Big Laxá: Part Two :: By Jeff Bright

From the United Kingdom and the rest of northern Europe, or from eastern North America, getting to Iceland is a quick jaunt. Coming from the Pacific Northwest, it’s a bit more of a trek, but surprisingly not the lengthy journey I had imagined.

Read more…


Wilderness Journal :: By Tim Guilfoile


Utah’s High Desert: An Urgent Call
Strip mining for coal is destroying the high desert of southwestern Utah. And if you get to know the desert and its surroundings, you will come to understand what a heinous crime strip mining has become.
From a distance, the high desert of southwestern Utah, in the semiarid foothills of the Colorado Plateau, seems a pitiful place. Even the imagination cannot replace the desolation—devoid of the life, color, and diversity that are assumed to be the foundation of wilderness. But just as you cannot marvel at the darkness by drenching it with light, you cannot see the desert without wading in and touching it with your senses.

Read more…


Farquhar Atoll — Seychelles :: By Henry Gilbey

It’s the moment when you lift off into the unknown that a fishing trip like this really starts. I totally get that the Seychelles are one of the world’s most desirable hot weather holiday and honeymoon destinations, but to me they will always be synonymous with some of the best saltwater flats fishing to be found anywhere on this earth.

Read more…


From the Sportsman’s Widow :: By Sandra Stenson

What I did Last Summer
It was the best of times (for him, mostly), it was the worst of times. It was the season of exploration and the season of holding down the fort at home.
This summer, while I was dealing with minor distractions such as students, research, report-writing, and comforting two sixty-pound dogs during each day’s major downpour, the husband went on three “work” trips exploring different piscine regimes. The poor dear, all that work tearing him away from home—how ever did he cope?

Read more…


Home to Roost: Where Doves Come in Droves by Terry Wieland

It was one of those deep, dark, velvety, southern-hemisphere nights, the kind where the sky goes black and opens like a flower, and you wonder how there could possibly be so many stars.

Read more…


Writer-in-Residence, Replications :: By Rick Bass

When I was younger, and my dogs and I would find birds in the exact same spot year after year, I would sometimes feel a little guilty about it, as if we weren’t really quite hunting. It seemed we were using the knowledge of previous years rather than the more primal and direct responses of scent, sight, sound, intuition.

Such encounters seemed to be lacking the wild extravagance, flamboyance, and stunning originality of finding birds in new places, or places where you did not expect them, or places where you expected them but have never found them before. It’s as if the dogs and I knew a secret; as if the dogs and I held, in our experience, an unfamiliar advantage over the bird hiding in that one, same spot.

What I think now, however, is that there is something just as flamboyant and spectacular in the eerie parallels of sameness that proceed, now and again, finding a bird beneath the same cottonwood, or in the precise same strand of cattails. These replications call out to us to notice them more deeply, not less, in their enduring sameness: like the teacher who desires that the students learn by rote or brute force of memorization certain of the most important lessons.

Read more…


Gun Room, Combatting the Shooter’s Curse :: By Terry Wieland

At one time or another, everyone who shoots a firearm flinches. It doesn’t matter if it’s a magnum rifle, a .22 target pistol, or a 20-gauge shotgun, shoot long enough and one day you will flinch. And, when you flinch, you will in all likelihood miss whatever it was you were shooting at.

Ah, you say: So if you hit your target, it wouldn’t matter if you flinched?

The answer is yes, and that gives us an insight into the nature of shooting itself. Because, after a lifetime of shooting, watching others shoot, and reading accounts of shooting, I have come to the conclusion that everyone flinches, to some degree, every time they pull the trigger.

The difference is, when you miss, it’s called a flinch. When you don’t miss, it’s something else.

Read more…


Just a Twenty-Pound Ruffed Grouse :: By George Calef

If there is magic on this planet,” wrote Loren Eisley, “it is contained in water.” The great scientist-essayist had deep philosophical thoughts in mind, but his words also have meaning for a first time turkey hunter in the arid Texas Hill Country.

Read more…


Top of the Tree :: Photography by Stephen Savage

A brief glimpse of a fabulous collection.

 

 

To read more visit www.thecontemporarywingshooter.com


Fair Chase :: By Nancy Anisfield

Episode 32: Scott Linden, host of Wingshooting USA, sits atop a Tennessee Walker ambling across the prairie of the Fort Pierre National Grasslands in search of sharptails and prairie chickens. Nothing about the blue sky, steady breeze, and big running English setters would strike a Midwest hunter as out of the norm for a South Dakota hunt.

Read more…