It was back in May that we reluctantly bid adieu to hunting seasons 2018-19. Last season started for me with a whimper with doves. I sat alone in a field a friend had given me permission to hunt.
Even with daytime temperatures edging above the century mark and the calendar just now entering August, don’t you sometimes find yourself thinking about what lies just a few months down
While being a true Sportsman’s Paradise, Louisiana seems to attract some unseemly species that we would do just as well without, and here comes another that is wreaking havoc in southern Louisiana.
It’s unfortunate but it’s a fact. The number of youngsters who eventually become hunters is in a slow fall. Why is that? Greg Patterson with Ducks Unlimited put his finger
I remember it well although it happened several decades ago. I was a kid, fishing Molido Creek behind our house with my dad’s rod and reel and his favorite lure, a brown fishy-looking River Runt.
Once springtime slab slaying is done, some crappie fishermen hang it up for the year. However, others stick with it with good results, but you have to do it differently.
If you enjoy viewing wildlife in native habitats and have never visited the Tensas River National Wildlife Refuge, you need to avail yourself of the privilege. I did last week,