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Tallbear
10-08-2008, 09:46 AM
First woman on Shooting Sportsman
magazine cover draws great interest

Rockport, Maine --At last month's Vintage Cup World Side-by-Side Championship in Queenstown, Maryland , the event was abuzz with questions about the November/December issue of Shooting Sportsman magazine. Wing-shooting aficionados all knew it was news that the 20-year-old magazine had put a woman on its cover for the first time. And, according to the magazine's editor, Ralph Stuart, "The response was overwhelmingly positive."

http://www.golftransactions.com/gpaccess/upload_files/1011591.jpg

She's a model, but April Moritz is a hunter, too. Stuart said he was not surprised when sportsmen and women wanted to know, "Is she legit? Is she actually a hunter?" While most of us realize magazine covers in all areas of interest frequently feature models who know nothing about the subjects they are representing, "Sportsmen are more demanding," Stuart said.

In the cover photo, hunter and model April Moritz is carrying four mallard drakes and a Benelli Super Black Eagle II. Sportsmen and women demanded to know, could she have taken the ducks herself? Since she is outfitted entirely in Filson clothing and her cheeks are almost too beautifully rosy to be true, many also asked if she'd been made up for a fashion shoot to look flushed from the outdoor experience.

Others wanted to know if Shooting Sportsman editors, who work months in advance on each issue, were clairvoyant enough to know a dark-haired woman hunter would make the ideal November cover image even before the name of the maverick-vice presidential candidate was announced.

According to photographer Lee Thomas Kjos, model April Moritz did not shoot the particular mallards she is carrying in the cover photo, but she did bring down some pheasants during the three-day, dark-to-dark hunting trip-during which fellow hunters shot the ducks. And when she strode through the grass at the edge of a prairie slough near Veblen, South Dakota, her cheeks were flushed from the frigid temperatures rather than from makeup. "It was raw, raw-boned chill out there," Kjos recalled. "That face and her lips and her chin-that's not makeup. That's [due to] cold!"

Because Kjos was doing some advertising photography for Filson during the three-day outing, the hunters in the group were wearing gear from that company. But, in fact, the photo was not posed. Kjos snapped it from across the slough using a long telephoto lens, which he had set up to focus on some men bringing in decoys and boats. "April just picked up that bird strap and started back toward the truck," he said. "I saw her coming through the grass" and just started taking the pictures.

Moritz recalled the hunting trip, too. "We didn't have a makeup artist out there," she laughed. "What you see is windburn. The wind chill was so cold, I was hurting. My cheeks were flushed for a couple of days after that."

Why did the editors of the world's premier wing-shooting magazine wait so long to feature a woman on their cover? Shooting Sportsman Art Director Lynda Mills said she long had been open to considering a woman for the cover. After all, Mills hails from a traditional Maine hunting family herself. She said she'd evaluated photos of women for this purpose before but that this image was the first that met all of her criteria for a cover. "I chose this photo because of its vitality and the fact that I knew the subject was the real deal. I thought people might question the authenticity, and I knew we had the facts to back it up."

And here are the facts. Born and raised in rural Emily, Minnesota, Moritz grew up in a family of eight. Both of her parents hunt, with her mother even more keen on the sport than her father. Moritz holds an MBA and a job in the field of financial management, and she sometimes models for Kjos. But she sees herself as a genuine sportswoman first. Moritz is a professional snowmobile racer who also pursues motocross (dirt biking) in the woods around her home. Moritz is also a hunter whose first love is wingshooting.

She's accustomed to receiving attention for her beauty but, she said, "People think because I'm a girl and I'm pretty, I might not be capable. Guys all the time want to arm wrestle with me. When they see me hunting or on a dirt bike, it gets attention because they think it's unique. I get comments that start, "I didn't expect….' And I'm, like, 'Well, yuh!'" It's just obvious to her that plenty of women are capable at sports.

Moritz is not related to Sarah Palin. And Shooting Sportsman editors did not see Moritz in a crystal ball along with predictions of the vice-presidential news. They did know something about the future, though.

"Women are the future of our sport," Stuart said. "As overall hunter numbers have decreased in the past couple of decades, female participation has increased. And when women become involved with the sport, they ensure that their families will take part as well. We're proud to have a woman on our cover who truly represents the face of hunting's future."

who dat
10-08-2008, 10:05 AM
"Bout time.

sse
10-08-2008, 10:52 AM
"Women are the future of our sport," Stuart said. "As overall hunter numbers have decreased in the past couple of decades, female participation has increased. And when women become involved with the sport, they ensure that their families will take part as well. We're proud to have a woman on our cover who truly represents the face of hunting's future."
+1

Done Deal
10-08-2008, 10:54 AM
Last November...my son's fiancee at the time (they are now married) put on camo for the first time and got up in a tree stand that was twenty some feet in the air (one some guys don't like to climb). She watched my son arrow a buck on that hunt.

She did however leave the tracking to the guys. It wasn't much of a track...only took a couple of minutes.

Anyway...she may start hunting this year as well.

dominus
10-08-2008, 11:58 AM
I don't hunt, but I do enjoy shooting.. and I take female friends out as often as I can. My ex-gf is the proud owner of a Ruger Super Blackhawk in .44 Magnum. No roses for these girls, I can just give them ammo. ;)

garyjt
10-08-2008, 02:32 PM
"Women are the future of our sport," Stuart said. "As overall hunter numbers have decreased in the past couple of decades, female participation has increased. And when women become involved with the sport, they ensure that their families will take part as well. We're proud to have a woman on our cover who truly represents the face of hunting's future."




This would be nice if it were true, but its not.


When I was young, half the boys, and nearly as many of the girls in school hunted.


Virtually every girlfriend I had when I was young hunted and fished, shot a gun and a bow.


My kids had to do a lot of seaching, a lot, to find any dates who hunted. KIds who hunt are becoming very rare unless it is a rural school.



I just dont see very many immigrant Pakistani, Indian, Indonesian, chinese women, or their daughters, going hunting. In fact, none at all.

dominus
10-09-2008, 12:31 PM
I just dont see very many immigrant Pakistani, Indian, Indonesian, chinese women, or their daughters, going hunting. In fact, none at all.

Because they don't hunt in their native countries. Maybe you need to take them out and teach them.

garyjt
10-09-2008, 01:40 PM
Because they don't hunt in their native countries. Maybe you need to take them out and teach them.


Anyone who wont kill a cow, wont kill a deer, and wont see any need for anyone to own a gun.

dominus
10-09-2008, 01:54 PM
Anyone who wont kill a cow, wont kill a deer, and wont see any need for anyone to own a gun.

I won't kill animals either. Doesn't stop me from target shooting or having them for defense.

who dat
10-09-2008, 02:40 PM
According to a study I saw in a NRA article, 50% of gun owners don't hunt. Doesn't mean they WON'T kill, it just means they don't.

dominus
10-09-2008, 02:57 PM
According to a study I saw in a NRA article, 50% of gun owners don't hunt. Doesn't mean they WON'T kill, it just means they don't.

I was thinking that last night.. I was driving home late and always watch for deer along I-94.. if I hit one and *didn't* kill it with the car, I'd shoot it to put it out of it's misery.

Then call a few people to see if anyone wants to pick it up for free meat. :D

KayL
10-09-2008, 04:50 PM
I was thinking that last night.. I was driving home late and always watch for deer along I-94.. if I hit one and *didn't* kill it with the car, I'd shoot it to put it out of it's misery....
Careful... that might put you in jail. Or at least earn a ticket.

garyjt
10-10-2008, 10:19 AM
I won't kill animals either. Doesn't stop me from target shooting or having them for defense.



YOu are missing the point.


How many new vegetarian Indian immigrants that you, actually personally know of, ............ who actually own guns, any gun?


Altogether?


I mean: FEMALE immigrants from India.




Give us a number, and a "percentage", eg, "2" out of 100,000, "1" out of 25,000, etc.



NOw count all the arab immigrant women that you know of, who own or carry guns, who have a CPL license, etc.



NOw count all the mulsim immigrant women that you know of, who own or carry guns, who have a CPL license, etc.




How many recent immigrant women from communist china that you know of, who own or carry guns, who have a CPL license, etc.



Lets get some real meaningful numbers of the "REAL" future of guns, gun ownership, in America.

dougwg
10-10-2008, 11:36 AM
Careful... that might put you in jail. Or at least earn a ticket.

Yeah, he's probably better off running it over again to put it out of it's misery than shooting it. (discharge of a firearm within city limits)

dominus
10-10-2008, 03:20 PM
YOu are missing the point.



What I said was that it's the gun owner's job to get other people interested in guns.

I've been doing it with all my friends.