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Free Mount Offered With Purchase Of Nikon M-223 Riflescope

Thursday, March 31st, 2011 at 6:54 PM

Free Mount Offered With Purchase Of Nikon M-223 Riflescope

Nikon Free Mount Offered With Purchase

Nikon Free Mount Offered With Purchase Of Nikon M-223 Riflescope

Nikon Hunting

Nikon Hunting

Melville, NY --(Ammoland.com)- Nikon invites AR shooters to mount up and take aim this spring with a special offer. With the purchase of any eligible M-223 riflescope, Nikon will include a free M-223 mount.

Buyers will save an estimated $99.95 with the inclusion of the mount. The offer is valid April 1 through May 31, 2011 and is available through participating dealers.

The special M-223 mount fits Picatinny rails found on most flat-top AR’s and features 20 MOA incline to maximize elevation for extreme long range shooting. It is a pivotal component for anyone looking to the get most out of an M-223 riflescope.

Recognizing the popularity of AR rifles, Nikon developed the M-223 riflescopes to deliver extreme speed, accuracy and shooting confidence.

The M-223 line offers six riflescopes, all engineered for the .223 Rem./5.56mm NATO round with 55-grain polymer tipped bullet with a muzzle velocity of 3240fps. With Nikon’s latest reticle and adjustment technologies, the M-223 integrates the same level of quality as the flagship Monarch riflescopes.

The offer is available with the purchase of the following M-223 models:

  • 1-4×20 (#8485)
  • 2-8×32 (#8486 & #8487)
  • 3-12×42 (#8488 & 8489)

The offer excludes the new M-223 Laser IRT (#8491), which has an integral mount.

For more information about the Mount ‘Em Up promotion, including a listing of participating dealers, please visit nikonpromo.com.

Nikon Inc. is the U.S. distributor of Nikon sports and recreational optics, world-renowned Nikon 35mm cameras, digital cameras, speedlights and accessories, Nikkor lenses and electronic imaging products.

For more information on Nikon’s full line of Riflescopes, Binoculars, Spotting Scopes, Fieldscopes and Laser Rangefinders, please contact: Nikon Sport Optics, 1300 Walt Whitman Rd., Melville, NY 11747-3064, or call 1-800-645-6687. www.nikonhunting.com.

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Hunting Clubs Urged To Start Planning For Junior Hunts

Thursday, March 31st, 2011 at 3:11 PM

Hunting Clubs Urged To Start Planning For Junior Hunts
July 22 deadline established for those applying for pheasants.

Pennsylvania Game Commission

Pennsylvania Game Commission

HARRISBURG, PA --(Ammoland.com)- While Pennsylvania’s junior pheasant hunt seems like a long way off, Pennsylvania Game Commission Executive Director Carl G. Roe noted that now is the time for hunting clubs to make plans to host an organized junior pheasant hunt or other special hunts that have been established for squirrels, rabbits waterfowl or spring gobbler.

“The future of hunting is directly related to the continuing participation of young Pennsylvanians,” Roe noted. “The goal is to successfully compete with all the other activities and recreational opportunities that vie for a young person’s time. It’s truly a challenge for the Game Commission, as well as Pennsylvania’s one million hunters.

“To maximize this opportunity for younger hunters, and to ensure we pass along the importance of ethics and sound ideals that have shaped our hunting heritage, the Game Commission urges local clubs to consider hosting a junior pheasant hunt or other special junior hunts in their communities.”

Those clubs interested in hosting a junior pheasant hunt are encouraged to use the 26-page planning guide prepared by the Game Commission and the Pennsylvania State Chapter of Pheasants Forever. The booklet offers a step-by-step guide on how to develop an organized junior pheasant hunt. The guide book includes: a sample timeline; suggested committees and assignments; general event planning considerations; and several sample forms and news releases. It also includes event evaluation guides so clubs and organizations may consider changes for future junior pheasant hunts.

Roe noted that the junior pheasant guide can be adapted and used by clubs to host other special hunts, including for rabbit, squirrel, waterfowl and spring gobbler.

To view the guide, go to the Game Commission’s website, put your cursor over “HUNT/TRAP” in the menu bar at the top of the page, click on “Hunting” in the drop-down menu listing, select the “Pheasant” in the “Small Game” listing, and choose “Junior Pheasant Hunt Planning Guide” in the Junior Pheasant Hunt” section.

Once a club schedules a junior hunt, they can submit the information for posting on the Game Commission’s on-line “Special Hunts” calendar, which enables those looking to participate in a special junior hunts to locate, and register on-line for, an opportunity near them. Clubs that want to have their junior hunt advertised in the “Special Hunts” calendar should contact Julie Imes, Game Commission Outreach Coordinator, at jimes@state.pa.us, or at 717-787-4250 (ext. 3327).

“All youth who register for a youth hunt using this on-line calendar receive a free, one-year subscription to Game News,” Imes said. “Also, real-time registration information of how many participants are signed up is one benefit to clubs having their event included in the ‘Special Hunts’ calendar, in addition to reaching more potential participants.”

To bolster participation in the junior pheasant hunt, the Game Commission again plans to stock pheasants just prior to this special season. For the 2011 hunt, the agency will release 15,000 birds on lands open to public hunting. These areas will be identified in the 2011-2012 Pennsylvania Digest of Hunting and Trapping Regulations, as well as in future Game Commission news releases and on the agency’s website (www.pgc.state.pa.us).

Additionally, the Game Commission will provide, free of charge, a limited number of pheasants to those clubs that host a junior pheasant hunt. Applications must be received by July 22, and the only two stipulations to be eligible are that clubs must have registration open to the public and the hunt must be held on lands open to public hunting.

To participate in these junior hunts, youngsters must be 12 to 16 years of age, and must have successfully completed a basic Hunter-Trapper Education course. As required by law, an adult must accompany the young hunters. Participating hunters do not need to purchase a junior hunting license to take part in the junior hunt, but all participants must comply with the mandatory fluorescent orange requirements established for the season.

Based on previous surveys of junior pheasant hunt participants, about half of the juniors successfully bag game; a male relative had accompanied most of them; the majority of participants were between the ages of 12 and 14; and many of them intend to hunt again. The agency also received many positive comments about the junior hunting opportunity.

Pheasants Forever is a national non-profit habitat conservation organization with a system of hard-working local chapter volunteers dedicated to the protection and enhancement of pheasants and other wildlife populations. Pheasants Forever emphasizes habitat improvement, public awareness and education, and land management policies that benefit private landowners and wildlife alike. For more information, visit the organization’s website (www.pheasantsforever.org).

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