Send us your best digital outdoor/nature photo from this year’s summer vacation. Deadline is September 1, 2009. Send photos to mherwig@pheasantsforever.org.
Winners will be posted at www.uplandtales.org after October 1. Winning entries will also be published in Winter issue of Upland Tales magazine. Pheasants Forever and Quail Forever may use all entries gratis with credit given to the photographer. more…
Archive for the Category ◊ Spring 2009 ◊
By Evan Griggs

The author fishing Lake Harriet in the Twin Cities, Minnesota. Griggs founded the Southwest High School Fly Fishing Club to get his fellow students involved in the outdoors and conservation.
Whether you know it or not, the future of fishing, hunting and the conservation of our natural world isn’t in the hands of any politician, scientist or activist. It’s in ours. Kids hold all the cards for the future!
Many people think it’s a waste of time to try and get young adults and kids involved with the outdoors. Many believe that most of us don’t like to venture into the wilderness and would rather spend time in the video game store or the gas station. But, that’s a misconception.
Sure, we love our video games and cell phones and the candy and pop we can get from the gas station, but some of us love the outdoors too. There’s a huge majority of kids that want to go hunting and fishing, but because their parents never really do either of those activities, they can’t. Plus, there are probably more kids at your schools and in your neighborhoods that fish and hunt than you even more…
By Sierra Amundson

Ryan Amundson and his daughter Sierra with her first gobbler bagged last April near Wheatland, Wyoming.
OK, so I’m not your average 11-year-old girl. I wear camo more than skirts. I’d rather ride my horse than play with Barbie, and I watch the Outdoor Channel instead of Disney.
I’ve gone hunting with my dad, Ryan, since I was in diapers. I passed the Wyoming hunter safety course two years ago and started carrying a shotgun myself and hunting birds last fall. In my short hunting career, I’ve harvested a couple mourning doves, a Canada goose and white tailed deer.
This story is about my first turkey hunt last spring in southeast Wyoming with my dad.
On a Friday night after school, we went to the property we would be hunting and ‘roosted’ some birds before dark – that is we heard them gobble from the roost so we knew where they would be in the morning when the season started.
Dad’s wake-up call came early the next morning, and we were in th more…
By Cassie Schlender
Getting involved in the outdoors can be very fulfilling and life changing. Many feel that being in touch with nature can be incredibly boring and a waste of their time, but sometimes you just have to give it a chance and try it.
College student Tasha Zeinstra has something inspirational to share about how her life has been changed by visiting the outdoors. All it took was one time at the age of 15 when her stepdad took her and her brother deer hunting. Ever since then, she’s been hooked on the sport of hunting.
Tasha has been involved in Minnesota’s Lyon County Pheasants Forever Chapter for three years and is enjoying it immensely. She also helps out with the chapter events, including its annual banquet. Tasha really enjoys helping out with the youth hunt because many kids usually don’t get the chance to be outdoors.
Currently, Tasha is studying law enforcement in Willmar, Minnesota. She will graduate in May 2009. Before going to school in Willmar, Tasha went to school in Sanford, North Carolina, to get certified in training police dogs. She then decided to combine two interests: using K-9 partners and working as a Conservation Officer with the Minnesota Department of Natural Resources.
more…
by Marie Keefe

Miller Farm visitors learn about bird banding and migration. Banded birds tell us what habitats are important to the birds so they can be protected.
It’s 6:30 a.m. and time for me to wake up. I put on some work clothes and dirty boots. Mom and I are ready for another workday at the 80-acre Miller Conservation Farm. It was donated by one of the earliest conservationists in Seneca County, Ohio — Maynard Stonebraker.
My mom and I pull into the farm and as usual are greeted by the greatness and the freedom of the outdoors. What brings me and my mom to Miller Farm every month is not just my mom’s job, but the chance to give back to the environment and make the people aware of what they are missing by staying indoors.
more…




