Media

Here’s sharp advice for this year’s hunt

The coming of October means the real fall classic is upon us. That’s right — hunting season! With much of New York state now allowing deerꦫ hunting in one form or another, it’s time to get out and bag one of the 230,000 or so deer that are expected to be killed this season. These mags will tell you how best to hunt them down.

Bowhunter

Bowhunter is full of heartfelt readable personal essays, making it seem like a community gathering where hunters share their stories. There is🌳 a story, for example, on the pride of being a Dad turkey hunting with his son. One writer says the way to convince non-hunters that hunting is fine is to offer them some fresh-killed game. Of course, that is unless it is brown bear or caribou, since that meat will make you sick. That may make it a little harder to persuade non-hunters the feature essay on killing brown bears on Alaska’s Kodiak Island is moral. Still, non-hunters are not the target audience. We liked the essay on hunting when you’re more than 50 years old.

Field & Stream

Field & Stream, instead, is full of professional tips, especially on deer hunting. Guides tell you their favorite gun models and knives. And what state has the best hunters? Pennsylvania. The worst hunters? New York and New Jersey (tied). Well, we don’t know about that but we do know that because of the harsh winter last year in New York, the state expects the number of deer taken this year will fall about 3 percent from last year — while the number of hunting permits has been soaring. So you’ll need some practical advice. In this magazine, that includes pictorials on how a single camera placed the right way can locate your buck, and how, when you stumble upon good hunting ground, to use your cell phone to determine who owns theꦐ land.

Outdoor Life

Outdoor Life has a nice cover picture of a deer and leads you to believe it will be all about the animals. An editorial gets the reader excited: “October is glorious — all bright and crisp, summer fat and ripe for harvest.” Instead, you may have a hard time finding deer in its pages. What you will catch instead is lots of fishing, including locally the Spring Pike. There is a piece on salmon conservation in Idaho. What? It’s hunting season, remember? Then, too, there are pages devoted to calling a turkey, and the pheasant hu൩nt. At least these are American hunts. Remember, the turkey hunting season in most of New York doesn’t start until Oct. 17.

Petersen’s Hunting

The very thin Petersen’s Hunting focuses on the East African kudu (It look🔯s like an antelope.) Th🍌is is despite mentioning that the kudu is becoming endangered. If you cannot make it to Africa, you can turn your eyes to a feature on hunting in Scotland. Rifle ratings provide a little practical advice for most American hunters.

New Yorker

The New Yorker seems a bit behind the news curve. First, there is the cover story on the Univision star Jorge Ramos, who stood up to Donald Trump. Didn’t this happen in late August? And since, Carly Fiorina also has stood toe-to-toe with “The Donald.” The 10-page feature does effectively bring Ramos to life and gives us the real story on t🌜his longtime journalism veteran. But, at the end of the day, is it really important enough for the cover? A Talk of the Town item about Fiorina, meanwhile, is biting and provides enough insightful information to have been expanded. There is a Talk of the Town item on Brooklyn’s first National Hockey League team, the Brooklyn Americans, that made me think I had read it before. Oh, yes, that was Stephen Cohen Sept. 20 in The Post. A saving grace is an investigative story on how an Iraqi woman goes under cover to root out traffickers and expose Iraq’s female pimps. Also, a story🥀 worth reading is on a West Harlem girl basketball star named Chicken who is shot down, perhaps weeks before getting a college scholarship.

Time

Time stays somewhat current, but has little real substance. The cover story, “Pope Francis Meets America,” is almost all pictures, four full-page shots, and tells us precious little about the overall theme of the visit beyond the obvious he’s-humble-and-cares -about-people message. Missing an opportunity to investigate, Time largely glorifies Planned Parenthood spy David Daleiden. Good topic considering that some Republicans have threatened to shut down the government — and forced Speaker John Boehner from office — if it continues to fund Planned Parenthood, which makes it more frustrating this feature did not include much real insight. Nice quick coverage on Volkswagen’s ওemission lies and the irony of its “Truth in Engineering” slogan. A Yogi Berra obituary consists mostly of Yogi’s quotes, meaning the magazine barely covered the bases on the passing of an American icon.