Just in time for Dove Season. Check out this great product review from our friends at the Texas Sporting Journal on the Texas Hunter Products Swivel Shooters Stool:
Another trick to staying transparent to flying doves is to stay low. Being that I am in the older generation category, kneeling or bending does not work well for very long. Texas Hunter Products offers a stool that is perfect for using in a field or fence row. The compact triangular shaped stools is light and can be carried to your favorite spot with ease. The triangular shape and extra wide design makes the stool extremely comfortable. This stool is built with a ball bearing swivel allowing 360-degree silent movement. This is critical because you have to be able to look and turn quickly. This Texas Hunter stool is made from anodized aluminum and will never rust. The foam padded seat provides comfort and the camo vinyl is a rip-stop material that won’t tear. Learn to shoot from a sitting position and your work as a dove hunter will greatly diminish.
Feeding your pond fish isn’t just about throwing out pellets—it’s about precision timing that drives growth, water quality, and overall pond performance. From critical water temperature thresholds to the safest times of day, the right schedule can dramatically improve feed conversion and fish health. Learn exactly when to start, scale back, or stop feeding to keep your pond balanced, efficient, and thriving year-round.
Using road feeders to supplement wild turkeys in the spring can be effective when done responsibly, legally, and with an understanding of seasonal behavior. Learn how remote road feeders are most effective to supplement nutrition, subtly influence travel patterns, and promote consistent daytime movement while preserving natural behavior.
Sarah Parvin and her father have spent years chasing something most pond managers never attempt: growing the world's largest coppernose bluegill on their five-acre North Alabama pond. What started as a happy accident after a devastating 2018 fish kill became their life's work. Then, in July, a second kill wiped out everything they'd built. Rather than accept defeat they both decided to stare defeat in the face and come roaring back anyway. Learn how Sarah manages feeding schedules, water quality, and habitat to grow trophy fish — and why reliability matters when every growing day counts.