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    Hunting | Survival | Travel

    How weather patterns quietly control deer movement

    ByAsher Clark March 14, 2026March 13, 2026

    Whitetail deer rarely move at random. Their daily patterns, seasonal migrations, and sudden bursts of daylight activity tend to track with subtle shifts in temperature, wind, rain, and pressure that roll through long before most people notice a change. For hunters, land managers, and wildlife watchers, learning how those weather cues quietly steer deer behavior…

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  • Image Credit: Gage Skidmore from Surprise, AZ, United States of America - CC BY-SA 2.0/Wiki Commons
    Gear | Survival

    Watchdog questions $93 billion in Pentagon spending in a single month

    ByAsher Clark March 14, 2026March 13, 2026

    When you look at how the U.S. spends its defense dollars, the numbers are always large. But spending more than $93 billion in just one month — September 2025 — has drawn fresh scrutiny from watchdog groups and lawmakers alike. That month’s total was described as the largest single-month outlay in decades, and much of it came under…

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    Survival | Travel

    Historians estimate half a million cats served in World War I trenches

    ByAsher Clark March 14, 2026March 13, 2026

    Cats weren’t just mascots in World War I—they were essential members of trench life. An estimated half a million felines roamed the muddy networks of European frontlines, offering practical and emotional support. Soldiers relied on them for more than companionship; cats controlled vermin populations that threatened food supplies and spread disease. Their presence was a…

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  • Image Credit: Gage Skidmore – CC BY-SA 3.0/Wiki Commons
    Survival | Travel

    Trump comments about possible attacks inside the U.S. spark backlash

    ByAsher Clark March 14, 2026March 13, 2026

    When a president talks about war and retaliation, people listen closely. Words carry weight because they shape how Americans understand risk at home. In recent days, comments by Donald Trump about the possibility of attacks inside the United States have stirred a wave of criticism from lawmakers, security analysts, and even some longtime supporters. The remarks came…

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    Survival | Travel

    Kayak angler hooks massive bass in shallow water

    ByAsher Clark March 14, 2026March 13, 2026

    If you spend enough time chasing bass from a kayak, you learn quickly that shallow water can produce some of the biggest surprises of the season. Anglers often focus on deep ledges or offshore structure when they’re hunting for a trophy, but big bass regularly slide into skinny water for feeding opportunities. When that happens,…

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  • Image Credit: MODIS Land Rapid Response Team, NASA GSFC - Public domain/Wiki Commons
    Survival | Travel

    New warning claims global economy could suffer if the Strait of Hormuz closes

    ByAsher Clark March 14, 2026March 14, 2026

    When people talk about global choke points, few places carry the weight of the Strait of Hormuz. This narrow stretch of water between Iran and Oman handles an enormous share of the world’s oil and natural gas shipments. Tankers leaving major producers like Saudi Arabia, Iraq, and Kuwait pass through it every day. When tensions rise in the region, economists and security analysts pay…

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    Hunting | Survival

    8 animals once declared extinct that were later rediscovered alive

    ByAsher Clark March 14, 2026March 13, 2026

    Out in the wild, certainty has a way of falling apart. Scientists can search a region for decades, collect every record available, and still miss a species that’s quietly hanging on in some overlooked valley or patch of forest. When an animal disappears for long enough without confirmed sightings, it sometimes gets labeled extinct. But…

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  • Image Credit: United States Department of Justice – Public domain/Wiki Commons
    Gear | Survival | Travel

    Lawmakers clash over war powers following U.S. strikes on Iran

    ByAsher Clark March 14, 2026March 13, 2026

    When the United States launches military strikes overseas, the debate in Washington rarely stays quiet for long. The Constitution gives Congress the power to declare war, yet modern presidents from both parties have often used military force without formal approval. That tension has returned to the center of national debate after U.S. strikes against Iranian…

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    Hunting | Survival | Travel

    America’s lakes with the largest alligator populations

    ByAsher Clark March 14, 2026March 13, 2026

    If you spend enough time fishing or hunting around the Southeast, you eventually learn that alligators are part of the landscape. They’re not rare curiosities anymore. In many lakes, they’re as common as herons on the shoreline or bass under the docks. Healthy wetlands, long warm seasons, and decades of protection helped bring the American…

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    Hunting | Survival | Travel

    How Florida’s children helped save the panther from extinction

    ByAsher Clark March 14, 2026March 13, 2026

    There was a time when the Florida panther was hanging by a thread. By the early 1990s, biologists believed fewer than 30 animals remained in the wild. Habitat loss, vehicle collisions, and inbreeding were pushing the population toward collapse. Wildlife managers were scrambling to keep the species alive, but one of the most powerful pushes didn’t come…

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