Though there are plenty of compact survival tools around that feature all kinds of impressive functionality, sometimes it pays to keep things simple. Taking this approach is the newly launched Sharp-n ...
"High-quality tools can last over 30 years with regular care. To ensure the investment you make in these tools lasts for a ...
Upland game biologists for the North Dakota Game and Fish Department typically start making the rounds listening for male sharp-tailed grouse on their spring dancing grounds from mid-March to April 1.
When Tom Rusch first started working in the Tower area wildlife office 30-some years ago he would see sharp-tailed grouse at a half-dozen locations across his district. Each spring Rusch and other ...
The Minnesota Department of Natural Resources announced Monday that the hunting season for sharp-tailed grouse in east-central Minnesota will be closed this fall — and likely in future years — because ...
A knife is only as good as its edge. Let a knife lose its edge and, regardless of how much it cost, it’s next to useless. Keeping a knife sharp and ready to use takes a little time and effort, but ...
Since we’re right in the middle of archery hunting and about to get into the rifle season, I thought it might be an appropriate time to do an article on knife sharpening. It’s a lot more fun to skin ...
A high wind and snow traveling sideways had quieted most of the early birds in the moments before dawn. Still, there was a hooting sound coming from the tall, dead grass and scattered sagebrush. It ...
State biologists and volunteers this spring found 13% more male sharp-tailed grouse on dancing grounds in Wisconsin, according to a Department of Natural Resources report. The data include a 19% rise ...
For the first time in seven years, Wisconsin may host a sharp-tailed grouse hunting season this fall. At least that's the recommendation of the Department of Natural Resources' Sharp-tailed Grouse ...
Tokyo — In developing a self-sufficient lighting system that relies on solar cells instead of wires, Sharp Corp. has moved to open new frontiers in a market that the company already dominates. “We ...
“We are at the point now where there are so few birds in some places, there’s an issue of genetic viability,’’ said Dave Pauley, president of the Minnesota Sharp-Tailed Grouse Society and a retired ...