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Officials host meth awareness meeting
by Bailey Richards
Staff Reporter
Dan Smoot of Operation UNITE showed several of the common chemicals used to make meth, and the bottles to look out for  during a meeting at the Perry County Library on May 29. (photo by Bailey Richards)
Dan Smoot of Operation UNITE showed several of the common chemicals used to make meth, and the bottles to look out for during a meeting at the Perry County Library on May 29. (photo by Bailey Richards)
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HAZARD — The Hazard Police Department and Operation UNITE hosted a community meeting this week to help inform residents of the dangers and signs of making meth.

Meth has been moving eastward with incredible speed since the introduction of the shake-and-bake method. Through this method, meth can now be made in a 20-ounce soda bottle with only 45 minutes and a trip to Walmart, most grocery stores, or even CVS or Lowe’s. The volatile concoction of liquid fire, lithium, pseudoephedrine, ammonium nitrate and brick cleaner creates toxic gas inside the small bottle that has the potential to blow up and cause a fire, or even poison people around it.

This is especially frightening for officials, considering many of these types of meth labs are being found in hotels, cars and even in store restrooms where the ingredients are bought. According to Dan Smoot with Operation UNITE, even once the process of extracting meth is complete, these bottles can still be highly dangerous and explosive.

A meeting held in the Perry County Public Library auditorium on May 29 gave residents and first responders a better indication of what to look for and how to handle a situation when they suspect someone of making meth.

Smoot, who has been in police work for 32 years and in narcotics enforcement for 26, noted that during his entire career, “I have never encountered anything like meth.”

“It is the worst of the worst,” he added. “It is by far the most highly addictive drug around. It does explode in the process, and it does contaminate anybody that comes near it.”

Smoot said that while any of the ingredients in meth do not by themselves raise a red flag, buying large quantities, or in conjunction with other items, can be a sign that someone is making meth. Knowing what to look for can help keep yourself and community members safe.

Meth contains many chemicals, including lithium taken from batteries, lighter fluid, fertilizer, Coleman camp fuel, brick cleaner, coffee filters and allergy medication. Many of these items can be substituted, but one of them, a decongestant called pseudoephedrine, is always necessary.

“[They] have to have pseudoephedrine,” said Smoot. “It is the only one product you have to have to make methamphetamine.”

Federal law mandates that no one person can buy more than nine grams of pseudoephedrine in a month, however, Kentucky just limited this to only seven and a half grams. Smoot said that this is a step in the right direction, but is not much of a hurdle for experienced meth cooks. He said that many of them do not buy their own ingredients. They trade ingredients for finished product through a process called smurfing.

Smurfing is when a meth cook gets other people to buy pseudoephedrine for them so they can get more than the legal amount in a single month. In some states, pseudoephedrine can only legally be obtained through a prescription, and officials there have seen significant decreases in the number of meth labs.

Mexico used to be a main exporter of meth to the United States, but since then officials there have banned pseudoephedrine, drastically reducing meth manufacturing there.

Once someone has the necessary products to create meth, it is put into a bottle that immediately becomes a volatile combination of chemicals. Lithium alone will catch fire in the presence of any moisture.

“It will shoot up a flame about eight feet high,” said Smoot.

The bottle will begin to expand and can explode if the pressure is not released in a process called burping.

“Here is the problem, most of them take this bottle and throw it out the right window and this bottle and throw it out the left one,” said Smoot. “You can literally find these two bottles all over the state of Kentucky. If you, a kid, or anybody picks this bottle up and shakes it, it starts the chemical reaction back over.”

These bottles can explode and cause injury. Smoot said that in some areas UNITE crews are brought in to help clean up during PRIDE clean-up days to avoid any volunteers getting hurt. One of these areas is Laurel County, which has been the hardest hit by meth in recent years.

Kentucky as a whole now ranks number four for the most meth incidents in the country.

“We had over 1,200 incidents of meth labs,” said Smoot.

While Perry County has seen relatively few of these incidents, meth is starting to creep into the county. This is why it is important that people know what to look for and what to do if a lab if found, Smoot noted.

“The bigger problem is Perry County is a source county,” he added. “When I say a source county it means you have a lot of pharmacies.”

Because so many people from neighboring areas are coming to Hazard and Perry County to obtain the ingredients for meth, the responsibility often falls on the stores to look out for people making suspicious purchases. Some stores will limit the number of lithium batteries someone can buy at a given time, others are now keeping both pseudoephedrine and batteries behind the counter.

Smoot said that unfortunately some store owners do not know what to look for, and as sales increase for some of these ingredients they will actually market them and put them on display.

For people living near what they suspect is a home that is also serving as a meth lab, offiicals noted that there can be a distinct chemical smell coming from the home, and often burn piles containing the packaging from some of the products used. Living near these homes or going into them can contaminate anyone in the area.

It can be especially hard on children living in these homes. They can develop what looks like rashes, but are actually chemical burns from touching carpet and walls. They can also have a cough or other flu-like symptoms and have a chemical smell.

It is important that anyone in contact with meth making is decontaminated so as not to spread any chemicals to others.

Smoot said that meth was created to keep soldiers awake during World War II, and it still has the same effect. It can make people using meth highly dangerous and very strong, since they do not feel their muscles fatigue. Once someone starts to take meth, he added, they are usually in the final stages of their addiction. And once they begin taking meth, the average user has a life expectancy of about five years.

“No one starts out on methamphetamine,” he said. “You can talk to any addict. Meth is usually the last drug that they try because they know once you get addicted to meth you are all but dead. Most of them don’t live five years.”

People taking meth often develop sores on their face and arms, and their faces take on a sunken appearance. Early intervention is important to help that person and to stop the spread and sale to others, officials say. If any meth activity is suspected in your neighborhood, or with anyone you know, call authorities as soon as possible.

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Oil and gas looking up in state, association director says
by Cris Ritchie
Editor
Jun 19, 2013 | 3995 views | 0 0 comments | 11 11 recommendations | email to a friend | print

The oil and natural gas industry in Kentucky could see a rebound in the next year or two, according to industry officials, as companies seem to be showing a renewed interest in the state’s natural resources.

A new report released by the Kentucky Oil and Gas Association shows the economic impact of the oil and gas industry in Kentucky, which in 2011 contributed more than $34 million in severance taxes. Perry County, where more than 1 million barrels of oil and just less than 100 billion cubic feet of natural gas were produced from 2001 to 2011, was responsible for approximately $23 million in taxes.

Natural gas in Kentucky took a hit in 2011, however, as prices plummeted to around $2 per unit, noted Andrew McNeill, executive director of the Kentucky Oil and Gas Association. Companies weren’t showing an interest in new natural gas exploration in Kentucky because it wasn’t economical to do so at the time, he said. In early 2012 for instance, EQT announced it would halt all new drilling in the state and concentrate on production in the Marcellus Shale region in West Virginia and Pennsylvania.

“Now we’re starting to see companies that had not been investing or drilling in the state are starting to come back and do some new exploration,” McNeill said. “We’re seeing some of the revitalization of the industry back in Kentucky.”

McNeill noted EQT, the largest producer of natural gas in Perry County, recently announced the company would now drill 50 new wells in Kentucky in 2013, and while his organization certainly would like to see more production, he views that as a step in the right direction from the industry’s outlook in 2011.

“I think what it’s telling us is that we’re making a comeback from a low point in 2009-2010, 2011-2012,” he said.

While each of the top 15 gas-producing counties in the state are located in Eastern Kentucky, the state’s western counties ranked high in oil production (Perry County ranked 6th). McNeill said because oil prices have remained high, at near $92 per barrel, more companies are showing an interest in production in Kentucky.

“A lot of folks have diversified and taken equipment for gas exploration and started developing oil opportunities,” he said.

In addition to tax revenues, the oil and gas industry also has a direct effect on the labor market in the state, according to the association’s report. More than 9,000 people in Kentucky were employed either in the direct extraction of oil and gas, or through drilling or support operations in 2011. Average salaries topped out at $61,448 for oil and gas extraction, while support industry salaries stood at just over $50,000.

Dr. Paul Coomes, a professor for the University of Louisville who conducted research for the association’s report, said as prices for natural gas rebound from the lows of the past few years, he also expects the industry in Kentucky to rebound. The number of producing wells in the Kentucky dropped to a five-year low in 2011.

“Kentucky has been a steady producer of oil and natural gas for over a century. Today, the industry is a major economic engine, particularly in Eastern Kentucky,” Coomes said. “The region will get an economic boost as natural gas prices recover from the extremely low levels of the last few years.”

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Kentucky Afield Outdoors: Summer archery checklist
by Art Lander, Jr.
Jun 19, 2013 | 2179 views | 0 0 comments | 11 11 recommendations | email to a friend | print

June is the halfway point on the calendar and is highlighted by the longest day of the year: the official start of summer on Friday, June 21 this year.

For Kentucky’s 90,000 plus archery deer hunters, the Summer Solstice seems to trigger another seasonal phenomenon - the need to get ready for the upcoming hunting season.

Kentucky’s 136-day archery deer season opens in late summer, this year 15 days before the first day of fall. The season dates are Sept. 7, 2013 through Jan, 20, 2014.

The signs are everywhere across rural Kentucky that deer season is not that far off: mast is beginning to grow on trees in the woods, fields are lush with clover and tall grass. Deer fawns are becoming more visible and bucks are growing back their antlers with renewed vigor. When deer season opens, deer will still be in their summer pattern and highly visible while feeding late in the day in fields.

For avid archery hunters, it’s never too early to think deer. Late June is a good time to get organized by checking out equipment and adding new accessories. Start practicing, even if it’s been months since the last hunt of last season.

For archers who don’t shoot year-round, here’s a checklist to study in preparation for the upcoming season.

Take your hunting bow to a trusted technician now and have it checked out, top to bottom, especially the bow string.

“Most people wait until it’s too late,” said Tommy Downey, owner of 4-D Archery in Henry County. “The string may look okay, but it may be weakened under the center serving (where the arrow nock is attached).”

Downey said bow strings can also stretch over time and hundreds of shots. “That gets the bow out of tune, so that it shoots erratically and inconsistently.”

If you plan to change vital equipment, don’t wait, do it now.

“For most people it takes about a month to adjust to a new arrow rest or bow sight,” said Downey. “It takes longer than you would think to sight in your bow when there’s been a change in equipment.”

Inspect arrows carefully. Make sure they are straight and free of cracks. Replace damaged fletching or nocks and be certain that the weight of your field points (practice points) are the same weight as your hunting broadheads. Set aside one broadhead for practice. As opening day of archery deer season approaches, sight in your bow with your practice broadhead.

When you start practicing, take it slow. “Don’t shoot too many arrows at first,” said Downey. “Ease into it.”

Older archers might consider turning down the poundage or the draw weight of their compound bows and just shoot a few arrows a day, to build muscles back up.

Sloppy practice is bad practice, even in the beginning. Concentrate. Get back into the rhythm of archery.

When the season opens and you draw on that first deer, your mind and body should be on auto-pilot. Archery is part mental, part muscle memory. Be ready.

Author Art Lander, Jr. has been writing about the outdoors since the 1970s. He is a staff writer for Kentucky Afield Magazine.

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download June 18, 2013
Clifton Watts, a member of the Church of Christ in Brownsfork, used a garden hose to spray mud from the church's front stoop Tuesday afternoon. The church was damaged Monday night during a flash flood. (photo by Cris Ritchie | Hazard Herald)
Clifton Watts, a member of the Church of Christ in Brownsfork, used a garden hose to spray mud from the church's front stoop Tuesday afternoon. The church was damaged Monday night during a flash flood. (photo by Cris Ritchie | Hazard Herald)
slideshow
Clifton Watts, a member of the Church of Christ in Brownsfork, used a garden hose to spray mud from the church's front stoop Tuesday afternoon. The church was damaged Monday night during a flash flood. (photo by Cris Ritchie | Hazard Herald)
Clifton Watts, a member of the Church of Christ in Brownsfork, used a garden hose to spray mud from the church's front stoop Tuesday afternoon. The church was damaged Monday night during a flash flood. (photo by Cris Ritchie | Hazard Herald)
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Sports
Oil and gas looking up in state, association director says
by Cris Ritchie
Editor
Jun 19, 2013 | 3995 views | 0 0 comments | 11 11 recommendations | email to a friend | print

The oil and natural gas industry in Kentucky could see a rebound in the next year or two, according to industry officials, as companies seem to be showing a renewed interest in the state’s natural resources.

A new report released by the Kentucky Oil and Gas Association shows the economic impact of the oil and gas industry in Kentucky, which in 2011 contributed more than $34 million in severance taxes. Perry County, where more than 1 million barrels of oil and just less than 100 billion cubic feet of natural gas were produced from 2001 to 2011, was responsible for approximately $23 million in taxes.

Natural gas in Kentucky took a hit in 2011, however, as prices plummeted to around $2 per unit, noted Andrew McNeill, executive director of the Kentucky Oil and Gas Association. Companies weren’t showing an interest in new natural gas exploration in Kentucky because it wasn’t economical to do so at the time, he said. In early 2012 for instance, EQT announced it would halt all new drilling in the state and concentrate on production in the Marcellus Shale region in West Virginia and Pennsylvania.

“Now we’re starting to see companies that had not been investing or drilling in the state are starting to come back and do some new exploration,” McNeill said. “We’re seeing some of the revitalization of the industry back in Kentucky.”

McNeill noted EQT, the largest producer of natural gas in Perry County, recently announced the company would now drill 50 new wells in Kentucky in 2013, and while his organization certainly would like to see more production, he views that as a step in the right direction from the industry’s outlook in 2011.

“I think what it’s telling us is that we’re making a comeback from a low point in 2009-2010, 2011-2012,” he said.

While each of the top 15 gas-producing counties in the state are located in Eastern Kentucky, the state’s western counties ranked high in oil production (Perry County ranked 6th). McNeill said because oil prices have remained high, at near $92 per barrel, more companies are showing an interest in production in Kentucky.

“A lot of folks have diversified and taken equipment for gas exploration and started developing oil opportunities,” he said.

In addition to tax revenues, the oil and gas industry also has a direct effect on the labor market in the state, according to the association’s report. More than 9,000 people in Kentucky were employed either in the direct extraction of oil and gas, or through drilling or support operations in 2011. Average salaries topped out at $61,448 for oil and gas extraction, while support industry salaries stood at just over $50,000.

Dr. Paul Coomes, a professor for the University of Louisville who conducted research for the association’s report, said as prices for natural gas rebound from the lows of the past few years, he also expects the industry in Kentucky to rebound. The number of producing wells in the Kentucky dropped to a five-year low in 2011.

“Kentucky has been a steady producer of oil and natural gas for over a century. Today, the industry is a major economic engine, particularly in Eastern Kentucky,” Coomes said. “The region will get an economic boost as natural gas prices recover from the extremely low levels of the last few years.”

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Kentucky Afield Outdoors: Summer archery checklist
by Art Lander, Jr.
Jun 19, 2013 | 2179 views | 0 0 comments | 11 11 recommendations | email to a friend | print

June is the halfway point on the calendar and is highlighted by the longest day of the year: the official start of summer on Friday, June 21 this year.

For Kentucky’s 90,000 plus archery deer hunters, the Summer Solstice seems to trigger another seasonal phenomenon - the need to get ready for the upcoming hunting season.

Kentucky’s 136-day archery deer season opens in late summer, this year 15 days before the first day of fall. The season dates are Sept. 7, 2013 through Jan, 20, 2014.

The signs are everywhere across rural Kentucky that deer season is not that far off: mast is beginning to grow on trees in the woods, fields are lush with clover and tall grass. Deer fawns are becoming more visible and bucks are growing back their antlers with renewed vigor. When deer season opens, deer will still be in their summer pattern and highly visible while feeding late in the day in fields.

For avid archery hunters, it’s never too early to think deer. Late June is a good time to get organized by checking out equipment and adding new accessories. Start practicing, even if it’s been months since the last hunt of last season.

For archers who don’t shoot year-round, here’s a checklist to study in preparation for the upcoming season.

Take your hunting bow to a trusted technician now and have it checked out, top to bottom, especially the bow string.

“Most people wait until it’s too late,” said Tommy Downey, owner of 4-D Archery in Henry County. “The string may look okay, but it may be weakened under the center serving (where the arrow nock is attached).”

Downey said bow strings can also stretch over time and hundreds of shots. “That gets the bow out of tune, so that it shoots erratically and inconsistently.”

If you plan to change vital equipment, don’t wait, do it now.

“For most people it takes about a month to adjust to a new arrow rest or bow sight,” said Downey. “It takes longer than you would think to sight in your bow when there’s been a change in equipment.”

Inspect arrows carefully. Make sure they are straight and free of cracks. Replace damaged fletching or nocks and be certain that the weight of your field points (practice points) are the same weight as your hunting broadheads. Set aside one broadhead for practice. As opening day of archery deer season approaches, sight in your bow with your practice broadhead.

When you start practicing, take it slow. “Don’t shoot too many arrows at first,” said Downey. “Ease into it.”

Older archers might consider turning down the poundage or the draw weight of their compound bows and just shoot a few arrows a day, to build muscles back up.

Sloppy practice is bad practice, even in the beginning. Concentrate. Get back into the rhythm of archery.

When the season opens and you draw on that first deer, your mind and body should be on auto-pilot. Archery is part mental, part muscle memory. Be ready.

Author Art Lander, Jr. has been writing about the outdoors since the 1970s. He is a staff writer for Kentucky Afield Magazine.

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download June 18, 2013
Clifton Watts, a member of the Church of Christ in Brownsfork, used a garden hose to spray mud from the church's front stoop Tuesday afternoon. The church was damaged Monday night during a flash flood. (photo by Cris Ritchie | Hazard Herald)
Clifton Watts, a member of the Church of Christ in Brownsfork, used a garden hose to spray mud from the church's front stoop Tuesday afternoon. The church was damaged Monday night during a flash flood. (photo by Cris Ritchie | Hazard Herald)
slideshow
Clifton Watts, a member of the Church of Christ in Brownsfork, used a garden hose to spray mud from the church's front stoop Tuesday afternoon. The church was damaged Monday night during a flash flood. (photo by Cris Ritchie | Hazard Herald)
Clifton Watts, a member of the Church of Christ in Brownsfork, used a garden hose to spray mud from the church's front stoop Tuesday afternoon. The church was damaged Monday night during a flash flood. (photo by Cris Ritchie | Hazard Herald)
slideshow
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Opinion
Oil and gas looking up in state, association director says
by Cris Ritchie
Editor
Jun 19, 2013 | 3995 views | 0 0 comments | 11 11 recommendations | email to a friend | print

The oil and natural gas industry in Kentucky could see a rebound in the next year or two, according to industry officials, as companies seem to be showing a renewed interest in the state’s natural resources.

A new report released by the Kentucky Oil and Gas Association shows the economic impact of the oil and gas industry in Kentucky, which in 2011 contributed more than $34 million in severance taxes. Perry County, where more than 1 million barrels of oil and just less than 100 billion cubic feet of natural gas were produced from 2001 to 2011, was responsible for approximately $23 million in taxes.

Natural gas in Kentucky took a hit in 2011, however, as prices plummeted to around $2 per unit, noted Andrew McNeill, executive director of the Kentucky Oil and Gas Association. Companies weren’t showing an interest in new natural gas exploration in Kentucky because it wasn’t economical to do so at the time, he said. In early 2012 for instance, EQT announced it would halt all new drilling in the state and concentrate on production in the Marcellus Shale region in West Virginia and Pennsylvania.

“Now we’re starting to see companies that had not been investing or drilling in the state are starting to come back and do some new exploration,” McNeill said. “We’re seeing some of the revitalization of the industry back in Kentucky.”

McNeill noted EQT, the largest producer of natural gas in Perry County, recently announced the company would now drill 50 new wells in Kentucky in 2013, and while his organization certainly would like to see more production, he views that as a step in the right direction from the industry’s outlook in 2011.

“I think what it’s telling us is that we’re making a comeback from a low point in 2009-2010, 2011-2012,” he said.

While each of the top 15 gas-producing counties in the state are located in Eastern Kentucky, the state’s western counties ranked high in oil production (Perry County ranked 6th). McNeill said because oil prices have remained high, at near $92 per barrel, more companies are showing an interest in production in Kentucky.

“A lot of folks have diversified and taken equipment for gas exploration and started developing oil opportunities,” he said.

In addition to tax revenues, the oil and gas industry also has a direct effect on the labor market in the state, according to the association’s report. More than 9,000 people in Kentucky were employed either in the direct extraction of oil and gas, or through drilling or support operations in 2011. Average salaries topped out at $61,448 for oil and gas extraction, while support industry salaries stood at just over $50,000.

Dr. Paul Coomes, a professor for the University of Louisville who conducted research for the association’s report, said as prices for natural gas rebound from the lows of the past few years, he also expects the industry in Kentucky to rebound. The number of producing wells in the Kentucky dropped to a five-year low in 2011.

“Kentucky has been a steady producer of oil and natural gas for over a century. Today, the industry is a major economic engine, particularly in Eastern Kentucky,” Coomes said. “The region will get an economic boost as natural gas prices recover from the extremely low levels of the last few years.”

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(0)
Comments-icon Post a Comment
No Comments Yet
Kentucky Afield Outdoors: Summer archery checklist
by Art Lander, Jr.
Jun 19, 2013 | 2179 views | 0 0 comments | 11 11 recommendations | email to a friend | print

June is the halfway point on the calendar and is highlighted by the longest day of the year: the official start of summer on Friday, June 21 this year.

For Kentucky’s 90,000 plus archery deer hunters, the Summer Solstice seems to trigger another seasonal phenomenon - the need to get ready for the upcoming hunting season.

Kentucky’s 136-day archery deer season opens in late summer, this year 15 days before the first day of fall. The season dates are Sept. 7, 2013 through Jan, 20, 2014.

The signs are everywhere across rural Kentucky that deer season is not that far off: mast is beginning to grow on trees in the woods, fields are lush with clover and tall grass. Deer fawns are becoming more visible and bucks are growing back their antlers with renewed vigor. When deer season opens, deer will still be in their summer pattern and highly visible while feeding late in the day in fields.

For avid archery hunters, it’s never too early to think deer. Late June is a good time to get organized by checking out equipment and adding new accessories. Start practicing, even if it’s been months since the last hunt of last season.

For archers who don’t shoot year-round, here’s a checklist to study in preparation for the upcoming season.

Take your hunting bow to a trusted technician now and have it checked out, top to bottom, especially the bow string.

“Most people wait until it’s too late,” said Tommy Downey, owner of 4-D Archery in Henry County. “The string may look okay, but it may be weakened under the center serving (where the arrow nock is attached).”

Downey said bow strings can also stretch over time and hundreds of shots. “That gets the bow out of tune, so that it shoots erratically and inconsistently.”

If you plan to change vital equipment, don’t wait, do it now.

“For most people it takes about a month to adjust to a new arrow rest or bow sight,” said Downey. “It takes longer than you would think to sight in your bow when there’s been a change in equipment.”

Inspect arrows carefully. Make sure they are straight and free of cracks. Replace damaged fletching or nocks and be certain that the weight of your field points (practice points) are the same weight as your hunting broadheads. Set aside one broadhead for practice. As opening day of archery deer season approaches, sight in your bow with your practice broadhead.

When you start practicing, take it slow. “Don’t shoot too many arrows at first,” said Downey. “Ease into it.”

Older archers might consider turning down the poundage or the draw weight of their compound bows and just shoot a few arrows a day, to build muscles back up.

Sloppy practice is bad practice, even in the beginning. Concentrate. Get back into the rhythm of archery.

When the season opens and you draw on that first deer, your mind and body should be on auto-pilot. Archery is part mental, part muscle memory. Be ready.

Author Art Lander, Jr. has been writing about the outdoors since the 1970s. He is a staff writer for Kentucky Afield Magazine.

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Comments-icon Post a Comment
No Comments Yet
download June 18, 2013
Clifton Watts, a member of the Church of Christ in Brownsfork, used a garden hose to spray mud from the church's front stoop Tuesday afternoon. The church was damaged Monday night during a flash flood. (photo by Cris Ritchie | Hazard Herald)
Clifton Watts, a member of the Church of Christ in Brownsfork, used a garden hose to spray mud from the church's front stoop Tuesday afternoon. The church was damaged Monday night during a flash flood. (photo by Cris Ritchie | Hazard Herald)
slideshow
Clifton Watts, a member of the Church of Christ in Brownsfork, used a garden hose to spray mud from the church's front stoop Tuesday afternoon. The church was damaged Monday night during a flash flood. (photo by Cris Ritchie | Hazard Herald)
Clifton Watts, a member of the Church of Christ in Brownsfork, used a garden hose to spray mud from the church's front stoop Tuesday afternoon. The church was damaged Monday night during a flash flood. (photo by Cris Ritchie | Hazard Herald)
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Local Features
Oil and gas looking up in state, association director says
by Cris Ritchie
Editor
Jun 19, 2013 | 3995 views | 0 0 comments | 11 11 recommendations | email to a friend | print

The oil and natural gas industry in Kentucky could see a rebound in the next year or two, according to industry officials, as companies seem to be showing a renewed interest in the state’s natural resources.

A new report released by the Kentucky Oil and Gas Association shows the economic impact of the oil and gas industry in Kentucky, which in 2011 contributed more than $34 million in severance taxes. Perry County, where more than 1 million barrels of oil and just less than 100 billion cubic feet of natural gas were produced from 2001 to 2011, was responsible for approximately $23 million in taxes.

Natural gas in Kentucky took a hit in 2011, however, as prices plummeted to around $2 per unit, noted Andrew McNeill, executive director of the Kentucky Oil and Gas Association. Companies weren’t showing an interest in new natural gas exploration in Kentucky because it wasn’t economical to do so at the time, he said. In early 2012 for instance, EQT announced it would halt all new drilling in the state and concentrate on production in the Marcellus Shale region in West Virginia and Pennsylvania.

“Now we’re starting to see companies that had not been investing or drilling in the state are starting to come back and do some new exploration,” McNeill said. “We’re seeing some of the revitalization of the industry back in Kentucky.”

McNeill noted EQT, the largest producer of natural gas in Perry County, recently announced the company would now drill 50 new wells in Kentucky in 2013, and while his organization certainly would like to see more production, he views that as a step in the right direction from the industry’s outlook in 2011.

“I think what it’s telling us is that we’re making a comeback from a low point in 2009-2010, 2011-2012,” he said.

While each of the top 15 gas-producing counties in the state are located in Eastern Kentucky, the state’s western counties ranked high in oil production (Perry County ranked 6th). McNeill said because oil prices have remained high, at near $92 per barrel, more companies are showing an interest in production in Kentucky.

“A lot of folks have diversified and taken equipment for gas exploration and started developing oil opportunities,” he said.

In addition to tax revenues, the oil and gas industry also has a direct effect on the labor market in the state, according to the association’s report. More than 9,000 people in Kentucky were employed either in the direct extraction of oil and gas, or through drilling or support operations in 2011. Average salaries topped out at $61,448 for oil and gas extraction, while support industry salaries stood at just over $50,000.

Dr. Paul Coomes, a professor for the University of Louisville who conducted research for the association’s report, said as prices for natural gas rebound from the lows of the past few years, he also expects the industry in Kentucky to rebound. The number of producing wells in the Kentucky dropped to a five-year low in 2011.

“Kentucky has been a steady producer of oil and natural gas for over a century. Today, the industry is a major economic engine, particularly in Eastern Kentucky,” Coomes said. “The region will get an economic boost as natural gas prices recover from the extremely low levels of the last few years.”

Comments
(0)
Comments-icon Post a Comment
No Comments Yet
Kentucky Afield Outdoors: Summer archery checklist
by Art Lander, Jr.
Jun 19, 2013 | 2179 views | 0 0 comments | 11 11 recommendations | email to a friend | print

June is the halfway point on the calendar and is highlighted by the longest day of the year: the official start of summer on Friday, June 21 this year.

For Kentucky’s 90,000 plus archery deer hunters, the Summer Solstice seems to trigger another seasonal phenomenon - the need to get ready for the upcoming hunting season.

Kentucky’s 136-day archery deer season opens in late summer, this year 15 days before the first day of fall. The season dates are Sept. 7, 2013 through Jan, 20, 2014.

The signs are everywhere across rural Kentucky that deer season is not that far off: mast is beginning to grow on trees in the woods, fields are lush with clover and tall grass. Deer fawns are becoming more visible and bucks are growing back their antlers with renewed vigor. When deer season opens, deer will still be in their summer pattern and highly visible while feeding late in the day in fields.

For avid archery hunters, it’s never too early to think deer. Late June is a good time to get organized by checking out equipment and adding new accessories. Start practicing, even if it’s been months since the last hunt of last season.

For archers who don’t shoot year-round, here’s a checklist to study in preparation for the upcoming season.

Take your hunting bow to a trusted technician now and have it checked out, top to bottom, especially the bow string.

“Most people wait until it’s too late,” said Tommy Downey, owner of 4-D Archery in Henry County. “The string may look okay, but it may be weakened under the center serving (where the arrow nock is attached).”

Downey said bow strings can also stretch over time and hundreds of shots. “That gets the bow out of tune, so that it shoots erratically and inconsistently.”

If you plan to change vital equipment, don’t wait, do it now.

“For most people it takes about a month to adjust to a new arrow rest or bow sight,” said Downey. “It takes longer than you would think to sight in your bow when there’s been a change in equipment.”

Inspect arrows carefully. Make sure they are straight and free of cracks. Replace damaged fletching or nocks and be certain that the weight of your field points (practice points) are the same weight as your hunting broadheads. Set aside one broadhead for practice. As opening day of archery deer season approaches, sight in your bow with your practice broadhead.

When you start practicing, take it slow. “Don’t shoot too many arrows at first,” said Downey. “Ease into it.”

Older archers might consider turning down the poundage or the draw weight of their compound bows and just shoot a few arrows a day, to build muscles back up.

Sloppy practice is bad practice, even in the beginning. Concentrate. Get back into the rhythm of archery.

When the season opens and you draw on that first deer, your mind and body should be on auto-pilot. Archery is part mental, part muscle memory. Be ready.

Author Art Lander, Jr. has been writing about the outdoors since the 1970s. He is a staff writer for Kentucky Afield Magazine.

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download June 18, 2013
Clifton Watts, a member of the Church of Christ in Brownsfork, used a garden hose to spray mud from the church's front stoop Tuesday afternoon. The church was damaged Monday night during a flash flood. (photo by Cris Ritchie | Hazard Herald)
Clifton Watts, a member of the Church of Christ in Brownsfork, used a garden hose to spray mud from the church's front stoop Tuesday afternoon. The church was damaged Monday night during a flash flood. (photo by Cris Ritchie | Hazard Herald)
slideshow
Clifton Watts, a member of the Church of Christ in Brownsfork, used a garden hose to spray mud from the church's front stoop Tuesday afternoon. The church was damaged Monday night during a flash flood. (photo by Cris Ritchie | Hazard Herald)
Clifton Watts, a member of the Church of Christ in Brownsfork, used a garden hose to spray mud from the church's front stoop Tuesday afternoon. The church was damaged Monday night during a flash flood. (photo by Cris Ritchie | Hazard Herald)
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Oil and gas looking up in state, association director says
by Cris Ritchie
Editor
Jun 19, 2013 | 3995 views | 0 0 comments | 11 11 recommendations | email to a friend | print

The oil and natural gas industry in Kentucky could see a rebound in the next year or two, according to industry officials, as companies seem to be showing a renewed interest in the state’s natural resources.

A new report released by the Kentucky Oil and Gas Association shows the economic impact of the oil and gas industry in Kentucky, which in 2011 contributed more than $34 million in severance taxes. Perry County, where more than 1 million barrels of oil and just less than 100 billion cubic feet of natural gas were produced from 2001 to 2011, was responsible for approximately $23 million in taxes.

Natural gas in Kentucky took a hit in 2011, however, as prices plummeted to around $2 per unit, noted Andrew McNeill, executive director of the Kentucky Oil and Gas Association. Companies weren’t showing an interest in new natural gas exploration in Kentucky because it wasn’t economical to do so at the time, he said. In early 2012 for instance, EQT announced it would halt all new drilling in the state and concentrate on production in the Marcellus Shale region in West Virginia and Pennsylvania.

“Now we’re starting to see companies that had not been investing or drilling in the state are starting to come back and do some new exploration,” McNeill said. “We’re seeing some of the revitalization of the industry back in Kentucky.”

McNeill noted EQT, the largest producer of natural gas in Perry County, recently announced the company would now drill 50 new wells in Kentucky in 2013, and while his organization certainly would like to see more production, he views that as a step in the right direction from the industry’s outlook in 2011.

“I think what it’s telling us is that we’re making a comeback from a low point in 2009-2010, 2011-2012,” he said.

While each of the top 15 gas-producing counties in the state are located in Eastern Kentucky, the state’s western counties ranked high in oil production (Perry County ranked 6th). McNeill said because oil prices have remained high, at near $92 per barrel, more companies are showing an interest in production in Kentucky.

“A lot of folks have diversified and taken equipment for gas exploration and started developing oil opportunities,” he said.

In addition to tax revenues, the oil and gas industry also has a direct effect on the labor market in the state, according to the association’s report. More than 9,000 people in Kentucky were employed either in the direct extraction of oil and gas, or through drilling or support operations in 2011. Average salaries topped out at $61,448 for oil and gas extraction, while support industry salaries stood at just over $50,000.

Dr. Paul Coomes, a professor for the University of Louisville who conducted research for the association’s report, said as prices for natural gas rebound from the lows of the past few years, he also expects the industry in Kentucky to rebound. The number of producing wells in the Kentucky dropped to a five-year low in 2011.

“Kentucky has been a steady producer of oil and natural gas for over a century. Today, the industry is a major economic engine, particularly in Eastern Kentucky,” Coomes said. “The region will get an economic boost as natural gas prices recover from the extremely low levels of the last few years.”

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Kentucky Afield Outdoors: Summer archery checklist
by Art Lander, Jr.
Jun 19, 2013 | 2179 views | 0 0 comments | 11 11 recommendations | email to a friend | print

June is the halfway point on the calendar and is highlighted by the longest day of the year: the official start of summer on Friday, June 21 this year.

For Kentucky’s 90,000 plus archery deer hunters, the Summer Solstice seems to trigger another seasonal phenomenon - the need to get ready for the upcoming hunting season.

Kentucky’s 136-day archery deer season opens in late summer, this year 15 days before the first day of fall. The season dates are Sept. 7, 2013 through Jan, 20, 2014.

The signs are everywhere across rural Kentucky that deer season is not that far off: mast is beginning to grow on trees in the woods, fields are lush with clover and tall grass. Deer fawns are becoming more visible and bucks are growing back their antlers with renewed vigor. When deer season opens, deer will still be in their summer pattern and highly visible while feeding late in the day in fields.

For avid archery hunters, it’s never too early to think deer. Late June is a good time to get organized by checking out equipment and adding new accessories. Start practicing, even if it’s been months since the last hunt of last season.

For archers who don’t shoot year-round, here’s a checklist to study in preparation for the upcoming season.

Take your hunting bow to a trusted technician now and have it checked out, top to bottom, especially the bow string.

“Most people wait until it’s too late,” said Tommy Downey, owner of 4-D Archery in Henry County. “The string may look okay, but it may be weakened under the center serving (where the arrow nock is attached).”

Downey said bow strings can also stretch over time and hundreds of shots. “That gets the bow out of tune, so that it shoots erratically and inconsistently.”

If you plan to change vital equipment, don’t wait, do it now.

“For most people it takes about a month to adjust to a new arrow rest or bow sight,” said Downey. “It takes longer than you would think to sight in your bow when there’s been a change in equipment.”

Inspect arrows carefully. Make sure they are straight and free of cracks. Replace damaged fletching or nocks and be certain that the weight of your field points (practice points) are the same weight as your hunting broadheads. Set aside one broadhead for practice. As opening day of archery deer season approaches, sight in your bow with your practice broadhead.

When you start practicing, take it slow. “Don’t shoot too many arrows at first,” said Downey. “Ease into it.”

Older archers might consider turning down the poundage or the draw weight of their compound bows and just shoot a few arrows a day, to build muscles back up.

Sloppy practice is bad practice, even in the beginning. Concentrate. Get back into the rhythm of archery.

When the season opens and you draw on that first deer, your mind and body should be on auto-pilot. Archery is part mental, part muscle memory. Be ready.

Author Art Lander, Jr. has been writing about the outdoors since the 1970s. He is a staff writer for Kentucky Afield Magazine.

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download June 18, 2013
Clifton Watts, a member of the Church of Christ in Brownsfork, used a garden hose to spray mud from the church's front stoop Tuesday afternoon. The church was damaged Monday night during a flash flood. (photo by Cris Ritchie | Hazard Herald)
Clifton Watts, a member of the Church of Christ in Brownsfork, used a garden hose to spray mud from the church's front stoop Tuesday afternoon. The church was damaged Monday night during a flash flood. (photo by Cris Ritchie | Hazard Herald)
slideshow
Clifton Watts, a member of the Church of Christ in Brownsfork, used a garden hose to spray mud from the church's front stoop Tuesday afternoon. The church was damaged Monday night during a flash flood. (photo by Cris Ritchie | Hazard Herald)
Clifton Watts, a member of the Church of Christ in Brownsfork, used a garden hose to spray mud from the church's front stoop Tuesday afternoon. The church was damaged Monday night during a flash flood. (photo by Cris Ritchie | Hazard Herald)
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Oil and gas looking up in state, association director says
by Cris Ritchie
Editor
Jun 19, 2013 | 3995 views | 0 0 comments | 11 11 recommendations | email to a friend | print

The oil and natural gas industry in Kentucky could see a rebound in the next year or two, according to industry officials, as companies seem to be showing a renewed interest in the state’s natural resources.

A new report released by the Kentucky Oil and Gas Association shows the economic impact of the oil and gas industry in Kentucky, which in 2011 contributed more than $34 million in severance taxes. Perry County, where more than 1 million barrels of oil and just less than 100 billion cubic feet of natural gas were produced from 2001 to 2011, was responsible for approximately $23 million in taxes.

Natural gas in Kentucky took a hit in 2011, however, as prices plummeted to around $2 per unit, noted Andrew McNeill, executive director of the Kentucky Oil and Gas Association. Companies weren’t showing an interest in new natural gas exploration in Kentucky because it wasn’t economical to do so at the time, he said. In early 2012 for instance, EQT announced it would halt all new drilling in the state and concentrate on production in the Marcellus Shale region in West Virginia and Pennsylvania.

“Now we’re starting to see companies that had not been investing or drilling in the state are starting to come back and do some new exploration,” McNeill said. “We’re seeing some of the revitalization of the industry back in Kentucky.”

McNeill noted EQT, the largest producer of natural gas in Perry County, recently announced the company would now drill 50 new wells in Kentucky in 2013, and while his organization certainly would like to see more production, he views that as a step in the right direction from the industry’s outlook in 2011.

“I think what it’s telling us is that we’re making a comeback from a low point in 2009-2010, 2011-2012,” he said.

While each of the top 15 gas-producing counties in the state are located in Eastern Kentucky, the state’s western counties ranked high in oil production (Perry County ranked 6th). McNeill said because oil prices have remained high, at near $92 per barrel, more companies are showing an interest in production in Kentucky.

“A lot of folks have diversified and taken equipment for gas exploration and started developing oil opportunities,” he said.

In addition to tax revenues, the oil and gas industry also has a direct effect on the labor market in the state, according to the association’s report. More than 9,000 people in Kentucky were employed either in the direct extraction of oil and gas, or through drilling or support operations in 2011. Average salaries topped out at $61,448 for oil and gas extraction, while support industry salaries stood at just over $50,000.

Dr. Paul Coomes, a professor for the University of Louisville who conducted research for the association’s report, said as prices for natural gas rebound from the lows of the past few years, he also expects the industry in Kentucky to rebound. The number of producing wells in the Kentucky dropped to a five-year low in 2011.

“Kentucky has been a steady producer of oil and natural gas for over a century. Today, the industry is a major economic engine, particularly in Eastern Kentucky,” Coomes said. “The region will get an economic boost as natural gas prices recover from the extremely low levels of the last few years.”

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Kentucky Afield Outdoors: Summer archery checklist
by Art Lander, Jr.
Jun 19, 2013 | 2179 views | 0 0 comments | 11 11 recommendations | email to a friend | print

June is the halfway point on the calendar and is highlighted by the longest day of the year: the official start of summer on Friday, June 21 this year.

For Kentucky’s 90,000 plus archery deer hunters, the Summer Solstice seems to trigger another seasonal phenomenon - the need to get ready for the upcoming hunting season.

Kentucky’s 136-day archery deer season opens in late summer, this year 15 days before the first day of fall. The season dates are Sept. 7, 2013 through Jan, 20, 2014.

The signs are everywhere across rural Kentucky that deer season is not that far off: mast is beginning to grow on trees in the woods, fields are lush with clover and tall grass. Deer fawns are becoming more visible and bucks are growing back their antlers with renewed vigor. When deer season opens, deer will still be in their summer pattern and highly visible while feeding late in the day in fields.

For avid archery hunters, it’s never too early to think deer. Late June is a good time to get organized by checking out equipment and adding new accessories. Start practicing, even if it’s been months since the last hunt of last season.

For archers who don’t shoot year-round, here’s a checklist to study in preparation for the upcoming season.

Take your hunting bow to a trusted technician now and have it checked out, top to bottom, especially the bow string.

“Most people wait until it’s too late,” said Tommy Downey, owner of 4-D Archery in Henry County. “The string may look okay, but it may be weakened under the center serving (where the arrow nock is attached).”

Downey said bow strings can also stretch over time and hundreds of shots. “That gets the bow out of tune, so that it shoots erratically and inconsistently.”

If you plan to change vital equipment, don’t wait, do it now.

“For most people it takes about a month to adjust to a new arrow rest or bow sight,” said Downey. “It takes longer than you would think to sight in your bow when there’s been a change in equipment.”

Inspect arrows carefully. Make sure they are straight and free of cracks. Replace damaged fletching or nocks and be certain that the weight of your field points (practice points) are the same weight as your hunting broadheads. Set aside one broadhead for practice. As opening day of archery deer season approaches, sight in your bow with your practice broadhead.

When you start practicing, take it slow. “Don’t shoot too many arrows at first,” said Downey. “Ease into it.”

Older archers might consider turning down the poundage or the draw weight of their compound bows and just shoot a few arrows a day, to build muscles back up.

Sloppy practice is bad practice, even in the beginning. Concentrate. Get back into the rhythm of archery.

When the season opens and you draw on that first deer, your mind and body should be on auto-pilot. Archery is part mental, part muscle memory. Be ready.

Author Art Lander, Jr. has been writing about the outdoors since the 1970s. He is a staff writer for Kentucky Afield Magazine.

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Comments-icon Post a Comment
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download June 18, 2013
Clifton Watts, a member of the Church of Christ in Brownsfork, used a garden hose to spray mud from the church's front stoop Tuesday afternoon. The church was damaged Monday night during a flash flood. (photo by Cris Ritchie | Hazard Herald)
Clifton Watts, a member of the Church of Christ in Brownsfork, used a garden hose to spray mud from the church's front stoop Tuesday afternoon. The church was damaged Monday night during a flash flood. (photo by Cris Ritchie | Hazard Herald)
slideshow
Clifton Watts, a member of the Church of Christ in Brownsfork, used a garden hose to spray mud from the church's front stoop Tuesday afternoon. The church was damaged Monday night during a flash flood. (photo by Cris Ritchie | Hazard Herald)
Clifton Watts, a member of the Church of Christ in Brownsfork, used a garden hose to spray mud from the church's front stoop Tuesday afternoon. The church was damaged Monday night during a flash flood. (photo by Cris Ritchie | Hazard Herald)
slideshow
Oil and gas looking up in state, association director says
by Cris Ritchie
Editor
Jun 19, 2013 | 3995 views | 0 0 comments | 11 11 recommendations | email to a friend | print

The oil and natural gas industry in Kentucky could see a rebound in the next year or two, according to industry officials, as companies seem to be showing a renewed interest in the state’s natural resources.

A new report released by the Kentucky Oil and Gas Association shows the economic impact of the oil and gas industry in Kentucky, which in 2011 contributed more than $34 million in severance taxes. Perry County, where more than 1 million barrels of oil and just less than 100 billion cubic feet of natural gas were produced from 2001 to 2011, was responsible for approximately $23 million in taxes.

Natural gas in Kentucky took a hit in 2011, however, as prices plummeted to around $2 per unit, noted Andrew McNeill, executive director of the Kentucky Oil and Gas Association. Companies weren’t showing an interest in new natural gas exploration in Kentucky because it wasn’t economical to do so at the time, he said. In early 2012 for instance, EQT announced it would halt all new drilling in the state and concentrate on production in the Marcellus Shale region in West Virginia and Pennsylvania.

“Now we’re starting to see companies that had not been investing or drilling in the state are starting to come back and do some new exploration,” McNeill said. “We’re seeing some of the revitalization of the industry back in Kentucky.”

McNeill noted EQT, the largest producer of natural gas in Perry County, recently announced the company would now drill 50 new wells in Kentucky in 2013, and while his organization certainly would like to see more production, he views that as a step in the right direction from the industry’s outlook in 2011.

“I think what it’s telling us is that we’re making a comeback from a low point in 2009-2010, 2011-2012,” he said.

While each of the top 15 gas-producing counties in the state are located in Eastern Kentucky, the state’s western counties ranked high in oil production (Perry County ranked 6th). McNeill said because oil prices have remained high, at near $92 per barrel, more companies are showing an interest in production in Kentucky.

“A lot of folks have diversified and taken equipment for gas exploration and started developing oil opportunities,” he said.

In addition to tax revenues, the oil and gas industry also has a direct effect on the labor market in the state, according to the association’s report. More than 9,000 people in Kentucky were employed either in the direct extraction of oil and gas, or through drilling or support operations in 2011. Average salaries topped out at $61,448 for oil and gas extraction, while support industry salaries stood at just over $50,000.

Dr. Paul Coomes, a professor for the University of Louisville who conducted research for the association’s report, said as prices for natural gas rebound from the lows of the past few years, he also expects the industry in Kentucky to rebound. The number of producing wells in the Kentucky dropped to a five-year low in 2011.

“Kentucky has been a steady producer of oil and natural gas for over a century. Today, the industry is a major economic engine, particularly in Eastern Kentucky,” Coomes said. “The region will get an economic boost as natural gas prices recover from the extremely low levels of the last few years.”

Comments
(0)
Comments-icon Post a Comment
No Comments Yet
Kentucky Afield Outdoors: Summer archery checklist
by Art Lander, Jr.
Jun 19, 2013 | 2179 views | 0 0 comments | 11 11 recommendations | email to a friend | print

June is the halfway point on the calendar and is highlighted by the longest day of the year: the official start of summer on Friday, June 21 this year.

For Kentucky’s 90,000 plus archery deer hunters, the Summer Solstice seems to trigger another seasonal phenomenon - the need to get ready for the upcoming hunting season.

Kentucky’s 136-day archery deer season opens in late summer, this year 15 days before the first day of fall. The season dates are Sept. 7, 2013 through Jan, 20, 2014.

The signs are everywhere across rural Kentucky that deer season is not that far off: mast is beginning to grow on trees in the woods, fields are lush with clover and tall grass. Deer fawns are becoming more visible and bucks are growing back their antlers with renewed vigor. When deer season opens, deer will still be in their summer pattern and highly visible while feeding late in the day in fields.

For avid archery hunters, it’s never too early to think deer. Late June is a good time to get organized by checking out equipment and adding new accessories. Start practicing, even if it’s been months since the last hunt of last season.

For archers who don’t shoot year-round, here’s a checklist to study in preparation for the upcoming season.

Take your hunting bow to a trusted technician now and have it checked out, top to bottom, especially the bow string.

“Most people wait until it’s too late,” said Tommy Downey, owner of 4-D Archery in Henry County. “The string may look okay, but it may be weakened under the center serving (where the arrow nock is attached).”

Downey said bow strings can also stretch over time and hundreds of shots. “That gets the bow out of tune, so that it shoots erratically and inconsistently.”

If you plan to change vital equipment, don’t wait, do it now.

“For most people it takes about a month to adjust to a new arrow rest or bow sight,” said Downey. “It takes longer than you would think to sight in your bow when there’s been a change in equipment.”

Inspect arrows carefully. Make sure they are straight and free of cracks. Replace damaged fletching or nocks and be certain that the weight of your field points (practice points) are the same weight as your hunting broadheads. Set aside one broadhead for practice. As opening day of archery deer season approaches, sight in your bow with your practice broadhead.

When you start practicing, take it slow. “Don’t shoot too many arrows at first,” said Downey. “Ease into it.”

Older archers might consider turning down the poundage or the draw weight of their compound bows and just shoot a few arrows a day, to build muscles back up.

Sloppy practice is bad practice, even in the beginning. Concentrate. Get back into the rhythm of archery.

When the season opens and you draw on that first deer, your mind and body should be on auto-pilot. Archery is part mental, part muscle memory. Be ready.

Author Art Lander, Jr. has been writing about the outdoors since the 1970s. He is a staff writer for Kentucky Afield Magazine.

Comments
(0)
Comments-icon Post a Comment
No Comments Yet
download June 18, 2013
Clifton Watts, a member of the Church of Christ in Brownsfork, used a garden hose to spray mud from the church's front stoop Tuesday afternoon. The church was damaged Monday night during a flash flood. (photo by Cris Ritchie | Hazard Herald)
Clifton Watts, a member of the Church of Christ in Brownsfork, used a garden hose to spray mud from the church's front stoop Tuesday afternoon. The church was damaged Monday night during a flash flood. (photo by Cris Ritchie | Hazard Herald)
slideshow
Clifton Watts, a member of the Church of Christ in Brownsfork, used a garden hose to spray mud from the church's front stoop Tuesday afternoon. The church was damaged Monday night during a flash flood. (photo by Cris Ritchie | Hazard Herald)
Clifton Watts, a member of the Church of Christ in Brownsfork, used a garden hose to spray mud from the church's front stoop Tuesday afternoon. The church was damaged Monday night during a flash flood. (photo by Cris Ritchie | Hazard Herald)
slideshow