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March Madness has a whole different meaning
to Ronnie Strickland.
Besides following his Mississippi State Bulldogs
steamroll their way through the NCAA Tournament's field of
64, the third week in March signals the start of Mississippi's
turkey season - Strickland's Christmas morning.
The Natchez native, who is currently the senior
vice president of Television and Related Media for Mossy Oak
in West Point, "Cuz" lives for hunting turkeys.
So much so that Strickland has written a series of engaging
books about the sport.
The second, "The Whole Truth about Spring
Turkey Hunting According to Cuz," was released late last
month, and it's a must-read for diehard turkey enthusiasts,
especially for Strickland's Natchez friends.
"I wrote the first book, and it was pretty
successful. I was very surprised. It's not exactly a John
Grisham novel," said Strickland of "The Truth about
Spring Turkey Hunting According to Cuz."
"You've gotta be a hardcore turkey hunter
to get it. When a real turkey hunter reads this, he's gonna
start nodding his head."
He credits Natchez with the first chapters
of the "Truth" series. Strickland and hunting buddies
like Ross McGehee and Bubba Bruce used to take to the woods
with a cumbersome camera in tow to make some adventurous home
movies.
"Back then the camera weighed 80-some-odd
pounds. We didn't know what we were doing," Strickland
said. "They were doing it with me because they were my
friends. If you thought about doing this because you wanted
to hunt to be some hero, you were doing it for the wrong reason."
Still to this day, when folks ask where Strickland
is from, he tells them Natchez is his home, despite living
in northeast Mississippi for the better part of 14 years now.
For a hunter as addicted to the sport as Strickland,
Natchez was the ideal place for him to grow up. He still remembers
the willingness people had to share knowledge about their
successful spots
"The hunting was so good. I remember
the people more than anything," said Strickland, whose
father was the sports editor at The Democrat, and he himself
contributed a hunting and fishing column for some years before
he left in 1990.
"Natchez was a special place to grow
up if you were hunting or fishing. I've gone all over and
I still think it's one of the best places in the world."
Strickland produces five television shows,
with his "Hunting the Country" remaining the highest-rated
outdoors program on ESPN2 currently. In July, a new show titled
"Step Outside" will debut.
Last summer the Golf Channel ran a Strickland
program called "Second Season," which featured current
and former PGA Tour pros in their element on hunting adventures.
The series, which included a Texas' bow hunt
with legend Jack Nicklaus, will have its episodes increased
from 13 to 26 this summer.
"It's more than the hunt. It's about
storytelling. I think the reason we've been so successful
is we relate to more people. It's not about the size of deer
you get, but what your experience was like. I think people
pick up on that.
In the upcoming weeks, Strickland related
he will take a 21-year-old Alabama Marine, who has just returned
from Iraq, on a hunting trip to Texas.
Keeping to his roots, Strickland has already
enlisted the services of Natchez's Bad Boy Buggies, which
makes the first-ever, all-electric four-wheel drive vehicle.
He's confident that there will be a bumper
crop of turkeys this season statewide in Mississippi.
"Mississippi has a lot to be proud of
with the MDWFP (Mississippi Department of Wildlife, Fisheries
and Parks)," Strickland said. "Twenty years ago
it wasn't much, but now, these are the good old days. They've
done a great job at setting limits."
He spent last week near Scuba on a youth hunt,
where he watched a 12-year-old harvest his first turkey.
While he loves the sport, he knows all too
well that its success depends on intangible factors, namely
the weather.
"It's all about the weather. If it rains,
they can't stand that," Strickland said. "It's hard
to raise a turkey from a brood. They lay their eggs on the
ground, and every predator in the world has a chance to get
those. It's almost a miracle if they do hatch."
Strickland said he found in doing seminars
his audience enjoyed being entertained with engaging stories,
not bored with meaningless facts or statistics.
The stories led to penning some magazine articles,
which led to those being compiled into a book, which in turn
became the "Truth" series.
"It's not something where you say, 'OK,
I'm gonna write a book and put my kids through college,'"
Cuz said. "But turkey hunting is a cult. Everybody knows
everybody."
The Natchez Democrat story archive contains
stories and related material published online after August
1, 1999. The archive does not include the complete text of
the print edition of the paper.
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