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  • July 27, 2009

    Rifle Quiz: Win $100 at Bass Pro Shops!

    Here’s the deal: Read the following scenario, come up the answer we’re looking for, and you’ll win a $100 gift card from Bass Pro Shops. Make sure to back up your answer with at least a few facts. (Facts that don’t include that you have seen your cousin Ray-Ray brain a squirrel at 200 yards with the same set-up.)

    Scenario: Pest-control hunt on some pastureland in the Ozark Mountains. Shooting area is endless, with rolling hills and significant brush to use for cover. You will be shooting a Thompson-Center Arms R-55, semi-auto .22 LR, with a 10-shot clip. Open sights and no gun rest. Ammo is off-the-shelf 40-grain round nose—the stuff you plink with for fun. Shots will be quick and the rancher wants clean kills.

    Question: What is the maximum range you feel comfortable squeezing the trigger?

    Please don’t reply “20 yards” and expect the swag. Whatever yardage and your reasoning behind it is a much more likely to earn you the 100 bones. But, if you do happen to pull this off, the $100 gift card is just enough to cover cost and shipping of a great new product, the “Bill Heavey Suburban Deer Moccasin, edition IV.” They are great for sneaking around affluent neighborhoods looking for that magical, hidden thicket where booners hide away from homebound outdoor writers and little dogs.

    - John Davis

    dek: 
    Read the following scenario, come up the answer we’re looking for, and you’ll win a $100 gift card from Bass Pro Shops.
  • July 27, 2009

    MEET THE FINALIST: The Bachelor

    Justin Brown, 29
    Memphis, Ind.

    Less than 500 people call the other Memphis home, and Justin Brown is one of them. This small-town sportsman has big hopes for the Total Outdoorsman Challenge after placing third in the Nashville Regional.

    "I feel that getting third—I’m capable of a lot more," says Brown, an elevator mechanic. "They had an obstacle course, and I had a high score. After that I just lost it."

    Though Brown enjoys hunting and fishing equally, he spends a bit more time on the water. He’s spent countless hours on Indiana’s Patoka Lake fishing for bluegill and believes his strong point in this competition is bass fishing. "The best part about bass fishing is that feeling you get when you outsmart the fish. It’s not you against other fishermen. It’s you against the fish."

    Fly fishing may present a problem, however, since Brown has never done it. But the way Brown sees it, he doesn’t need to be the best in any single event, so long as he’s near the top in all of them. And he’s not too worried about finding time to be more consistent: "I’m single, so I feel I get to hunt and fish a lot more."

    — Lance Madden

  • July 22, 2009

    MEET THE FINALIST: The Graduate

    William Bond, 23
    Fort Gibson, Okla.

    William Bond is the youngest competitor in this year’s Total Outdoorsman Challenge, but he’s already performed on a national stage. He was on the bass fishing team at the University of Arkansas, where he graduated from in May with an environmental science degree and a minor in wildlife habitat.

    “We won the national championship in 2008,” says Bond. “So that’s not too bad.” Bond’s skills don’t end on the bass lake, though. He started making duck calls while in school, and they quickly became popular. He’s sold about 200 calls in the past six years—all made by hand with Arkansas-style single reeds.

    Bond, who has been hunting and fishing with his dad, Rodney, since he was a kid, says he’s in good physical shape—an advantage in a competition with seven legs. “I certainly hope being younger gives me an advantage,” says Bond, who placed first in the Independence Regional. “From what I’ve seen, there are some physical parts, and, well, it just might be easier to do those things as a younger guy. I’d also like to think I’ve got a pretty cool head.”

    — Lance Madden

  • July 16, 2009

    The Finals

    Twelve have beaten the odds and have advanced through two stages of qualifying. Now what? Just for starters add three events, tougher competition courses, and the infinite pressure of knowing that those little red lights are documenting every move for deer camp buddies to critique. Throw in a four-day schedule that resembles Bill Heavey’s fall travel schedule (Promo hunts keep a man busy! Thanks, Scent-Lok!), and it would be easy to feel over-whelmed.

    Take the average practice time these guys put in for the Regionals and add to it the endless list of skill and equipment modifications. A tree stand and a ground blind are added into the archery mix, along with some distance and significantly harder shot angles than at the qualifying stages. In order to get separation in this crowd of shooters, the course will be a monster.

    Skills is now Endurance, and that’s pretty close to comparing a fence lizard to a gator—both are cold-blooded reptiles, but only one would eat you if given the chance. Fatigue can cause errors and more than one has flipped their chance at 25 g’s by a single, erratic move in a canoe. Trust me, there’s gators in Dogwood for one week a year.

    Weekend practice sessions are reserved for what can’t be practiced in the backyard. Maybe work in a bass tournament, fish some crowded trout stream, or bust clays at a range shoot to get used to performing in front of crowds.

    And one more little detail that the competitors didn’t face in qualifying…cameras. They capture everything: trigger punch, broken knots, running the wheeler into a tree, all for everyone to see on national TV. It’s hard to imitate that pressure in practice and I’ve seen it break a bunch of talented competitors over the years.

    Making it to the Finals is like finally scoring a date with the Prom Queen. Some of your buds will be happy for you no matter what. Some are going to take their shots because they didn’t ask her out, and they are convinced they would be better fit. All of them will give you pointers, most of them awful, on how to date a Debutante.

    You have your own ideas. Doing it up all fancy, but that seems foreign to you. Even after all the prep time, in the end, it’s still just you and the Prom Queen. It’s probably best just to be who you really are…but at least take the time to shower.

    —John Davis

  • July 15, 2009

    Harrisburg Wrap

    The Harrisburg, Pa, Bass Pro Shops hosted the final Regional of 2009, and two more newcomers earned their way to Dogwood Canyon. With just the wildcard slot left, at least nine of the field of sixteen will be first time Finals competitors.

    Crushing the four disciplines, Ryan Straley won with an impressive total score of ten. Victories in air rifle and bait casting, a second in skills, and a six in archery send Ryan to the Canyon with a head of steam.

    Jay Moore (third place in the 2006 TOC) finished second in Harrisburg and is a big threat to stop Paul Thompson’s winning streak. Jay is the best I have seen with the stick and string in five years of this competition, and archery is going to be brutal this year.

    If you keep up with the competitive archery world, then you will know the third place finisher. Randy Hendrix is as good with the bow as anyone in the world; big statement, but Google his resume and that should back it up. If it shoots, Randy is pretty handy with it—so don’t be surprised if he has a good lead going into the fishing disciplines.

    —John Davis

  • July 7, 2009

    Independence Wrap

    Three more new faces are heading to the Canyon to try and stop Paul Thompson’s “quad for the quad” quest. Out of the nine invitations handed out so far, seven have gone to rookies. This year’s Finals will be like a Jack Russell Terrier race: some going straight and fast, some will get stuck in the chute, and someone will wander off to munch on a lost corn dog under the bleachers without even realizing there is a race going on.

    Will Bond won Independence with a steady performance. He didn’t win any discipline, but never finished lower than seventh in any of the four. Being consistent is a great quality in the Finals.

    John Sappington finished second overall. He won two disciplines, Air Rifle and Bait Casting, but had a little bit of a struggle in Archery. John came back strong with a four in Skills to secure his spot.

    John Stanley grabbed third place with a win in the Skills discipline. He will have some work to do in the shooting department to contend, but two months gives John the time he needs.

    —John Davis

    dek: 
    Three more new faces are heading to the Canyon to try and stop Paul Thompson’s “quad for the quad” quest. Out of the nine invitations handed out so far, seven have gone to rookies.
  • July 7, 2009

    Back to Business

    Sorry about the time between posts, but I’ve been out of action since Nashville. No, I wasn’t abducted by Kellie Pickler, and I wasn’t fired by Eric for selling the contents of my hotel mini-bar for walking around cash.

    In Grapevine and Nashville my color had faded to a minty-green usually reserved to basement dwellers addicted to Warcraft. My crew buddies made me visit the Doc to see what’s up, and in a whirlwind I’m receiving chemo for lymphoma. Prognosis and treatments are all good so far, and my family and friends are very supportive. We are getting this thing whipped and I can’t thank those who have reached out to me enough.

    Updates for Independence and Harrisburg will be written by the end of the week. I just have to recon a little more information from the events.

    —John Davis

TOC
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