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Shooting Sportsman, May/June 2008

Shooting Sportsman Magazine

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Features

'Fowling Argentina

Geese & ducks in South American's hunting jewel

  • By: Gary Kramer

And The Twain Did Meet

New York grousing with a premier dog trainer

  • By: Tred Slough

Hail, Columbia

A bittersweet hunt for dabblers & divers

  • By: E. Donnall Thomas Jr

Blues in the Reefs

An opening day climb for blue grouse

  • By: Pete Fromm

Green Days

Enjoying driven shooting on the merald Isle

  • By: Terry Allen

Touring the London Trade

Visiting the gunmaking capital of the world

  • By: Chris Batha

Charles Gordon & His Guns

The guns Charles Gordon ordered all have their quirks and odd features and are always very desirable nonetheless.

  • By: Douglas Tate

Duds for Dogs

Aside from sweater-clad Scotties heeling for old ladies or the famous painting of dogs in smoking jackets play-ing poker, I've seen few canines wearing clothes. For the dogs of my childhood, table scraps passed for nutrition and medical care consisted chiefly of tying a dog in the shade where he could rest and lick himself. Our dogs slept on straw in plywood houses, and I don't remember ever seeing men bathing their dogs. Needless to say, we never shopped for dog parkas.

  • By: Chad Mason

Advanced Gundogs

It's all a matter of time. The fact that you're reading Shooting Sportsman tells me that you love wingshooting and fine shotguns and that you likely think a good bird hunt is the finest form of sport. However, good bird hunts typically depend on good gundogs, and creating good gundogs takes time—lots of time.

There are basically four ways to get a quality gundog: Buy or breed a puppy and train it yourself, buy a puppy and send it to a trainer, buy a 10- to 18-month-old started dog and finish training it, or buy a finished dog that will be the envy of anyone lucky enough to hunt over it.

  • By: Gary Hubbell

The Ultimate Training Facility

Imagine you were given the opportunity to develop the ultimate kennel and gundog training facility without the limits imposed by money. How would you set up the kennels, grounds and training areas? What would your wish list encompass?

For me, housing would be the first consideration. A dog should be lodged where it can stay warm and dry as well as sheltered from the heat and cold. An effective design to meet these objectives is an indoor/outdoor setup. My kennel building would include an inside fenced run with a doghouse. The fence would be seven feet high and the run area 5' x 5'. The run would sit approximately 22 inches above the kennel floor on a platform made of an ABS flooring material with holes or spaces similar to a doormat. This platform would sit in and be supported by a stainless-steel bed frame with stainless-steel legs strong enough to allow a person to walk on the platform. The holes would allow wash water and urine to drain to a cement pad that would be pitched toward a trough along the outer wall of the building. The trough then would drain into a septic system. With multiple runs, each would be separated by a narrow corridor, allowing full access between them.

  • By: George Hickox

Departments

From the Editor

A story of hope

  • By: Ralph P. Stuart

Letters

Woodcock, moreon the .410, RST and excess

Shooting

Fire enough shots, and odds are you’ll hit something sooner or later. The laws of probability would support that. Unfortunately. The point is to hit targets by design and not by accident.

  • By: Michael McIntosh

Fine Gunmaking

A profile of stockmaker Craig Libhart and Susquehanna Stockworks

  • By: Steven Dodd Hughes

Shot Talk

Recoil slowly but surely beats to death the shooting performance of most shotgunners.

  • By: Tom Roster

Gun Review

A comprehensive review of the Kolar AAA Competition Sporting gun

  • By: Bruce Buck

Book Review

The Orvis Book of Dogs, Training Your Pointing Dog for Hunting & Home, Professional Gundog Training: The Trade Secrets, Positive Gun Dogs: Clicker Training for Sporting Breeds, Training People

  • By: Charles Fergus

Game & Gun Gazette

Last year British correspondent and Editor-at-Large John Gregson described in great detail the importance of the annual CLA Game Fair on the calendar of British countrysports (see "All the Fun of the Fair," May/June '07). Comparing the annual three-day event-the granddaddy of all game fairs-to a requisite pilgrimage, Gregson wrote that "... missing the Game Fair would be unthinkable and the omission would cast a long, dark shadow over the start of the shooting season on the Glorious Twelfth of August."

The Major

The art of survival as taught by a squirrel

  • By: Galen Winter

Conservation

The “free-flighted release” of captive-reared mallards has been a contentious issue for some time.

  • By: Chad Mason

Field Gear

Product reviews of Mendota Products' Skid Plate, Mud River's Kennel Cover, Dawg Tired's Premium Dog Beds and Cozy Winters' Heated Dog Bowl

Bird hunting is a spectacular sport, not a spectator sport. Doing it right means getting leg cramps and sore feet. It's the only outdoor pursuit I know that demands protection from the 700 kinds of thorns, pickers and burs waiting to pierce and tear. A warm place to dry out after a day of sleet or snow is as close to nirvana as can be hoped for in this life. What could be better than a comfy bed to stretch out in and let those punished leg muscles stop twitching? Only then do the dreams about today's coveys and tomorrow's rises come.

  • By: Tom Huggler
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