To stray from merit when it comes to filling vacant board seats can damage our game and fish agencies unlike anything else.
Author: Tom Venesky
Do we really need to aid a predator whose population is already on the rise? And if so, what’s the benefit?
If the reintroduction of bobwhite quail is a success at Letterkenny, the agency hopes to expand the effort beyond the depot’s borders, according to Andrew Ward, PGC quail biologist.
These are the images that remind us that, in nature, when a predator kills its prey, it’s not always pretty.
A set of enormous antlers recently discovered in a southeastern Pennsylvania antique shop has a new home, and a new spot in the record book.
Sure, a particular species may be here today in great numbers, but that might not be the case tomorrow.
“Unfortunately, our hunters will have some reduced opportunities, but the reduced bag limit is what’s best for the resource right now,” – Waterfowl Biologist Nate Huck
Wearing a black cap embroidered with “World War II Veteran” across the front, the man shook my hand and told me his name.
Opinion: There’s a better way to reduce the fall turkey harvest and save the integrity of the season
If the agency wants to reduce the number of hens harvested in the fall, there’s no need to cut the season length or prohibit rifles.
“It takes a special breed to go out and fish in 20-degree weather with sleet,” Dalley said. “A lot of people just don’t want to deal with the conditions in the winter to fish for walleye.”