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Pages Past - An Outdoor Journal

The Upland Almanac

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Autumn 2024

In a world of the non-stop barrage of political sound bites, the modern news cycle that used to be days in length now seems to be updated every few minutes whether we need it or not. I am old enough to remember when our country's leaders were not media celebrities but statesmen that our nation held in esteem, even if we disagreed with their point of view. Recently, while allowing my dogs to stretch their legs on a warm evening, dusk brewing on the horizon, my mind retreated to a similar evening in my boyhood, July 15, 1979.

- Glen Blackwood

Pages Past - An Outdoor Journal

We had just finished baling the season's second cutting of hay, and the wagons were stacked full, when my grandpa told me to put them in the barn and come inside and clean up. There were a couple hours of daylight left, and the Cincinnati Reds had an off day; I was perplexed. When I questioned why, he told me President Carter was speaking. Now I was more confused. I said something like why were we stopping and watching him when you don't like him. I was tersely told be respectful because "he is our President." A lesson in civics never to be forgotten. That evening, we sat side by side at the kitchen table and watched Carter's "Malaise" speech on a black-and-white television, the rabbit ear antenna capturing the signal.

The surfacing of this memory caused me to reread our 39th President's sporting memoir, An Outdoor Journal, published by Bantam Books in 1988. In the title's foreword, he calls this book "a labor of love," and by reading the book you see the author not as a political figure but as a sportsman who relishes time in the field. While best known as a fly fisherman, he was also an upland hunter, and dove, quail, ruffed grouse, woodcock and wild turkey are discussed throughout the work. The author also included a chapter called "Learning to Hunt." The chapter begins:

Before I was big enough to handle my own gun or even a BB rifle, I was serving proudly as a pickup boy for my father during the frigid hours of the winter dove shoots....

FLERE HISTORIER FRA The Upland Almanac

The Upland Almanac

The Upland Almanac

Mailbox & Insights

I have just finished reading the “Reflections” edition of your magazine, and I can’t say I have ever read a better issue of any magazine.

time to read

3 mins

Spring 2026

The Upland Almanac

Grouse Guns

Grouse guns are composed of wood, steel and memories.

time to read

2 mins

Spring 2026

The Upland Almanac

The Upland Almanac

Late in an Uplanders's Life

\"The instant ages on the living eye....\" - Theodore Roethke, \"Infirmity\"

time to read

7 mins

Spring 2026

The Upland Almanac

The Upland Almanac

HIGH, WIDE & Handsome

That's what I said to myself when I saw the two Hungarian partridge at the edge of a gravel road that winds through the foothills and up into the rugged crags of Montana's Rocky Mountain Front.

time to read

6 mins

Spring 2026

The Upland Almanac

The Upland Almanac

THE MORNING OF THE FIRST DAY

On the morning of the day following that of his return, the Captain awakened at an early hour, but he lay quietly for some minutes while gazing out the open windows toward the South Orchard and the well-remembered hump of Rock Pasture beyond.

time to read

8 mins

Spring 2026

The Upland Almanac

The Upland Almanac

Pages Past

Building a Book

time to read

4 mins

Spring 2026

The Upland Almanac

The Upland Almanac

Everywhere Is Art

Everywhere Is Art

time to read

4 mins

Spring 2026

The Upland Almanac

The Upland Almanac

Bird Dogs - Health Matters

Ursolic Acid in Athletic Sporting Dogs

time to read

4 mins

Spring 2026

The Upland Almanac

The Upland Almanac

Profile of an Artist: Taylor Lunt

TAYLOR LUNT EXPANDS HIS RANGE

time to read

1 mins

Spring 2026

The Upland Almanac

The Upland Almanac

Tailfeathers

The short walk from my work table to the coffee maker in my basement office usually produces no surprises.

time to read

4 mins

Spring 2026

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