We rounded up our favorite gifts for the dad who can’t wait to get back in the woods
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Field & Stream is one of the most trusted outdoor media brands in the United States, covering hunting, fishing, survival skills, and outdoor gear. Founded in 1871, Field & Stream has helped generations of hunters and anglers learn essential outdoor skills, discover new techniques, and choose the best gear for the field.
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fieldandstream Jun 13
If you’ve seen Meredith Powroznik in a Field & Stream Turkey Camp before, it’s because she’s the kind of hunter we’d gladly invite back.
She came to Oklahoma hoping to get a Rio with a longbow. The bow happened to belong to her dad.
What she got was a front-row seat to watch her 80-year-old father crawl under barbed-wire fences and cover ground in 90-degree heat like quitting had never occurred to him. As Meredith put it:
“He’s the reason I ain’t got no quit.
He’s the gravel where I got my grit.”
The turkey is memorable. Watching your 80-year-old dad hunt like that is something you’ll carry a lot longer.
For the dads who taught us everything….
Join or gift an 1871 Club membership to unlock exclusive Father’s Day gifts like the limited-edition tumblers and a bottle of Eric Church’s Whiskey JYPSI Bourbon. Drop an “1871” comment & we’ll DM you a link to the collection.
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If you’ve seen Meredith Powroznik in a Field & Stream Turkey Camp before, it’s because she’s the kind of hunter we’d gladly invite back.
She came to Oklahoma hoping to get a Rio with a longbow. The bow happened to belong to her dad.
What she got was a front-row seat to watch her 80-year-old father crawl under barbed-wire fences and cover ground in 90-degree heat like quitting had never occurred to him. As Meredith put it:
“He’s the reason I ain’t got no quit.
He’s the gravel where I got my grit.”
The turkey is memorable. Watching your 80-year-old dad hunt like that is something you’ll carry a lot longer.
For the dads who taught us everything….
Join or gift an 1871 Club membership to unlock exclusive Father’s Day gifts like the limited-edition tumblers and a bottle of Eric Church’s Whiskey JYPSI Bourbon. Drop an “1871” comment & we’ll DM you a link to the collection. ...

fieldandstream Jun 12
His father wrote “A River Runs Through It.”
John N. Maclean spent much of his life answering questions about it.
Long before he wrote “Home Waters,” Maclean built a remarkable career of his own. He covered wars, reported on some of the biggest wildfires in American history, worked as a foreign correspondent, and authored multiple bestselling books. Yet one story remained largely untouched. The story of his father, Norman Maclean.
The story of his uncle Paul, whose life inspired Brad Pitt’s character in the film adaptation of “A River Runs Through It.” And the story of the Blackfoot River that connected them all. Then an editor asked a simple question: Would you ever tell the whole story?
Eventually, John went back. Back to the river. Back to the cabin. Back to the people behind one of the most influential stories in outdoor history. The result became “Home Waters,” a chronicle of the real family behind the legend.
The full return home story featuring John N. Maclean by Maggie Doherty is worth your time. Drop a RIVER in the comments and we’ll send you the full read.
Maggie Doherty’s Feature Story photography by: Rebecca Stumpf for Field & Stream.
Family images courtesy of John N. Maclean.
River foam photography by Christina Holmes.
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His father wrote “A River Runs Through It.”
John N. Maclean spent much of his life answering questions about it.
Long before he wrote “Home Waters,” Maclean built a remarkable career of his own. He covered wars, reported on some of the biggest wildfires in American history, worked as a foreign correspondent, and authored multiple bestselling books. Yet one story remained largely untouched. The story of his father, Norman Maclean.
The story of his uncle Paul, whose life inspired Brad Pitt’s character in the film adaptation of “A River Runs Through It.” And the story of the Blackfoot River that connected them all. Then an editor asked a simple question: Would you ever tell the whole story?
Eventually, John went back. Back to the river. Back to the cabin. Back to the people behind one of the most influential stories in outdoor history. The result became “Home Waters,” a chronicle of the real family behind the legend.
The full return home story featuring John N. Maclean by Maggie Doherty is worth your time. Drop a RIVER in the comments and we’ll send you the full read.
Maggie Doherty’s Feature Story photography by: Rebecca Stumpf for Field & Stream.
Family images courtesy of John N. Maclean.
River foam photography by Christina Holmes. ...

fieldandstream Jun 12
A South Carolina patrol sergeant was fishing a 40-foot-deep back eddy on the Pee Dee River when a giant flathead ate his Santee rig.
What followed was a 15-minute fight and a trip to the scales.
South Carolina DNR fisheries biologists ultimately certified the fish as the largest flathead catfish ever recorded in the state, shattering the previous record by nearly 30 pounds.
For perspective, the IGFA all-tackle world-record flathead catfish—caught in Kansas in 1998—weighed 128 pounds even.
Story by @travishallmedia
📸: Joseph Driggers
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A South Carolina patrol sergeant was fishing a 40-foot-deep back eddy on the Pee Dee River when a giant flathead ate his Santee rig.
What followed was a 15-minute fight and a trip to the scales.
South Carolina DNR fisheries biologists ultimately certified the fish as the largest flathead catfish ever recorded in the state, shattering the previous record by nearly 30 pounds.
For perspective, the IGFA all-tackle world-record flathead catfish—caught in Kansas in 1998—weighed 128 pounds even.
Story by @travishallmedia
📸: Joseph Driggers ...

fieldandstream Jun 11
Mike Lee’s “Roadless Rule Nullification” amendment has been added to the Wildfire Prevention Act, advancing a proposal that could remove protections from millions of acres of backcountry national forest lands.
For hunters and anglers, the debate goes beyond roads. Many of the country’s best elk, mule deer, and trout waters exist inside roadless areas—places that have remained undeveloped for more than two decades under the Roadless Rule.
“Hunters and anglers stand to lose more from the elimination of Roadless Rule than anyone else,” said Trout Unlimited President and CEO Chris Wood. “The biggest bulls and bucks are in roadless areas. The finest fishing for native trout is in roadless areas.”
The amendment was adopted by the Senate Energy and Natural Resources Committee in a party-line vote and now advances as part of the broader wildfire legislation.
Swipe through to see what the amendment would do, who supports it, who opposes it, and what it could mean for public land hunters and anglers.
Story by @travishallmedia
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Mike Lee’s “Roadless Rule Nullification” amendment has been added to the Wildfire Prevention Act, advancing a proposal that could remove protections from millions of acres of backcountry national forest lands.
For hunters and anglers, the debate goes beyond roads. Many of the country’s best elk, mule deer, and trout waters exist inside roadless areas—places that have remained undeveloped for more than two decades under the Roadless Rule.
“Hunters and anglers stand to lose more from the elimination of Roadless Rule than anyone else,” said Trout Unlimited President and CEO Chris Wood. “The biggest bulls and bucks are in roadless areas. The finest fishing for native trout is in roadless areas.”
The amendment was adopted by the Senate Energy and Natural Resources Committee in a party-line vote and now advances as part of the broader wildfire legislation.
Swipe through to see what the amendment would do, who supports it, who opposes it, and what it could mean for public land hunters and anglers.
Story by @travishallmedia ...

fieldandstream Jun 11
A lot has changed in fishing over the years. But one thing hasn’t. Catch a big enough bass, and somebody’s going to be happy for you. Even if you’ve never met.
A week earlier, his personal-best bass weighed 5.5 pounds. Then he landed a 9.3-pound California hawg.
When he posted the new PB, he mostly wanted to share the video. Instead, another angler pointed out something he didn’t know: the bass qualified for California’s division of r/BassFishing’s Trophy Fish Club, where the largemouth benchmark is 8 pounds or 23 inches. Soon after, an invitation showed up in the comments.
The fish was impressive. The response was better. The angler later explained that he didn’t know anyone around him who fished and had only picked up the sport because he was looking for something new to do. After the congratulations started rolling in, he wrote, “It’s awesome groups like this exist.”
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A lot has changed in fishing over the years. But one thing hasn’t. Catch a big enough bass, and somebody’s going to be happy for you. Even if you’ve never met.
A week earlier, his personal-best bass weighed 5.5 pounds. Then he landed a 9.3-pound California hawg.
When he posted the new PB, he mostly wanted to share the video. Instead, another angler pointed out something he didn’t know: the bass qualified for California’s division of r/BassFishing’s Trophy Fish Club, where the largemouth benchmark is 8 pounds or 23 inches. Soon after, an invitation showed up in the comments.
The fish was impressive. The response was better. The angler later explained that he didn’t know anyone around him who fished and had only picked up the sport because he was looking for something new to do. After the congratulations started rolling in, he wrote, “It’s awesome groups like this exist.” ...

fieldandstream Jun 11
Meet @morgankonenn Morgan Kate: the angler who landed this monster. “I remember yelling that its head looked about two feet wide, and nobody believed me…they all thought I was exaggerating,” she said.
An hour later, they did.
Fishing with @killgoreadventures in Idaho’s Hells Canyon, Morgan Kate hooked a white sturgeon that would eventually measure 9 feet 7 inches long with a 50-inch girth. At one point during the fight, the fish launched itself out of the water. Morgan Kate was the only one who saw it.
Then the fish went deep. For a while, nobody was sure they were gaining any line at all. Fishing a hole roughly 30 feet deep, the crew repeatedly thought they had snagged the bottom. Instead, the sturgeon had wrapped itself around rocks below the boat. When the fish finally surfaced, Morgan Kate knew she had a story for a lifetime.
Story & photos by: @morgankonenn
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Meet @morgankonenn Morgan Kate: the angler who landed this monster. “I remember yelling that its head looked about two feet wide, and nobody believed me…they all thought I was exaggerating,” she said.
An hour later, they did.
Fishing with @killgoreadventures in Idaho’s Hells Canyon, Morgan Kate hooked a white sturgeon that would eventually measure 9 feet 7 inches long with a 50-inch girth. At one point during the fight, the fish launched itself out of the water. Morgan Kate was the only one who saw it.
Then the fish went deep. For a while, nobody was sure they were gaining any line at all. Fishing a hole roughly 30 feet deep, the crew repeatedly thought they had snagged the bottom. Instead, the sturgeon had wrapped itself around rocks below the boat. When the fish finally surfaced, Morgan Kate knew she had a story for a lifetime.
Story & photos by: @morgankonenn ...

fieldandstream Jun 10
For nearly two decades, Paul Rosolie has been working to protect this corner of the Amazon from logging, mining, and development.
Today, @junglekeepers and its partners help safeguard roughly 138,000 acres of rainforest, with another 170,000 acres still left to protect. This trail cam photo is the reward.
Rosolie says he’s only seen a handful of pumas in 18 years in the Amazon. Then, at 2 a.m., one walked past his trail camera within a protected reserve. A few years ago, this stretch of forest was slated for logging before conservation efforts helped keep it intact. Now, one of the Amazon’s most elusive predators is still moving through the watershed and, according to Rosolie, raising the next generation there.
Photos & story: @paulrosolie / @junglekeepers
Card 1 Photo credit: @thomasstephane
Card 2 Photo credit. @mohsinkazmitakespictures
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For nearly two decades, Paul Rosolie has been working to protect this corner of the Amazon from logging, mining, and development.
Today, @junglekeepers and its partners help safeguard roughly 138,000 acres of rainforest, with another 170,000 acres still left to protect. This trail cam photo is the reward.
Rosolie says he’s only seen a handful of pumas in 18 years in the Amazon. Then, at 2 a.m., one walked past his trail camera within a protected reserve. A few years ago, this stretch of forest was slated for logging before conservation efforts helped keep it intact. Now, one of the Amazon’s most elusive predators is still moving through the watershed and, according to Rosolie, raising the next generation there.
Photos & story: @paulrosolie / @junglekeepers
Card 1 Photo credit: @thomasstephane
Card 2 Photo credit. @mohsinkazmitakespictures ...

fieldandstream Jun 10
If you’d like to speak up about the potential amendment, contact your senator via the Capitol Switchboard (202-224-3121), particularly if they serve on the Senate and Energy Natural Resource Committee, which Mike Lee chairs.
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If you’d like to speak up about the potential amendment, contact your senator via the Capitol Switchboard (202-224-3121), particularly if they serve on the Senate and Energy Natural Resource Committee, which Mike Lee chairs. ...

fieldandstream Jun 10
Fair warning: some of these photos aren’t for everyone. Most hunters think of whitetails as strict vegetarians. But deer have been documented eating fish, birds, snakes, rabbits, eggs, and bones.
One of the strangest examples came from a Texas forensic research facility, where a trail camera captured what researchers described as the first known evidence of a whitetail scavenging human bones. The bizarre story was originally covered by Bill Heavey for Field & Stream.
Drop a “WHITETAIL” comment and we’ll DM you a link to Whitetail 365—weekly stories, expert tips, gear reviews, and news for hunters who think about whitetails all year long.
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Fair warning: some of these photos aren’t for everyone. Most hunters think of whitetails as strict vegetarians. But deer have been documented eating fish, birds, snakes, rabbits, eggs, and bones.
One of the strangest examples came from a Texas forensic research facility, where a trail camera captured what researchers described as the first known evidence of a whitetail scavenging human bones. The bizarre story was originally covered by Bill Heavey for Field & Stream.
Drop a “WHITETAIL” comment and we’ll DM you a link to Whitetail 365—weekly stories, expert tips, gear reviews, and news for hunters who think about whitetails all year long. ...

fieldandstream Jun 9
Late on the evening of May 29, President Trump signed an executive order (EO) that could reshape 50 years of off-road vehicle use on federally managed public lands.
The order rescinds previous EOs signed by Presidents Nixon and Carter that have long served as the framework for how agencies like the US Forest Service and Bureau of Land Management evaluate motorized access on public lands.
According to Backcountry Hunters & Anglers (BHA), President Trump’s latest EO has the potential to fundamentally change public lands as we know them. While it doesn’t automatically open new areas to off-road vehicles, it could change how future travel management plans are written and what kinds of motorized access agencies are required to consider.
The rescinded orders helped guide decisions about which roads, trails, and areas remain open to vehicles and which are closed to protect wildlife habitat, natural resources, and cultural sites. Under the new executive order, agencies won’t have to apply the same level of scrutiny when evaluating off-road vehicle use. It will likely lead to a proliferation of new motorized trails in areas where none currently exist and force vulnerable big-game herds off vital public land winter ranges.
Callaghan said hunters and anglers who want a say in whether or not unrestricted motorized vehicle use should be the order of the day on their public lands should speak up now. “This should be a call for all user groups to get to the table,” he said. “Especially if you agree with BHA that there should be ample wild places set aside, free from wheeled travel.”
Drop an “OHV” comment and we’ll DM you the full story by @travishallmedia
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Late on the evening of May 29, President Trump signed an executive order (EO) that could reshape 50 years of off-road vehicle use on federally managed public lands.
The order rescinds previous EOs signed by Presidents Nixon and Carter that have long served as the framework for how agencies like the US Forest Service and Bureau of Land Management evaluate motorized access on public lands.
According to Backcountry Hunters & Anglers (BHA), President Trump’s latest EO has the potential to fundamentally change public lands as we know them. While it doesn’t automatically open new areas to off-road vehicles, it could change how future travel management plans are written and what kinds of motorized access agencies are required to consider.
The rescinded orders helped guide decisions about which roads, trails, and areas remain open to vehicles and which are closed to protect wildlife habitat, natural resources, and cultural sites. Under the new executive order, agencies won’t have to apply the same level of scrutiny when evaluating off-road vehicle use. It will likely lead to a proliferation of new motorized trails in areas where none currently exist and force vulnerable big-game herds off vital public land winter ranges.
Callaghan said hunters and anglers who want a say in whether or not unrestricted motorized vehicle use should be the order of the day on their public lands should speak up now. “This should be a call for all user groups to get to the table,” he said. “Especially if you agree with BHA that there should be ample wild places set aside, free from wheeled travel.”
Drop an “OHV” comment and we’ll DM you the full story by @travishallmedia ...

fieldandstream Jun 9
There are worse ways to spend a workday.
Field & Stream author Amanda Oliver got assigned to test Turtlebox’s newest speaker by taking it boating on the Chesapeake Bay.
She’s also a bit of a Turtlebox junkie. Amanda already owns enough Turtlebox speakers to know what a good one sounds like. So when Turtlebox released the Cub—its smallest speaker yet—she wanted to know if it could live up to the name. So she put it to work. For something this small, it’s built like it has something to prove.
Drop a “CUB” comment and we’ll DM you Amanda’s full review, including her verdict on whether Turtlebox’s smallest speaker can hang with the OG Gen 3.
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There are worse ways to spend a workday.
Field & Stream author Amanda Oliver got assigned to test Turtlebox’s newest speaker by taking it boating on the Chesapeake Bay.
She’s also a bit of a Turtlebox junkie. Amanda already owns enough Turtlebox speakers to know what a good one sounds like. So when Turtlebox released the Cub—its smallest speaker yet—she wanted to know if it could live up to the name. So she put it to work. For something this small, it’s built like it has something to prove.
Drop a “CUB” comment and we’ll DM you Amanda’s full review, including her verdict on whether Turtlebox’s smallest speaker can hang with the OG Gen 3. ...

fieldandstream Jun 9
The 6-foot-9 former professional goalie retired in 2017, spent two years working offshore charters, and earned his captain’s license before launching his Pensacola-based shark charter.
Today, he introduces anglers to some of the Gulf’s most powerful predators through catch-and-release fishing.
For McLean, it all comes down to a screaming drag and the unknown on the other end of the line.
Story & Media: @bigjohnoutdoors
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The 6-foot-9 former professional goalie retired in 2017, spent two years working offshore charters, and earned his captain’s license before launching his Pensacola-based shark charter.
Today, he introduces anglers to some of the Gulf’s most powerful predators through catch-and-release fishing.
For McLean, it all comes down to a screaming drag and the unknown on the other end of the line.
Story & Media: @bigjohnoutdoors ...
NEWSLETTERS
Weekly recaps of the latest outdoor news, hunting and fishing tips - plus exclusive offers, giveaways and more!




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F&S YOUTUBE
15 Second Canoe Rescue Technique: Boat Over Boat
6.5 Creedmoor +PEAK Hits Like 270 Winchester
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Grizzly x Crane Standoff
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F&S PODCASTS

Episode 25 – Big Wave Lessons and Bowhunting Obsession with Shane Dorian
February 25, 2026
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Episode 16 – Catfish Noodling, Conservation Battles, and the Dog of a Lifetime

February 20, 2026
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Waka Flocka Flame: “When I Met God, I High‑Fived the Devil”
“When I met God, I high‑fived the devil.” – Waka Flocka Flame
In one of the rawest conversations we’ve ever had on Country Outdoors Podcast, Waka Flocka Flame sits down with Mary O’Neill Phillips to share his full testimony.
From losing two younger brothers and carrying survivor’s guilt, to living on ecstasy from seventh grade into his twenties, facing a 10‑year prison sentence with a stolen car and a sawed‑off shotgun, and walking through divorce and depression, Waka opens up about the moments that nearly broke him—and how God met him in the middle of it.
He talks about why he now refuses to take any opportunity that pulls him away from God (“If it moves me away from God, I’m not doing it. I don’t care how profitable it is. The devil gets no play in my ride.”), how he thinks about marriage, friendship, forgiveness, and what kind of father he wants to be for his son.
If you’ve only known Waka Flocka Flame from the turn‑up anthems, this episode will change the way you see him.
What we cover in this episode:
The tragic accident that took his little brother’s life and the guilt he carried for years
Losing a second brother to suicide and wrestling with “Why them, God?”
Ecstasy, numbing the pain, and realizing “this is not me”
Getting locked up in Georgia and the legal scare that forced a change
Divorce, failure, and why he says he needed that season to grow
How he now makes every decision based on whether it moves him closer to or further from God
Fatherhood, boundaries, and why he still believes in love
Welcome to the Country Outdoors Podcast, where country music, entertainment, and outdoor lifestyle collide with honest conversations about faith, life, and the wild.
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Rural 1st https://www.rural1st.com/00:00 – Cold open: “When I met God…”
00:34 – Mary’s intro & setup
01:52 – Getting comfortable on set
03:00 – “I want to talk about Jesus”
04:20 – Gifts, Solture & Mossy Oak
06:00 – Hunting stories & turkey invite
07:45 – Why Waka’s faith stands out
08:40 – What “testimony” means
09:30 – Waka’s view of Jesus & Spirit
11:40 – Losing his little brother
15:00 – Second brother, suicide & “why?”
17:40 – Ecstasy, numbness, hitting bottom
20:50 – Prison scare & legal grace
24:00 – People feeling trapped
26:30 – Forgiveness & friendship lines
29:30 – Divorce, depression, growth
33:40 – Marriage, dating & standards
38:30 – Music, Satan & influence
41:10 – Prayer calls & fiancée’s faith
42:13 – What he wants to be remembered for
42:36 – God’s wrath & no attention to devil
42:50 – “When I met God, I high‑fived the devil”
#WakaFlockaFlame#CountryOutdoorsPodcast#Testimony#FaithJourney#ChristianPodcast#CountryMusic#HipHop#GodFirst#SpiritualWarfare#PodcastInterview
May 27, 2026
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HUNTING
The second rut, a hard winter, and even buck age can affect how early or late buck’s drop their antlers. Here’s how to know when to look for sheds
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If used at the right time and under the right conditions, adding an imposter to your setup can be pure poison to monster bucks.
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By Scott Bestul
Jesse Schroeder found the enormous deadhead while shed hunting in April. Now, it’s poised to unseat a nearly 50-year-old record
FISHING
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GUNS
Ammo is expensive. So use these dry-fire drills to vastly improve your rifle shooting without ever firing a live round
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Want the biggest bang for your buck? These hunting rifles will get the job done—and none costs more than $600
This dependable, budget-priced bolt-action is essentially the original Ruger American rifle—only better. Check out our expert’s full review

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