5 AWESOME DIY HUNTS YOU CAN TAKE THIS YEAR 1. WYOMING SAGE GROUSE 2. GREAT SALT LAKE DUCKS 3. MONTANA BLACK BEAR 4. ARIZONA MULE DEER 5. COLORADO ELK Post: 12 December 09:39
Goats may help prevent wildfires in California as drought worsens The voracious herbivores are being deployed to clear invasive plants throughout wildlands as another catastrophic fire season looms. For the past six years, Alissa Cope’s California company has contracted out goat herds to various clients who need the animals to chow down on unwanted vegetation and invasive plants. “When we got started it was for habitat restoration, and I just got tired of dumping gallons of herbicide on everything,” says Cope, owner of the Sage Environmental Group, a company that specializes in environmental planning with a natural resource focus. “When goats eat the seed, it goes through their digestive tract, and it becomes nonviable. It doesn't grow after it comes out the other end, which is really amazing.”Post: 8 June 14:18
Hunting Seasons in Wyoming 2025: Big Game and Small Game, Licenses, and Regulations Guide Plan your 2025–26 Wyoming hunt with our comprehensive guide—season dates, bag limits, license info, tag draws, and key species from mule deer and elk to waterfowl and furbearers. Wyoming’s sprawling high plains, rugged mountain ranges, and river bottoms make it a premier destination for hunters chasing trophy mule deer, massive elk herds, and elusive bighorn sheep. Whether you’re glassing antelope on sage‑brush flats at dawn or slipping into timber for black bear, the Cowboy State delivers diverse seasons, clear bag limits, and robust license systems. Here’s your all‑in‑one guide to Wyoming’s 2025–26 hunting calendar, from archery openings through late‑winter waterfowl hunts. What Is There to Hunt in Wyoming? Wyoming supports an incredible lineup of game: Big Game: Mule deer, white‑tailed deer, elk, pronghorn antelope, moose, bighorn sheep, mountain goat, black bear, grizzly bear, bison, grayPost: 12 July 12:57
How to Plan Your First Antelope Hunt Pronghorns are the gateway species for Western big-game hunters, and there’s a long season full of opportunity. Here’s when to go I wouldn’t go so far as to say a dead antelope buck smells good, but I don’t mind their odor a bit. There’s a hint of petting zoo goat — not necessarily repulsive in itself — mixed with dry Western air and sage and musk. All combined, somehow, the smell is sweet, and for me it always triggers good memories of hunting adventures far from home. Just about every Easterner ever to buy a deer tag has at some point dreamed of hunting out West. I talk to eager prospects every year, and many of them want to come out swinging, with designs on an elk hunt in the mountains. I love elk hunting, especially in September. But I always temper any encouragement I give with this reality: If you’re not going guided, you’re probably not going to kill an elk. Not your first year. If you’re prepared to pony up for a guided elk hunt, go Post: 16 September 11:09