Sporting
Sporting
Shooters from across the country learn from one of the world's best shotgun coaches
Sporting
Five new pieces of fly-fishing gear for angling in the South
Good Dog
Wherein a couple fall in love with a dog and out of love with each other
Conservation
Since first encountering an indigo snake as a boy, the author has been haunted by this all-but-extinct vestige of the Southern wild, once as much a part of the landscape as the longleaf pine. For fifty years he has walked the woods in search of an indigo, with an eye to the ground and, at long last, a little help from perhaps the only group in the world trying to save them
Sporting Scene
Forget standings and scores. In these parts, college football is about more than winning or losing
Legends
The golfer reflects on the course that taught him almost everything he knows
Sporting Scene
One of sportfishing’s most storied tournaments returns to Tuna Alley
Good Dogs
Deep in the North Carolina Piedmont, one man has made sure that the storied tradition of taking to the field with a pack of beagles in mad pursuit of rabbits lives on
Good Dog
For an Oklahoma farm kid, a pup with a nose for turtles was a boy’s best friend
Conservation
A modest proposal for the invasive species spreading through the Mississippi River basin
Sporting Scene
A sporting family cultivates a wildly beautiful retreat in the heart of the Texas prairie
Good Dog
An artist reflects on the dogs that have found their way into his work—and heart
Sporting South
A top-notch guide can turn a bad day into a good one and a good day into an unforgettable experience. Hedge your bets with any of these eleven standouts
Sporting Scene
A new class of shotguns arrive as more women head to the range
Sporting South
In the world of field-trialing bird dogs, there are pointers and then there are…more pointers. So when an English setter named Shadow Oak Bo won the National Championship, he sent a shock wave through the circuit. Then he did it again
Land & Conservation
During his thirty years tracking lost souls through the Smokies and beyond McCarter rescued twenty-six people, many of them children. These days he’s still in the mountains, often thinking about those he found—and the few he didn’t



















