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With Cole's pronghorn down and two birds killed with one stone (his first big game archery kill and a TV show) I had no stress to shoot another pronghorn.
It was Cole's first big game archery hunt and he had prepared well in advance for the big trip.
I like confidence when I bowhunt and hunting from a ground blind gives me that edge.
I was edgy—and the guys at the NAHC office Were calling me “Nervous Nancy,” which turned my face red every time. I’d never been hunting Out West before; in fact, I’d never even seen a live pronghorn.
Appropriate firepower for my western pronghorn trip needed to be completely different from what I was used to in the Midwest. For help, I leaned on some experts.
Pronghorns didn’t have large horns in Montana in 2008—at least not in the part of the state where I prefer to hunt.
Adventure and intrigue are intrinsic qualities that make a Sitka blacktail hunt on Alaska's Kodiak Island so memorable.
Pronghorn hunting remains one of the West’s most affordable, easily accessible hunting adventures. In states where their numbers have historically been the highest—Wyoming and Montana—tags remain relatively easy to draw.
I was resting on my stiff cot during the night of Nov. 12, 2007, looking out the room’s lone window. At age 13, my first hunting trip in Nebraska had been short and sweet.
My dad was determined to raise his sons with plenty of father/son bonding time—a relational cornerstone that eluded him while growing up. He chose several activities for us to enjoy together; however, to this day, hunting is one we come back to every year.