Thursday, May 31, 2018





Roger, 
The stoke level was high last week in D.C.! We held our largest ever fly-in with 22 volunteer participants and seven staff, all in the name of the Land and Water Conservation Fund – the No. 1 outdoors access tool in America. 
BHA badasses from AK, CA, CO, ID, MI, MT, NV, NM, NY, OH, OR, PA, WA and WI descended on Capitol Hill and took part in 42 meetings with congressional offices. Participants ranged from conservation stalwarts like Tom Healy from Montana to young guns from our college clubs. We even had our youngest participant ever, Sydney, age 17, who came with her father. The vast majority of our conversations about LWCF were very positive. We held a reception on Wednesday night, and not only was it well attended by our members and conservation partners, Sen. Heinrich (D-NM) and Sen. Gardner (R-CO) also stopped by. We flew in Hal Herring who recorded podcasts with Sens. Heinrich, Burr (R-NC), Bennett (D-CO) and Congressman Marshall (R-KS) — two Rs and 2 Ds, demonstrating that bipartisanship still exists in this country. Watch for their release in the coming weeks.
After their good work on the hill, our grassroots soldiers went home even more fired up with the tools to make change possible. One of those tools was an all-day media training put on by former BHA chairman, Outdoor Life contributor and communications pro Ben Long. For those who know Ben, who received our Mike Beagle Chairman Award this year, this note from him truly is significant: “Great seeing you in D.C. Went home as inspired as I’ve been in a long while.” Simple and sweet. 
For those that couldn’t make it out to D.C., you can still play part. Take action by calling your senators and representatives today. Call 202-224-3121 and say where you're from. Then let the folks in D.C. know that you want permanent reauthorization and full funding for the Land and Water Conservation Fund. You also can take action here.
BHA is made up of doers — let’s do!
Onward and upward,
LT_Signature.jpg
Land Tawney, BHA President and CEO








JUNE 8-10 BOW HUNTERS RENDEZVOUS AT POYNETTE, WI, JUST A FEW MILES AWAY.

nMembershipRendezvousContact
    2018 Boters Rendezvou


June 8-10, 2018

MacKenzie Center, Poynette, Wisconsin
The 2018 Pope and Young Club Bowhunters Rendezvous will once again be held at the MacKenzie Center in Poynette, Wisconsin (20 miles north Madison off I-90). The Rendezvous event will take place starting at 9 am, Friday, June 8, 2018, through 5 pm, Sunday, June 10, 2018, and is being promoted as a family-oriented bowhunters’ mega shooting event and social gathering.

Proceeds will support P&Y’s conservation and outreach programs.  
Onsite Registration and Walk-ins Welcome!

Major Rendezvous Sponsors:
 
Click Here To Register
Walk-ins Welcome

Travel Details


Accommodations

Shooting Events

REGISTRATION
ENTRY FEES
SINGLE
P&Y MEMBER
COUPLES
P&Y MEMBER
SINGLE
NON-MEMBER
COUPLES
NON-MEMBER
AGE 15
& UNDER
3-Day Shooting Pass$30$52$40$68$10
2-Day Shooting Pass$25$43$35$60$8
1-Day Shooting Pass$20$34$25$43$5

New for 2018
Adventure Race • RAFD Mini-Camp
Leading Ladies Outdoors • Bowfishing Frenzy
Save 50% on Novelty Shoot with the Ultimate Pass for only $20.00
Pass includes: 4 tickets for Aerial Disc, 4 tickets for Long Distance tickets and
5 tickets for the Iron Bear
Novelty Shoots Price List:
$5.00 – Aerial Disc (5 Arrows per ticket)$5.00 – Long Distance (5 Arrows per ticket)$1.00 – Iron Bear (1 Arrow per ticket)
Purchase Novelty Shoot tickets at each event with cash or by Credit Card in the Registration area.
Below is specific information regarding the unique scope of activities,
events, and attractions being planned and available at the Rendezvous
and the Wisconsin Dells community. Check back often as more events and activities are being added.
 
MacKenzie Center
W7303 County Highway CS
Poynette, WI 53955
Rendezvous:
Shooting/Social Events:
1. Themed 3-D diorama shooting courses featuring McKenzie,
     Rinehart and Shooter targets
2. Long-distance shooting course
3. Local food vendors 
4. Aerial Archery - Flying disk range (trad equipment and Flu-Flu arrows)

5. Adventure Race (click for race registration form)
6. The Iron Bear Shooting Challenge
7. Women's event hosted by Leading Ladies Outdoors
8. Children's Mini Camp hosted by Raised at Full Draw   
9. Bowfishing shoot venue (sponsored by Muzzy)
10. Kids’ shooting area (S3DA and NASP sponsored)
11. Hunt and gear auction
12. Bowhunting seminars
13. Target auction
1.  Reasonable Hotel options available starting within 10 miles of
the MacKenzie Center
Wisconsin Dells Community (30 miles north of the MacKenzie Center)
1.  Indoor/Outdoor mammoth waterparks
2.  Amusement parks and rides
3.  Zipline adventure tours
4.  Wildlife parks
5.  Live entertainment and tours
6.  Scenic river tours
7.  Winery tours
8.  Gaming

Accommodations - For complete details on accommodations available at the Bowhunters Rendezvous.

Travel Details - For details about traveling to the Rendezvous. 

Watch your email for more details to come on the 2018 Pope & Young Club Bowhunters Rendezvous!

Volunteer opportunities available by contacting Kurt at bowhuntersrendezvous@pope-young.org.

If you have further questions, you can email bowhuntersrendezvous@pope-young.org or call Headquarters at (507) 867-4144. 

DO NOT FORGET, FREE FREE FISHING WEEKEND THIS JUNE 2 AND 3RD.


Hiking masthead

News & Reviews

June 2018

Hartman Creek SP

Get ready for Free Fun Weekend!

Every year on the first weekend in June, Wisconsin makes a variety of outdoor activities throughout the state free and easy for users. Residents and visitors are encouraged to get out and try something new, or go back again to a favorite activity.
Free fun on June 2-3 this year includes:
  • Free Fishing Weekend, with no license needed for fishing just about anywhere in Wisconsin (rules and limits apply). Free fishing clinics are hosted around the state and free equipment is available on loan at sites including DNR offices and partner groups.
  • Free Fun Weekend at state properties, with free vehicle entry to state parks, forests and other areas.
  • Free Trails Weekend, with state trail pass fees waived at all DNR-owned trails and some jointly run state trails. Free Trails Weekend also coincides with the American Hiking Society’s National Trails Day on June 2, which features events nationwide.
  • Free ATV/UTV Weekend on public trails open to use.
Want an idea of where to go on this free activity weekend? Visit dnr.wi.gov and search keywords “explore outdoors.”

OutWiGo kickoffOutWiGo kicks off

OutWiGo is here! The new initiative from Wisconsin State Parks to promote good health through the great outdoors kicked off on May 17 with an event at Baraboo’s Mirror Lake State Park that included hiking, kayaking and standup paddleboarding. A variety of other OutWiGo activities are planned through the year. The idea is for people to read and share stories of outdoor wellness activities on DNR social media such as Facebook, YouTube and Instagram (#OutWiGo), and also to encourage 20,019 people by the start of 2019 to sign the OutWiGo pledge to “feel good in the great outdoors.” Check it out at dnr.wi.gov, keyword “OutWiGo.”

batsBefriending bats

With white-nose syndrome continuing to plague Wisconsin’s bat populations, people are encouraged to help monitor bat numbers statewide. The Wisconsin Bat Program features many ways to get involved including events such as the Great Wisconsin Bat Count, June 1-3, and other activities. There also is information about roost monitoring, building a bat house, reporting sick or dead bats and more. In addition, the DNR website has vital information on Wisconsin’s bats including why it’s important to help save them. Go to dnr.wi.gov and search keyword “bats.”
Summer cover

Summer issue coming soon

Kirtland’s warbler recovery efforts, biking in Wisconsin's Northwoods, tales of historic 1900s paddling trips, state tern conservation and a look at lake leadership training — not to mention a special section timeline featuring 50 years of DNR dedication. It’s all part of the Summer issue of Wisconsin Natural Resources, available in mid-June. Be sure you don’t miss it: See wnrmag.com to subscribe today.
ISAM logo

Join the battle against invasives

The Wisconsin Invasive Species Council, created by the Legislature to assist DNR in the fight against a variety of invasive species throughout the state, designates each June as Invasive Species Awareness Month. Residents can take action to help minimize the spread of the invasive plants, animals and diseases that harm our lands and waters. This includes aquatic invasive species (AIS), with rules governing the handling of bait when fishing and guidelines for boaters to “inspect, remove and drain” to avoid transporting destructive aquatic hitchhikers between water bodies. On land, restrictions on the transport of firewood are meant to stop the spread of the emerald ash borer, for example, while work to fight invasive plants is ongoing. For more on invasive species and how you can help control them, see dnr.wi.gov, keywords “invasive species.”

LAKE MICHIGAN WATER TEMPS AS OF MAY 31, 2018


Lake Michigan Central Region
NOAA

CHECK WITH YOUR LOCAL DOCTOR HOW HE FEELS ABOUT THIS ARTICLE.

American Medical Association versus America

Opinion by Doctors for Responsible Gun Ownership's Robert B Young, MD
Gun Control Safety Cap Medicine
American Medical Association versus America
USA –  -(Ammoland.com)-  The American Medical Association or AMA just announced that it will make an “unprecedented” push for more gun control laws through resolutions presented at its House of Delegates at its next annual meeting June 9-13 2018.
This is not really unprecedented, as the AMA has been advocating anti-gun measures for three decades now, along with many co-conspirator specialty associations. But it is a way for it to jump on the current popular bandwagon for restricting guns since some of the teenagers from the Marjorie Stoneman Douglas Valentine’s Day shootings have become media celebrities.

Jumping aboard progressive bandwagons is the main tactic left to the AMA to wield influence, since it now includes no more than 25% of America’s physicians as members, even though it claims to represent us all.

Its leadership has left most physicians behind by focusing on politics more than medicine and undercutting physician autonomy by supporting Obamacare. In this case, they continue denigrating the vast number of Second Amendment respecting health care providers by continuing to back gun control—as if anything short of full civilian disarmament would substantially reduce “gun violence”, let alone affect violent crime. (Regarding eliminating scary “assault rifles” see the latest school shooting at Santa Fe using a pump-action shotgun and a .38 caliber revolver; regarding the consequences of handgun prohibition, see the United Kingdom—or anywhere.)
The AMA has a very long history of attacking guns and gun ownership as too dangerous for commoners. Rarely, members with other views get a hearing (which is then ignored); more typically, even that doesn’t happen, as its governance seeks to justify positions, not develop them.
It quotes manipulated data, like all anti-gun rights groups, basing this outcry on an inflated list of 2018 school shootings making the rounds, even though only a fraction of those events qualifies as attempts at mass shootings on students during school. (PolitiFactoccasionally gets it right.)
From the Forbes article:
“This year, here are just some of the measures doctors want the AMA to back:
  • Ban the sale of bump stocks. AMA delegates will consider supporting “a ban on the sale of any device, including bump stocks, that converts a firearm into a weapon that mimics a fully automatic weapon.”
  • Strengthen the background check system for firearms. AMA delegates will consider supporting legislation that requires “all gun sales and transfers” to “fall under strengthened regulation.”
  • Ban on semi-automatic assault weapons and high capacity ammunition magazines. AMA delegates will consider supporting “a ban on the sale, transfer, manufacturer and importation of assault weapons and high-capacity ammunition magazines to the public.”
  • Increasing the legal age of purchasing ammunition and firearms from 18 to 21. AMA delegates will consider supporting “increasing the legal age to purchase firearms and ammunition.” ”

Some corrections are in order here.

First of all, “here are just some of the measures the AMA wants doctors to back.”
Then, regarding the claim by AMA President David A. Barbe, MD, that “Gun violence in America today is a public health crisis”, DRGO has repeatedly debnked that untruth (e.g., here). Continuing it is “one that requires a comprehensive and far-reaching solution” such as:
  • Ban the sale of bump stocks. This may be a device implicated in the fewest shootings of all, only in Las Vegas last October, which wasn’t even necessary to inflict all the casualties the gunman caused.
  • Strengthen the background check system for firearms. They mean, of course, universal registration of all firearm transfers, as of the effective date of universal background checks. That is not consistent with individual freedom in our country.
  • Ban on semi-automatic assault weapons and high capacity ammunition magazines. This suggests the next step would be to ban all semi-automatic weapons, since there’s not a dime’s worth of difference between the function of the Ruger Mini-14, the Browning [semi-]Automatic Rifle and any AR-model semi-automatic weapon. All pistols, gas-operated shotguns and even most .22 caliber plinkers would be gone. But this is “a good start”, to quote any anti-gun activist, including outlawing what have always been standard magazine capacities up of to 30 rounds.
  • Increasing the legal age of purchasing ammunition and firearms from 18 to 21. This is self-evidently discriminatory, as we rely on 18 to 20-year-olds’ judgment in most states about drinking and consider them able to decide to join the military and die in war zones without question. Wonder how most would vote on this question of their older betters intent to deprive them of a constitutional right?
Legislating morality has always been impossible in a diverse polity like the United States. They’ll have no more luck with this than the abortion, capital punishment or immigration battles have had in uniting American opinion about them.
To quote William F. Buckley, Jr.’s National Review mission statement, DRGO “stands athwart history, yelling Stop, at a time when no one is inclined to do so, or to have much patience with those who so urge it.” There’s progress (like ensuring a well-educated, ethical populace enjoying all the rights of individual liberty) and then there are progressives (the opposite). DRGO stands for progress.
Let’s not let them get away with it!

Robert B. Young, MD
Robert B. Young, MD
About Robert B Young, MD
— DRGO Editor Robert B. Young, MD is a psychiatrist practicing in Pittsford, NY, an associate clinical professor at the University of Rochester School of Medicine, and a Distinguished Life Fellow of the American Psychiatric Association.
Doctors for Responsible Gun Ownership, a project of the Second Amendment Foundation. www.drgo.us

LYME DISEASE INFORMATION FOR ALL OF US TO KNOW ABOUT.



May Lyme Disease Awareness Month
LDA NEWS & UPDATES 
May 2018


Congressman Smith Introduces: National Lyme & Tick-Borne Diseases Control & Accountability Act of 2018

The Lyme Disease Association, Inc. (LDA) announced the introduction of HR 5900,* “National Lyme and Tick-Borne Diseases Control and Accountability Act of 2018’’ into the US House of Representatives by Congressman Christopher H. Smith (R-NJ4) on May 21. Representatives Peterson (D-MN7), Faso (R-NY19), Comstock (R-VA10) and Posey (R-FL8) have joined Mr. Smith in co-sponsoring the bill. The Act will establish the Office of Oversight and Coordination for Tick-Borne Diseases in the Office of the Secretary of Health & Human Services (HHS) to be headed by a director appointed by the Secretary. According to LDA President, Pat Smith, announcing the bill at the 3rd Rocky Mountain Forum in Colorado, "It is critical doe patients that this bill gets passed." (Photo credit: Mary Beth Pfeiffer)

*LDA Note:  HR 5900 introduced on 5/21 is the same as HR 5878 introduced on 5/18 --- due to a technical glitch



Invasive New Tick Rapidly Spreading

Arrived in NJ last August….
Has now spread to VA and WV….

The Haemaphysalis longicornis tick (otherwise known as the East Asian or Longhorned tick), a self-cloning species native to China, Japan and Australia, was confirmed in Hunterdon County, NJ, on a sheep farm in late 2017, and a mystery still surrounds its appearance. The species survived the winter and chemical prevention measures and was confirmed again in NJ in two different locations in Spring of 2018. The LDA has been concerned that the tick reproduces asexually, which means the female tick can lay eggs which do not have to be fertilized by a male, thus the tick has the ability to establish itself very quickly, and that appears to be the case. On May 14, the tick was confirmed in Virginia, appearing on an orphaned calf on a beef farm in Albemarle County. In late May, the longhorned tick was confirmed in West Virginia in two separate farms in Hardy County, near the Virginia border. The U.S. Department of Agriculture considers the species to be a serious threat to livestock. The longhorned tick is already known to transmit several human diseases, including spotted fever rickettsiosis, in its native East Asian countries. It may be only a matter of time before they become carriers of tick-borne diseases that affect humans.


Photo: East Asian tick, also known as longhorned or bush tick. Thanks to J. Occi, Rutgers


CDC: Vector-Borne Diseases Have Tripled

The CDC has released the Morbidity and Mortality Weekly Report (MMWR), which examines trends in occurrence of nationally reportable vector-borne diseases during 2004–2016. Vector-borne diseases are major causes of death and illness worldwide. In the United States, the most common vector-borne pathogens are transmitted by ticks or mosquitoes, including those causing Lyme disease; Rocky Mountain spotted fever; and West Nile, dengue, and Zika virus diseases. The number of annual reports of tickborne bacterial and protozoan diseases more than doubled during this period, from >22,000 in 2004 to >48,000 in 2016. Lyme disease accounted for 82% of all tick-borne disease reports during 2004–2016.



TBD Working Group: 5th Meeting & Updates

The fifth meeting of the Health & Human Services (HHS) Tick-Borne Disease (TBD) Working Group took place in-person on May 15-16, 2018. Click here to see summaries, transcripts, slide presentations, written public comment, transcripts of verbal content, agendas, and webcasts for this meeting as they become available, and for previous meetings. For more TBD Working Group updates click the links below. The sixth Working Group meeting will be held online on June 21.



LDA/Columbia Conference Registration Now Open!

The Lyme Disease Association (LDA) announces its 19th annual conference - Lyme & Tick-Borne Diseases: Turning the Corner Through Research, jointly sponsored by Columbia University. It is being held on October 27 & 28, 2018 in Providence, RI at the landmark Marriott Providence Downtown hotel. The conference is designed for physicians and researchers, but the public is invited to register, and all registrants can attend a reception and network with the conference faculty. The LDA is once again offering conference scholarships for medical students, post docs, and others, thanks to the generosity of the Steven & Alexandra Cohen Foundation. Continuing Medical Education (CME) credits will be offered by Columbia University to CME-registered attendees. The conference will feature 20 faculty consisting of clinicians and researchers from across the US. IGeneX Labs has provided commercial support to the program.



May Lyme Disease Awareness Month
May Lyme Awareness Month

Activities

·     LymeWNY and LDA joined together to help educate people via billboards through the month of May. See billboard image: One Tick Bite Can Last a Lifetime

·     Government entities have declared May Lyme Disease Awareness Month via proclamations and resolutions. Click here to view photos

·     Many Lyme groups held educational conferences for May Lyme Awareness, and LDA was pleased to work with its partners throughout the country and spoke at the following conferences:

5/19: Colorado Tick-Borne Disease Awareness Association (Parker, CO)

5/12: Lyme Society, Inc. (Staten Island, NY)

4/28: Midcoast Lyme Disease Support & Education (Augusta, Maine)


Attention Researchers:
Apply for $$ Now

The Department of Defense Congressionally Directed Medical Research Program (CDMRP) Program Announcement for FY 2018 CDMRP research grant submissions has been posted.


Sen. Schumer Press Conference on TBD $$$

US Senator Chuck Schumer (NY), Senate Minority Leader, invited LDA President Pat Smith to speak at his press conference in Woodbury, NY on May 2, 2018. The focus was to ensure that government monies on Lyme and tick-borne diseases reach those officials at the state and local level who can best ensure the monies are used to help fight tick-borne diseases.

Has your Congressman Joined the US House Lyme Caucus?

TAKE ACTION: Contact your Congressmen and ask them to sign up for the Caucus today! The Caucus can help Lyme patients achieve their goals.






CFC 2017 Approves LDA as National Charity


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