Showing posts with label celebrity. Show all posts
Showing posts with label celebrity. Show all posts

Tuesday, September 03, 2013

Pathwalker's October Dance Card . . .

. . . is filling up.  Hurry and send a check to RGS for $850 if you want to be part of Andy's Oct. 2-5 grouse camp.

Hunting News

Ruffed Grouse Society to 

Host 2013 Upland Bird 

Hunt in Northern Maine


New ruffed grouse society logo
Following an extremely successful hunt last fall, the Ruffed Grouse Society (RGS) has once again chosen Northern Maine for its second annual grouse and woodcock hunt. Held out of the New EnglandOutdoorCenter, Fire Road 20D, Millinocket, Maine on October 2-5, 2013, the guided hunt is limited to ten hunters.
According to RGS regional director Tripp Way, registration is $850 per gun and  consist of a “Meet and Greet” reception party on Wednesday at 7 p.m., three breakfasts, two field lunches and two dinners — which includes a lobster or steak repast Friday evening. Hunting hours will run from 8:30 a.m. – 4 p.m., Friday and Saturday. Lodging will be at The Twin Pines Cabins, which has a spectacular view of MillinocketLake and Mt.Katahdin.
“Wednesday’s meet and greet will provide information on the terrain, followed by a Q&A session with RGS regional biologist Andy Weik,” Way said, adding that hunters are encouraged to bring their own dog or they can hunt with huntsmen’s dogs.
A 50-percent deposit is required by September 21, 2013, with remaining payment due prior too, or at the event. All major credit cards accepted and, with the exception of a $100 cancellation fee, refunds will be provided before September 27, 2013.
For more information and/or registration contact Mark Gray at 207-299-4172. Way can be reached at 607-743-0760; Weik at 607-793-4832.
Reservation forms can also be downloaded from the Internet at: www.ruffedgrousesociety.org/UserFiles/File/13AugustaMEMillinocketHunt.pdf.
Logo courtesy Ruffed Grouse Society
Sounds like a good time!

Sunday, August 11, 2013

oops, sorry to post over the pics of Rich in Quebec, but I promised Josh I'd post this photo. Our annual tradition.

Power brokering in Salt Lake City

Tuesday, July 24, 2012

Path Walker at Free Workshop On Ruffed Grouse Hunting In Holderness, VT

Free Workshop On Ruffed Grouse Hunting In Holderness, VT : The Outdoor Wire

Tuesday, July 24, 2012
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Free Workshop On Ruffed Grouse Hunting In Holderness, VT
HOLDERNESS, N.H. - Get set for the fall grouse season at a free workshop on Ruffed Grouse Hunting on Saturday, August 18, 2012, from 9 a.m. to noon at the New Hampshire Fish and Game Department's Owl Brook Hunter Education Center in Holderness. The session will be led by grouse hunting enthusiasts/hunter education instructors Sean Williamson and Dan Keleher. In addition, Andrew Weik, the Northeast biologist for the Ruffed Grouse Society, will give a presentation on ruffed grouse and their habitat needs. Pre-registration is required. To sign up, call 603-536-3954.

The workshop covers the basic skills needed for the pursuit of these challenging birds. Participants also will learn about grouse behavior, hunting safety issues, hunting with or without dogs, gaining permission to hunt/landowner relations, clothing choices, shotgun and ammunition options, creature comforts for an enjoyable hunt and recipes for grouse.

Grouse hunting season in New Hampshire opens October 1 and runs through December 31, with a daily bag limit of four birds. To learn more about small game hunting in New Hampshire, visit http://www.huntnh.com/Hunting/Hunt_species/hunt_small_game.htm.

For more information about the Owl Brook Hunter Education Center, and directions to the center, visit http://www.huntnh.com/Hunting/hunter_ed_center.htm.

Educational activities at Fish and Game's Owl Brook Hunter Education Center are funded by the Federal Aid in Wildlife Restoration Program, now in its 75th year, supported by your purchase of firearms, ammunition, and archery equipment.

The New Hampshire Fish and Game Department works in partnership with the public to conserve manage and protect the state's fish, wildlife and marine resources and their habitats. Visit http://www.huntnh.com.
Contact:
Tom Flynn, (603) 536-3954
Jane Vachon, (603) 271-3211

Wednesday, July 04, 2012

New Job

Some grousers already know about my new position with Orion, The Hunters' Institute, which started Monday.  Here's the press release that went out.

For Immediate Release:
July 2, 2012

Orion, The Hunters’ Institute Names New Executive Director

JOHNSON, VT – James A. Tantillo of Ithaca, N.Y., has been named executive director of Orion, The Hunters’ Institute, an organization that provides leadership on ethical and philosophical issues related to fair chase and responsible hunting.

"Jim's strong management and leadership skills make him the right person to push Orion to a new level," said Mark Hirvonen, chairman of Orion's board. "In addition, the organization will benefit from Jim's expertise in environmental policy and natural resources management as well as his commitment to upholding our hunting traditions."

Tantillo said his immediate goals are to increase fund-raising and to work on shared goals with groups such as the American Wildlife Conservation Partners. In addition, his efforts will include maintaining and expanding Orion's publications and speaking services and strengthening its hunter education services.

An avid upland bird hunter, Tantillo has served on Orion's board since 2009. During that time, he was chairman of the board’s governance committee, and he also represented Orion nationally at conferences and hunter education training workshops in various states.

Tantillo's management experience includes serving from 2006 to 2008 as CEO of Historic Ithaca, a local historic preservation organization in Ithaca, N.Y. Prior to that, he was interim executive director and chairman of the board for the Tompkins County Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Animals, also in Ithaca, N.Y.

Currently, Tantillo is a lecturer in environmental history and ethics for the Department of Natural Resources at Cornell University, where he will continue to teach part-time.  Tantillo holds his Bachelor of Science, Master of Science, and doctorate in natural resources from Cornell.

Orion, The Hunters’ Institute is the nation’s leading hunting think tank and provides education and consulting services for hunters and nonhunters throughout the United States and Canada. The organization was founded in 1993 by Jim Posewitz, a Montana big game biologist.  Posewitz put Orion on the map with his book Beyond Fair Chase, which has sold more than a half million copies.

To learn more about Orion, The Hunters’ Institute call 906-362-1969 or visit Orion’s website at www.huntright.org.



James A. Tantillo of Ithaca, N.Y., has been named executive director of Orion, The Hunters' Institute.
FOR MORE INFORMATION CONTACT:
Contact: Mark Hirvonen, Chairman
Orion, The Hunters’ Institute Board of Directors
657 Maple Hill Rd
Johnson, VT 05656
906-362-1969
Hirv5@aol.com 

One of the things I am hoping to do with Orion is expand our writings on our webpage, and from time to time I may look to some of you to display your literary talents--and who knows, with luck I will even be able to pay you for your efforts . . . .

Thursday, December 02, 2010

Newsflash--the Wild Harvest Table on the Radio

Hello fellow grousers. I may have mentioned to some of you that Mo and I are making a big push to get the Seneca Wild Harvest Table more squarely on the Cornell Cooperative Extension map. We are succeeding in incremental ways as far as the bureaucracy goes (DEC and Federal Formula Funds both look promising), but perhaps better in the "local buzz" category--check out Mo's radio interview this morning here.

Tuesday, March 16, 2010

Celebrity

I was recently interviewed by Kenn Blanchard of the Urban Shooter Podcast about an upcoming hunter education workshop I'm doing. You can listen to the podcast at http://urbanshooterpodcast.com/2010/03/11/156-how-to-keep-it-all-together/

If you want, allow the podcast #156 to load and then scroll to minute 32:00 which is when my interview starts. Sound quality varies a bit, but there it is if you're interested.

Saturday, October 31, 2009

Professional news

One grouser gains tenure, another makes headlines...

RGS welcomes Andrew Weik as its New England Wildlife Biologist

Wednesday, October 28th, 2009 at 1:53 pm

RGS welcomes Andrew Weik as its New England Wildlife Biologist
Dedicated professional brings years of experience with him.

Ruffed Grouse Society

Ruffed Grouse Society

Coraopolis, PA – -(AmmoLand.com)- The Ruffed Grouse Society (RGS) announced today the hiring of Andrew P. Weik as its New England Regional Wildlife Biologist. Scheduled to start in January, 2010, Weik will be responsible for implementing RGS’ on-the-ground forest management and landowner and land manager education programs in Connecticut, Maine, Massachusetts, New Hampshire, New York, Rhode Island and Vermont.

A New England native Weik, 45, has been employed with the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service’s (USFWS) Northeast Region at Moosehorn National Wildlife Refuge – the only National Wildlife Refuge dedicated to woodcock management – for the past five years. He serves as technical expert in USFWS Region 5 on early successional forest habitat management and its impact on American woodcock population dynamics.

In addition to providing technical training regarding forest management techniques that benefit wildlife to public and private resource professionals and landowners at workshops and meetings, Andrew was responsible for developing the Refuge’s Habitat Management Plan, Annual Habitat Work Plan, and assisting with the development of the Comprehensive Conservation Plan which will guide refuge programs for the next 15 years.

Prior to working with the USFWS, Weik was the Waterfowl and upland Game Bird Program Leader for the Maine Department of Inland Fisheries & Wildlife where, among other projects, he coordinated the development and implementation of programs and surveys to assess the status of game birds.

Married with two sons, Nolan (5) and Collin (3), Andrew, together with his wife Angela (also a wildlife biologist), enjoys hunting with their two setters and one Labrador for grouse, woodcock and waterfowl. One of Andy’s favorite quotes from the father of wildlife management, Aldo Leopold, when talking about grouse hunting, is “There are two kinds of hunting: ordinary hunting, and ruffed grouse hunting”.

“All of us here at RGS are very excited about the addition of Andrew to our team,” says RGS President and CEO Mike Zagata. “Andy’s background and experience as a wildlife biologist with the USFWS, as well as his work with the Maine Department of Inland Fisheries & Wildlife, will help us continue our mission of enhancing the environment for ruffed grouse, American woodcock, and other forest wildlife that utilize or require thick, young forests created through ecologically sound forest management practices”.

“I’m really excited about working for the Ruffed Grouse Society,” says Weik. “The organization was founded on the principle that sound scientific management is essential in today’s landscape for thriving populations of grouse, woodcock and other wildlife. I look forward to building on the accomplishments of the other RGS biologists, raising awareness of the habitat needs of grouse, woodcock, and other wildlife that depend on young forest, helping incorporate successional forest habitat management in municipal, state, federal, corporate, and non governmental organizations’ management plans, incorporating wildlife habitat needs into the development of woody biomass technology to help meet our energy and wildlife habitat needs, and working with landowners and RGS chapters on habitat improvement projects,” Weik said.

One specific project that Weik hopes to see through to its conclusion in 2010 is revising the RGS-published “A Woodcock in the Hand” (Sepik 1994) — a publication that provides tips on examining, aging, and sexing American woodcock as well as information on population monitoring and conservation.

The booklet is currently out of print.

To assist Weik in his goals, RGS is currently seeking a regional director for the New England area. The position involves working with local chapter volunteers to create and host chapter events including fund-raising sportsman’s banquets, shoots, educational activities and youth events. Interested individuals should contact Mark Fouts at 715-399-2270 or by e-mail at rgsfouts@centurytel.net .

About:
Established in 1961, the Ruffed Grouse Society is the one international wildlife conservation organization dedicated to promoting conditions suitable for ruffed grouse, American woodcock and related wildlife to sustain our sport hunting tradition and outdoor heritage.

Information on the RGS, its mission, management projects and membership can be found on the web at: www.ruffedgrousesociety.org.

Wednesday, June 24, 2009

15 minutes of fame?


Hate to blog right over such an...uhm...inspiring post, but here is a piece that my friend Pat Durkin just wrote for NRA's American Hunter magazine on Heberlein's deer / grouse camp 'Up North' in Wisconsin. Some of you have been there, others may be soon.

You'll notice the genesis of Conley's name. The story of me and the farm girl is true, but by today's standards would probably be rated PG-13.

Jim has assured me that pasting in a screen grab of the first page and then a link to the full article will work:

link to download full article.

If it doesn't...blame him. 'Course he's the one who's gotten me this far.

Tuesday, March 10, 2009

Unwanted Celebrity

Had a bit of excitement this week as I was quoted out of context in an AP story that ran in the New York Times. My thanks to the US Fish and Wildlife Service Public Affairs Office for sending the reporter to me for a juicy soundbite. JOSH.

heh heh

The misquoted statement made me look like a complete sociopath and prompted hate mail including the following:
While reading the online article about the 11 year old boy who shot his stepmother and her unborn baby, I came upon your ridiculous quote. This quote sounds as if it is coming from a serial killer not a college professor...not that teachng "environment philosophy" qualifies you as a professor. You are a dangerous person to be projecting your warped views onto age 20 something students.

After reading your quote (below) many times and I can't help but come to the conclusion that you are the biggest horse's ass on the planet. One thing is for sure you should not be around young people.

"Life exists at the expense of other life. You have to kill in order to live," said Jim Tantillo, an environmental philosophy professor at Cornell University in New York, who is also a hunter.
"There's just something very honest about owning the responsibility for the life you take. When you pull that trigger, you know something's going to die," he said.

There is something about hunting that I don't quite understand. You put on your gear, pick up the latest high powered killing machine, take your family and beer....don't forget that....we are doing the macho bonding thing...and you blow a hole in the side of an sentient animal that wishes you no harm. If you want to go the male bravado route...why don't you put your gun down and head for brown bear country and fight one one one with a larger more challenging animal? You don't need philosophy training to see that men who hunt are looking for validation or something that makes them feel manly or in control. Hunting deers isn't it!

Hopefully, you will lose your tenure at Cornell over your lack of good judgement. I seriously hope you are a person who likes to create sensations by talking out of your ass and really don't believe your dangerous quote.
In the interview with the reporter, Ramit Masti, we were talking about vegetarianism, not homicide. The actual quote was, and I have recited this almost verbatim in every talk I've given and hunting-related publication I've written for the past ten years :
"Alfred North Whitehead wrote that 'all life is robbery.' Life exists at the expense of other life. You have to kill in order to live, whether you are pulling carrots or pulling the trigger on a deer.

"In contrast to vegetarianism, there's just something very honest about owning the responsibility for the life you take [in hunting]. When you pull the trigger, you know that something's going to die."
Anyway, I asked for a correction and/or retraction, and an apology. The Associated Press issued a "clarification," and the reporter apologized for the poor editing.

So although there's still a chance that I am the biggest horse's ass on the planet (discuss), I guess all's well that ends well.

¿quien es mas macho?

Friday, February 08, 2008

Celebrity

I am once again a "Published Haiku Poet."

So I got that goin' for me . . . which is nice.

Sunday, October 21, 2007

More celebrity . . .

Here's the label category that refuses to go away. The boss and offspring visited with Justice Sandra Day O'Connor this morning, and then the boss went off on a ladies-only junket to Seneca Falls and the National Women's Hall of Fame. Apparently a good time was had by all.

Keith, you and Mo will be interested to know that my kids talked about Peanut with Justice O'Connor, who in turn told them stories about growing up on the Lazy B Ranch as a child. So maybe Peanut is the real celebrity here.

Anyway, more photos are at the Bossy Hen's Flickr site.

Wednesday, October 17, 2007

Celebrity!

Hey gang,
Some of you may find this mildly amusing. I found this on the internet last night: a 2003 lecture I gave in a class at Cornell that among other things covers animal rights and the philosophy of sport hunting.

If you've got a spare twenty or so minutes and want something to run on your machine as "background noise," go to http://ecommons.library.cornell.edu/handle/1813/7697 , let the mpeg fully load, and then skip ahead to just past the halfway point of the lecture to listen to "Tantillo on the Philosophy of Sport Hunting."

Of course if you're not pressed for time, or have no life, you could always listen to the entire 50-minute lecture, which also covers no-kill animal shelters and feral cats.

Also, as an added bonus I read from a book titled, 'Twas the Night Before Thanksgiving, which by itself is worth the price of admission.

Enjoy.

Tuesday, October 02, 2007

Celebrity!


Hey everyone,
Dr. Dirt and the Missus Dirt have been hanging out with the beautiful people in New York City.

Read all the gory details here.

JT

ps. why does Pete get the winsome young thang and Kelly gets the withered old catcher's mitt? will wonders never cease.

Friday, August 04, 2006

I'd say that's impact!

Moments after completing this evening's entry for Confessions of a Deer Sniper, Vassili received the following comment, which was then forwarded to me moments before Zaitsev deleted it from the blog.

From: Anonymous <anonymous-comment@blogger.com>
To: jat4@cornell.edu
Subject: [Confessions of a Deer Sniper] 8/04/2006 10:32:43 PM
Date: Fri, 4 Aug 2006 19:32:45 -0700 (PDT)

u sound like a sick fucker...i hope someone gutts the daylights outta u one day
--
Posted by Anonymous to Confessions of a Deer Sniper at 8/04/2006 10:32:43 PM

I'd say that's impact!

The Site Meter data indicated our fan mail came from India, which gives us the international recognition we have long craved:

Domain Name touchtelindia.net ? (Network)
IP Address 203.101.5.# (BTNL-DL-DSL)
ISP Bharti Broadband networks Limited
Location
Continent : Asia
Country : India (Facts)
State/Region : Maharashtra
City : Pande
Lat/Long : 18.3833, 75.2333 (Map)
Language English (United States)
en-us
Operating System Microsoft WinXP
Browser Internet Explorer 6.0

So we got that going for us!

Monday, July 10, 2006

Exciting News From USFWS!


Ahh, the joys of old-boy networking (I was desparate for a story, PW desperate for fame)...

...from the most recent edition of Fish and Wildlife News (page 11 of this PDF):

Andy Weik is a wildlife biologist for the Moosehorn National Wildlife Refuge, located in Maine along the New Brunswick border. Weik recently joined the Service from the Maine Department of Inland Fisheries and Wildlife, where he worked on a range of wildlife issues, from endangered species to migratory and upland game bird management. His wife—also a wildlife biologist studying habitat selection of lynx and Newfoundland marten—and young son Nolan joined Weik in his recent move from the metropolis of Bangor to the wilds of the Moosehorn region.

Fish & Wildlife News recently caught up with Weik to get his take on becoming a Service employee, and how well he’s been able to integrate his family with his new refuge family.

Tuesday, February 21, 2006

Friends of Grousers continue to display poetic genius

For the second week in a row, Rusty Parker and Frank Zappai garnered honors for their poetic work at Choka: The World's Longest Poem. Here is what the judges had to say about our boys' work this past week:
Rusty

but Samurais and show guns
anachronistic


Once again, the sharp shooter steps forward to break a blue rock. Nice play on shogun, unbelievable syllable pacing of anachronistic. So much so, in fact, that the birdhead and I believe that Rusty is actually the gun-totin' nom de plume of (you guessed it) Zappai. No matter. For his second week on the Wall, we're also officially granting him title of Sergeant at Arms for the Choka, meaning he is now fully entitled to all priviledges thereof and, that's right, he's now allowed to carry concealed. With the exception of suttonhoo, from now on don't assume that Rusty's just happy to see you when he bumps into you in the hall.

Frank Zappai

internet dates a big bust
judging from photos

Lots of great couplets from Frank again this week. This one is our favorite. Simple and straight forward. Lowhanded and smirky. What's not to like? Full credit. Bonus points for bringing up the first (and what may well end up being the only) serious point on the Discussion Board. You're not a man, Zappai, you're the man.
Jim again: Moreover, Frank Zappai won a first-ever distinction in partnership with a chokaer known only as "awgeez":
awgeez & Frank Zappai

If you have Girl Scout cookies,
Should you delete them?

Scouts' privacy policy
it's in the fine print


If you ever wonder why choka'ing is better than basketball, go back and look at this pair. This is the quintessential dunk and re-dunk. For the first time ever we award a twin WOF for couplets in combo. Awgeez makes the play on scout cookies, AND THEN ZAPPAI COMES UP WITH THE SCOUTS' SECURITY POLICY. Just awgeez? No. Just awesome? Yes.
Jim again: Once again I say it's time for all grousers everywhere to tip their hats to our intrepid poetry heroes. For their efforts, our boys get to proudly display the following badge of distinction on their respective web pages:



Frank's week, however, was not without its occasional misstep: The judges penalized him for his non-Zen allusion to the Hokey Pokey:
Frank Zappai

you do the Yokey Chokae
turn yourself around

Just kill my dog why don't you. Okay, the plural of choka is, choka -- like (one of what I'm sure is a class of your favorite pals) sheep. It's a poem, dammit, not a fricken antenna. But that's not what's the most disturbing. As you know, I'm an armchair philosopher -- the Archie Bunker of Zen as it were -- and one of the most disturbing bumper stickers I've ever seen in my life is: What if the Hokey Pokey is what it's all about? I mean, that's the kind of thing that just tears me up. Rips at me. I don't need to be reminded about it, I mean, I really don't, and that's precisely what you're doing here. (And seriously, what if it is what it's all about?)
Jim again: In our view, the judges here were a bit harsh with our boy Frank--but being the Archie Bunker of Zen as it were, we're just grateful they didn't call Frank "Meathead." But Frank now has the dubious distinction of being the first grouser to land his sorry behind in "Shame Alley"--and he is sentenced to displaying the following logo on his website:



Of course the other bad news is that the jig might be up on the Rusty Parker/Frank Zappai partnership. Suspicions have been raised that Rusty and Frank might in actuality be the same individual. Further detective work on this issue will be needed. Until next week . . . .

Monday, January 30, 2006

Can't get away from the Vicar vigil

Don't mean to keep the incessant Vicar vigil stuff going like a broken record, BUT, the following just landed in my inbox. The world deserves to be kept informed as to the Vicar's activities and whereabouts.
Richard Stedman (Ph D. UW Rural Sociology/Sociology) currently an assistant professor at Penn State University will be on National Public Radio Talk of the Nation for a special broadcast from the UW-Marathon County Theater in Wausau, WI on Thursday, February 2. The program will begin at 2 p.m. CST and will focus on the decline of hunting and the hunting tradition in the United States. You can find the show on the net at http://www.npr.org/

There you have it: all the hunting news that fits to print. I suggest we should all phone in and ask the Vicar questions about deer and bear baiting. Discuss.

Friday, January 27, 2006

FOUND HIM!

In twenty minutes I'll be in the presence of . . . greatness.

Effectiveness of Community-Based Watershed Organizations
January 27, 2006 - 3:00PM to 5:00PM

Panel Discussion with Representatives from Research, Extension and the Community

Introduction: Linda P. Wagenet, Development Sociology
Panel Discussion:
Roxanna Johnston, Watershed Coordinator, City of Ithaca, NY
Deb Grantham - Asst Director, Cornell Cooperative Extension
Sharon Anderson - Watershed Steward, Cayuga Lake Watershed Network

LOCATION: Warren Hall, 32

SPEAKER: Richard Stedman, Pennsylvania State University

WEBSITE: http://polson.cals.cornell.edu/events_detail.cfm?EventID=95
ADMISSION: Open to Public, Alumni, Students, Faculty, and Staff.
CONTACT: Mary Wright
255-1400
pigd@cornell.edu