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How Burnout Led This Pro Cyclist to Redefine Success


Being kind and informed and giving back to others—rather than race results—is how pro cyclist Sarah Sturm defines success. But it wasn’t always that way. As a competitor, Sturm had to burn out first before she realized that she’d rather be a mentor than an inspiration. Now she coaches other young women to achieve their own goals. Visit Wahoo Frontiers  to learn about more athletes who are redefining success.

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Camping Tips, Tricks and Adventures

Key to early season ruffed grouse success: slow down

The first couple weeks of ruffed grouse season are my least favorite time to hunt. For starters, I know that when I’m on public land I’ve usually got competition. Then there is the issue of the foliage, which starts out as thick as it’ll be all season and gradually thins throughout October and November.

All griping out of the way, when the temps are cool and the grouse season is open, it’s still worth going. But, it’s not enough to hit up your favorite two-track or logging road and hoof it until your dog goes on point or flushes a ruff across the trail.

Thick-cover grouse demand a bit of a slower approach, which isn’t a big deal with a pointer but can be a real problem if you’re running a flushing dog. Most retrievers will work to match your pace in the field, and if your pace is moderately fast to easy walking (while the dog is supposed to nose around in the thick stuff on the sides of the trail), he’ll probably miss birds.

This isn’t true for all dogs, but almost a rule for younger retrievers working on their first few seasons. Dogs need time to sort out all of the scents they encounter, and to pick up on the wind no matter which way the trail bends. This takes times, and if the dog is rushed, the results will be less than desirable.

As a naturally fast walker, this is a hard reality for me to embrace so I force myself to stop, often so that my dog can work. This has the added benefit of not only slowing the whole process down, but puts me at the ready more often when she does flush birds. It’s also an eye-opener, because it allows me to watch my dog relax and really work cover instead of blowing past it in an effort to keep up with me.

It doesn’t take too many flushes for that lesson to really sink in and make it a no-brainer reality that a snail’s pace is really the way to go for early-season ruffs.

Categories: Bloggers on Hunting, Tony Peterson
Tags: Hunting, Ruffed grouse

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Camping Tips, Tricks and Adventures

8 Tips for Making a Road Trip a Success

By Maggie Reichel A road trip is such a fun way to see the landscape of an area while you drive to a destination. You could be heading to a spot you’ve visited many times before, or somewhere brand new.
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Camping Tips, Tricks and Adventures

Two simple tips for ice-fishing success [video]

Check out this Angling Buzz video for a few rock-solid tips for catching more (and bigger?) fish through the ice.

Categories: Fishing, How To’s, Ice Fishing, Ice Fishing Tips, Illinois Videos, Michigan Videos, Minnesota Videos, New York Videos, Ohio Videos, Pennsylvania Videos, Wisconsin Videos
Tags: Angling Buzz, Ice fishing

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Camping Tips, Tricks and Adventures

Bird dog trust: Key to upland bird hunting and waterfowling success


If you want a dog that hunts for you and understands the process, you have to not only train for that, but hunt in such a way that it allows your dog to develop properly.

I call it low-rider mode, because when my Lab gets on a close pheasant, she starts bouncing up and down and staring into the cover. It’s as exciting as anything I’ve ever done in the outdoors, and there is no question when Luna starts bouncing, a bird is going to flush.

It’s far different than when she gets on older scent, or catches a whiff of a rabbit or a fresh deer bed. You can see curiosity, but it’s not the same thing. Not even close.

A lot of folks ask me how to develop that kind of relationship with a dog, including eye contact and real teamwork. Part of it just boils down to the right training (and lots of it), but part of it stems from experience afield. The more birds you hunt together, the more in-tune the process.

But it’s not so simple.

You could hunt every weekend the entire pheasant season with your dog and you might not get the results you want. If there are several other people and dogs always with you, then the distraction factor goes through the roof and the dynamic changes. Ditto for hunting the easy stuff where your dog rarely will encounter fresh scent or the opportunity to develop his skills.

Dogs need positive experiences when they are learning, and large-scale distraction make that challenging. They also need success, and walking a few miles without a flush is a sure way to turn them off the hunt.

Like all good things, developing a solid working relationship with your dog will take work and sacrifice on your part. Tell your buddies you’re hunting solo for a while, so that your dog can suss out the ways of the upland world without being rushed or distracted. You’ll need to get into the cover with your dog, where the birds actually live so that you can increase the odds of more flushes, and more retrieves.

The good thing about this extra work? It’s the right route to the best hunting you can have with your dog for most of the dog’s life. That makes it all worth it.

Categories: Bloggers on Hunting, Hunting, Tony Peterson
Tags: Bird dogs, Hunting, Upland game birds, Waterfowl

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Camping Tips, Tricks and Adventures

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