was preceded on the podium by the famed orator Edward Everett, who spoke to the crowd for two hours.”

“From July 1–3, 1863, more than 160,000 American soldiers clashed in the Battle of Gettysburg, in what would prove to be a turning point of the Civil War. The battle also had a major impact on the town of Gettysburg, Pennsylvania, which numbered only 2,400 inhabitants. The battlefield contained the bodies of more than 7,500 dead soldiers and several thousand horses of the Army of the Potomac and the Confederacy’s Army of Northern Virginia, and the stench of rotting bodies in the humid July air was overpowering.

Interring the dead in a dignified and orderly manner became a high priority for the few thousand residents of Gettysburg. Initially, the town planned to buy land for a cemetery and then ask the families of the dead to pay for their burial. However, David Wills, a wealthy 32-year-old attorney, objected to this idea and wrote to the Governor of Pennsylvania, Andrew Gregg Curtin, suggesting instead a National Cemetery to be funded by the states. Wills was authorized to purchase 17 acres (69,000 m²) for a cemetery to honor those lost in the battle, paying $2,475.87 for the land.”

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“Despite the historical significance of Lincoln’s speech, modern scholars disagree as to its exact wording, and contemporary transcriptions published in newspaper accounts of the event and even handwritten copies by Lincoln himself differ in their wording, punctuation, and structure. Of these versions, the Bliss version, written well after the speech as a favor for a friend, is viewed by many as the standard text. Its text differs, however, from the written versions prepared by Lincoln before and after his speech. It is the only version to which Lincoln affixed his signature, and the last he is known to have written.”

We shall see if our republic shall perish from this earth.

Sammy L. Davis, the real Forrest Gump

Posted in Culture on November 18th, 2009 by Arthur – 1 Comment

When I read the stories of Medal of Honor recipients, I am reminded of the men and women who have demonstrated amazing courage and have sacrificed so much that we may enjoy our liberties. We should be deeply grateful to these Americans. Sammy L. Davis is such an American.

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“Sammy Davis took some ribbing in the Army because he shared a name with the famous entertainer. Much later, long after his military days were over, he would again gain some acclaim among his old comrades, this time as the “real” Forrest Gump.

Davis enlisted in the Army directly out of high school in 1965. Volunteering for the artillery because his father had been an artilleryman in World War II, he was assigned to the 4th Artillery. Soon after completing training, he asked to be sent to Vietnam.

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Early on November 18, 1967, his unit of eleven guns and forty-two men was helicoptered into an area west of Cai Lay to set up a forward fire-support base-Firebase Cudgel-for American infantrymen operating in the area. Shortly after midnight the next morning, Private First Class Davis’s Battery C came under heavy mortar attack. Almost simultaneously, an estimated fifteen hundred Vietcong soldiers launched an intense ground assault, failing to overrun the Americans only because a river separated the two forces.

Davis’s squad was operating a 105 mm howitzer that fired eighteen thousand beehive darts in each shell. When he saw how close the enemy had come, Davis took over a machine gun and provided covering fire for his gun crew. But an enemy recoilless rifle round scored a direct hit on the howitzer, knocking the crew from the weapon and blowing Davis sideways into a foxhole. Convinced that the heavily outnumbered Americans couldn’t survive the attack, he decided to fire off at least one round from the damaged artillery piece before being overrun. He struggled to his feet, rammed a shell into the gun, and fired point-blank at the Vietcong who were advancing five deep directly in front of the weapon; the beehive round cut them down.

An enemy mortar round exploded nearby, knocking Davis to the ground, but he got up and kept firing the howitzer. When there were no more rounds left, he fired a white phosphorus shell, and then the last round he had- a “propaganda shell” filled with leaflets.

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At this point, he heard yelling from the other side of the river and realized that GIs had been cut off there. Despite the fact that he didn’t know how to swim, he got in the water and paddled across on an air mattress from the American camp; other GIs followed him. Scrambling up the bank, he found three wounded soldiers, one of them suffering from a head wound that looked fatal. He gave them all morphine and provided covering fire as another GI helped the most gravely wounded soldier across the river, then pulled the other two through the water on the air mattress to the fire base. He eventually made his way to an American howitzer crew and resumed the fight. Sometime before dawn, he was seriously wounded in the back and buttocks by friendly fire.

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While he was in the hospital, Davis heard that he was to be sent home. He petitioned General William Westmoreland to be allowed to stay with his unit. Permission was granted, although Davis was still so hobbled by his wounds that he was taken off the line and made a cook.

On November 19, 1968, exactly one year and one day after the nightlong firefight at Cai Lay, Davis received the Medal of Honor from President Lyndon Johnson. Years later, footage of LBJ putting the medal around Davis’s neck appeared in the movie Forrest Gump (with Tom Hanks’s head substituted for Davis’s), and Gump’s fictional Medal of Honor citation was loosely based on Davis’s real one.”

“You don’t lose until you quit trying.”

Sammy1

Thank You

Ducks Unlimited Conservation Challenge

Posted in Conservation on November 17th, 2009 by Arthur – Be the first to comment

Ducks Unlimited is raising money to secure habitat for Duck Hunting. To this end, DU has established the Ducks Unlimited Conservation Challenge:

“Across North America, waterfowl are finding fewer places to breed, migrate and winter. Sportsmen are having to hunt for land. In every flyway, at nearly every turn, we’re losing wetlands and grasslands at a rampant rate.

Threats continue to bear down on waterfowl breeding grounds. Last year, Ducks Unlimited supporters stood up and helped us protect more than 67,000 acres of the duck factory, but the losses continue. In North Dakota, Ducks Unlimited is facing outdated laws that prevent critical habitat conservation, Donate Today!even by willing private landowners. Along the Louisiana and Texas coast, marshes and wintering grounds are eroding every hour.

However, the good news is that Ducks Unlimited has answers to these problems and we’re taking action.

Ducks Unlimited supporters make gifts during the fall because they recognize that disappearing habitat, the prospect of empty skies and the end of our hunting tradition are losses we can’t afford.

That’s why we are excited to announce the Ducks Unlimited Conservation Challenge! Our goal is to raise $500,000 online for our conservation mission by Dec. 31″

Great White Expedition with Chris Fisher

Posted in Fishing on November 16th, 2009 by Alan – Be the first to comment

The National Geographic channel brings us famed bill fisherman Chris Fisher. He thinks it’s fun to catch great white sharks. We think it’s fun to watch:

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“Avid billfish angler and TV outdoor fishing adventurer Chris Fischer never thought he’d actually be living a scene much like that from Jaws as he kneeled face-to-face handling a huge, live 4,600 pound great white shark. As a sportsman Fischer has caught and safely released lots of giant black marlin each weighing about 800 lbs, but this great white and the other giant toothy predators that followed were the biggest he’s ever caught, examined and then released 15 minutes later unharmed.”

Great

Caterpillar Mudhole Skiing

Posted in Sports on November 16th, 2009 by Alan – Be the first to comment

Men, Machines, and Mud…all the ingredients for greatness.  These are the same guys that, as kids, got their chemistry sets and took all the little blue bottles of chemicals that warned, “DO NOT MIX WITH —- ”  and promptly mixed them together…my kind of people.

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