Monthly Archives: February 2012

Lazy Brews for Lazy Days :: Story by Lindsay Mott

Photograph by Stephen Savage

 

Kiln, Mississippi, located just miles northwest of Bay St. Louis, has long been home to those that love and make beer. Known as the moonshine capital of the world, according to legend, during the bootlegging years of prohibition, moonshine was made there secretly for many years.

Today, beer is still manufactured in Kiln, referred to as “The Kill” by locals, in large quantities but in a very legal way, at the Lazy Magnolia Brewery. Lazy Magnolia is the first and only manufacturing and packaging brewery in Mississippi since prohibition and is focused on bringing a true Southern quality to all of its brews.

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Following the Hops Trail, Part One :: Story by Mart McCann and Photography by Frank Barnett

 

Portland, Oregon, has more microbreweries per capita than any other city in the country. Living here should make writing about craft beer a snap, right? As it turns out, the plethora of breweries, brewpubs, and bottle shops can be a bit overwhelming. Where to begin? Serendipity led photographer Frank Barnett and me to follow the hops.

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The Oldest New Way to Pursue Salmon, Steelhead, and Trout. A Spey-Fishing Primer Installment No.3: The basic casts :: Story and Photography by Jeff Bright

 

Without preamble, I’ll continue this Spey-fishing primer with a discussion of mechanics for the basic casts and a general guideline for which cast to use when. If you’re just joining, it is imperative to visit the previous two issues, Vol. 2 No. 3 and Vol. 2 No. 4, for a review of the first two installments.

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Taimen Fishing in Mongolia :: Story and Photography by Henry Gilbey

 

I often think about different kinds of fishing that might or might not qualify as “legendary,” but should legendary fishing be all about merely the fish and the act of catching them, or should it also be about the place and the people? I can’t help but think more and more that it’s about the overall experience, and when it all comes together as some kind of delightful sensory overload then perhaps that is the time when the fishing becomes “legendary.”

Taimen fishing in Mongolia is just that to me. Legendary. And I got to go and do it, or rather I want to go and photograph it, live it, and perhaps fit in a few casts myself.

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Trout Unlimited’s Sportsmen’s Conservation Project: Protecting the Best of What’s Left :: Story and Photography by Chris Hunt

 
Habitat and opportunity. Without the first, the second is impossible.

Trout Unlimited’s Sportsmen’s Conservation Project works on public lands throughout the West on landscape-level campaigns to protect the best of what’s left with this notion in mind. If we are able to protect irreplaceable fish and game habitat, we are cementing in place the ability to hunt and fish on public lands for generations to come.

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Collecting Memories :: Story by Kelly Boatright Photography by David Krehl

 

From the cold winter waters of North Carolina’s Outer Banks to the salmon rivers of Canada, I am held, enchanted, and at peace, knowing that there is life for me when I am suspended between worlds, dancing with surf and currents, salt water and fresh. Only in remote grouse coverts am I as touched by time and my ancestors.

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A Different Territory :: Story by Rick Bass

November Slough—Pheasant by Jim Rataczak Courtesy of Wild Wings

Fortunately, late in December, the diminishment of your desire to kill a pheasant, or anything, after you’ve killed so many, is balanced almost perfectly by the increase in your desire to do right by your dog, and to keep on hunting.

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No Apologies Necessary :: Story by Jim Stenson

Photograph by Russ Schnitzer

Depending where you live, the odds are better than even that you are probably buried in snow right now up to your derriere or at least freezing the latter off. I feel for you—really I do—and I am almost embarrassed to say that is late December here in Mobile and it is a frigid 73 degrees and sunny. In fact, my wife just gave our dog a bath, which resulted in the dog losing ten pounds of hair. The poor dog can’t make up her mind if she wants to shed her summer coat and grow a winter coat, or vice versa. The trees seem equally confused. They are dropping their old leaves at a much slower rate than would be expected and some have commenced the process of growing new ones. Roses are blooming and the azaleas have new buds and look like they are going to explode any day. Naturally, I am still wearing shorts and polo shirts and, of course, the ubiquitous flip-flops. In short, everything (including the winter one wants to escape on holiday) is relative. As Jimmy Buffet once said, perceptions are based on attitudes and attitudes are based on changes in latitudes. Which brings me to changes in latitude.

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Swing Time :: Story and Photography by Terry Wieland

Photograph by Terry Wieland

We’ve only one virginity to lose, wrote Rudyard Kipling, and where we lose it there our hearts will be. Kipling was writing of the sea. I am writing of ruffed grouse. I was nine. It’s like it was yesterday. That’s not the day I shot a ruffed grouse, for that would come some years later. No, it was the day I first saw one, heard one, and felt it as it landed near me in some leaves on a brittle day in October.

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