Welcome to Running Creek Ranch

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Welcome to Running Creek Ranch WELCOME TO RUNNING CREEK RANCH We are proud to share with you our Running Creek Ranch that we have nurtured and developed since 2009. A 1,000 acre, working cattle ranch that holds lush pasture prairies, upland pine plantations, fertile hardwood bottomlands, and cold, clear running creeks and springs within it’s bosom. It is a recreational hunting, fishing, sport clay shooting, and horseback riding heaven for those who love the country, southern sporting lifestyle! Whether your interests are sporting activities, enjoying the great country outdoors of Southeast Mississippi, having a family gathering, a wedding celebration, a business meeting, a seasonal party, or simply enjoying good food and beverages with friends prepared by our Resort chefs, we welcome you to join us and experience the wonder of Running Creek, as we and our families have over these years past. A limited number of memberships are offered to those wanting to share this experience with us here at Running Creek Ranch. Enclosed please find an introduction to Running Creek Ranch Sporting Club and Resort and our private membership offering. We personally and sincerely invite you to schedule a tour and to experience the first-class amenities and services on which we pride ourselves. Welcome to Running Creek, a country, sporting club in the southeast Mississippi countryside. Warmest Regards, Elaine & Ronnie Penton, Owners MEMBERSHIP OFFERING Running Creek Ranch Sporting Club and Resort is offering a limited number of memberships by invitation only and subject to application approval. An application for the membership of your choice must be submitted for approval. Memberships do not provide the member with equity or ownership interest in the Club or Resort facilities; therefore, members have no legal, financial, nor legal responsibility for the operation or activities of the Resort. CORPORATE RESORT MEMBERSHIP SPORTSMAN RESORT MEMBERSHIP A Corporate Membership is approved for bonafide companies and The Sportsman Membership is offered to persons under the age businesses with full membership privileges for up to (3) designees, of 35 and includes you, your spouse, and dependent children under their spouses, and dependent children under 21 years of age. Corporate the age of 21. This membership provides you the privilege to enjoy membership privileges include but are not limited to, unlimited access the privileges and amenities of the Individual Resort, Sporting to the Resort meeting and dining facilities, Sporting Clay stands and Clay, Sporting Shooting, Upland Hunting, Equestrian, Fishing and courses, Gun Ranges, Gun Schools, Fishing lakes, Resort Clubhouse Supper Club Memberships. You are entitled to hold this membership (Spring 2021 Completion), Quail & Pheasant Hunting, Horse Stables, until your 35th birthday. It entitles you the privilege of paying your the Cabana Cantina & Grill, The Stables’ Horseshoe Tavern and membership fees monthly after purchasing this membership’s exclusive, 1st Refusal Opportunity to purchase Supper Club Variety initiation fee of $375.00 plus the 1st month’s installment of annual & Musical show tickets, as well as all other resort sponsored events fees in the amount of $156.25 for a total of $531.25. There shall be no for You and Your guests. Resort Membership automatically includes interest or service charge added to your installment payment plan. membership in the Rod & Gun Clubs, Equestrian Club, Upland Hunting Club, and the Supper Club, which includes all Resort One Time Initiation Fee: $375.00 facilities and activities. Corporate members receive 15% discounts Annual Membership Fee: $1,875.00 for all sporting activities and events, overnight lodging, meeting Monthly Payment: $156.25 facilities and Pro Shop merchandise. Your Option, to purchase this membership upfront or to be billed monthly. INTRODUCTORY BASIC SPORT CLAY One Time Initiation Fee: $1,250.00 MEMBERSHIP Annual Membership Fee: $5,000.00 The Introductory Basic Sporting Clay Membership is offered with Monthly Payment: $416.67 250 free targets to those who want an affordable membership that would allow them the privilege to shoot clays without the additional club benefits of more expensive memberships. With 2, 5-Stand INDIVIDUAL RESORT MEMBERSHIP Sporting Clay Facilities, one of which is lit for evening shooting, and The Individual Membership is offered to an individual, their spouse, our 12 Station, Woodland Sporting Clay Course, this is an excellent and dependent children under the age of 21. Membership provides choice for those who want no-frills shooting. This membership unlimited access to the Resort meeting and dining facilities, Sporting entitles you to trade it in for a membership with more privileges and Clay stands and courses, Gun Ranges, Gun Schools, Fishing lakes, benefits at any time. Resort Clubhouse (Spring 2021 Completion), Quail & Pheasant Hunting, Horse Stables, the Cabana Cantina & Grill, The Stables’ Horseshoe Tavern and exclusive, 1st Refusal Opportunity to purchase One Time Initiation Fee: $125.00 Supper Club Variety & Musical show tickets, as well as all other Annual Membership Fee: $500.00 resort sponsored events for You and Your guests. Resort Membership automatically includes membership in the Rod & Gun Club, Equestrian Club, Upland Hunting Club, and the Supper Club, which INTRODUCTORY INDIVIDUAL SPORT includes all Resort facilities and activities. This membership entitles CLAY MEMBERSHIP You to receive 10% discounts for overnight lodging, all sporting The Introductory Individual Sporting Clay Membership is offered activities, special events, meeting facilities and Resort merchandise. to you with 500 free targets, the privilege to shoot on your choice Your Option, to purchase this membership upfront or to be billed of 2, 5-Stand Sporting Clay facilities or our 12 Station, Woodland monthly. Sporting Clay Course and to enjoy use of our Big Horn UTVs. This membership includes your spouse and dependent children under the One Time Initiation Fee: $625.00 age of 21, gives you 10% discount on Pro Shop merchandise purchases, Annual Membership Fee: $2,500.00 Quail and Pheasant hunting, horseback riding, fishing, gun ranges, as Monthly Payment: $208.33 well as overnight lodging. Unlimited access to our food and beverage venues after a day of shooting is likewise a tremendous benefit of this membership. This membership entitles you to trade it in for a membership with more privileges and benefits at any time. One Time Initiation Fee: $250.00 Annual Membership Fee: $1,000.00 Monthly Payment: $83.33 CORPORATE UPLAND HUNTING INDIVIDUAL FISHING MEMBERSHIP MEMBERSHIP The Individual Fishing Membership gives you unlimited access The Corporate Upland Hunting Membership provides the perfect to our fishing lakes Sunday through Tuesday each week, where you opportunity for businesses to purchase discount hunts to entertain will enjoy excellent bass, bream, catfish, and panfish fishing. This customers or to build your Company from within through retreats membership gives you the privilege of using a Resort boat for up and team-building events during the Fall and Winter months. Our to 4 hours a day. Our Pro Shop carries fishing tackle and bait. As a meeting facilities equipped with a state-of-the-art audio-visual member, you will enjoy a 10% discount on all Pro Shop merchandise system can accommodate from 3 to 300 attendees and our food and purchases. Currently, creel limits allow 25 bass, 25 bream, and 10 beverage venues provide a 360° exceptional, business event venue for catfish per day, per boat. Limits subject to change based upon lake your Company’s exclusive use and benefit. Your option, to purchase management conditions. This membership entitles you to trade it in this membership upfront or to be billed monthly. for a membership with more privileges and benefits at any time. One Time Initiation Fee: $500.00 One Time Initiation Fee: $125.00 Annual Membership Fee: $2,000.00 Annual Membership Fee: $500.00 Monthly Payment: $166.67 SUPPER CLUB MEMBERSHIP INDIVIDUAL UPLAND HUNTING The Supper Club Membership includes your spouse and dependent children under the age of 21. This membership gives you the privilege MEMBERSHIP of unlimited access to all Supper Club dinners and exclusive, 1st The Individual Upland Hunting Membership gives you the privilege Refusal Opportunity to purchase tickets for all entertainment events of hunting Quail, Pheasant, Mallard Duck, and Partridge (Chukar) sponsored by the Resort. As a member, you are allowed to invite during the Mississippi Hunting Preserve Seasons from October unlimited guests you wish to bring to supper at the Resort. All Supper through March each year on the Ranch. Our professional guides, well- Club dinners and shows will be posted on our website and Facebook trained gun dogs, and ranch hands at Running Creek, provide you a accounts and will be emailed to you if you so request. truly memorable hunting experience. This membership includes your spouse and dependent children under the age of 21, gives you 10% Annual Membership Fee: $100.00 discount on Pro Shop merchandise purchases, Quail and Pheasant hunting, horseback riding, fishing, gun ranges, as well as overnight lodging. The food and beverage venues and the rustic, elegant lodge MEMBERSHIP RESIGNATION on the Ranch ensures that this will be a regular outing each season for The Resort requires a minimum of thirty (30) days written you and your hunting buddies. notification for membership resignation. The member account must be paid in full at the time of resignation. Any paid initiation fees and One Time Initiation Fee: $250.00 membership dues are nonrefundable and will not be refunded. Annual Membership Fee: $1,000.00 Monthly Payment: $83.33 INDIVIDUAL SPORT SHOOTING MEMBERSHIP The Individual Sporting Shooting Membership is offered to you to shoot at our Handgun Range, Tactical Situation Compound Range and our Long-Range Rifle Tower on the Ranch. This membership gives you the privilege of unlimited access to our shooting ranges during business hours. Our Pro Shop has all the shooting equipment and supplies you will need to make your range experience enjoyable.
Recommended publications
  • U.S. Fish and Wildlife Serv., Interior § 32.27
    U.S. Fish and Wildlife Serv., Interior § 32.27 8. You may possess no more than 25 ap- 7. Waterfowl hunters may not possess more proved nontoxic shot per day while in the than 15 shotgun shells per day on the West field (see § 32.2(k)). and Young Waterfowlers Hunt Areas. 9. This is a waterfowl hunt only. We allow B. Upland Game Hunting. We allow hunting no more than two dogs per waterfowl hunt- of upland game on designated areas of the ing party. We prohibit dog training on the refuge subject to the following conditions: refuge. 1. We allow hunting only on the South Up- 10. During State-established youth days, li- land Hunting Area. censed junior hunters may hunt in the des- 2. We allow hunting from 1⁄2 hour before ignated hunting area when accompanied by a sunrise to 1⁄2 hour after sunset. licensed adult hunter age 18 or older. Adults 3. You may possess only approved nontoxic must possess a valid hunting license; how- shot while in the field. ever, we prohibit them carrying a firearm. C. Big Game Hunting. We allow hunting of 11. We prohibit the use of air-thrust and in- turkey and deer on designated areas of the board water-thrust boats such as, but not refuge subject to the following conditions: limited to, hovercrafts, airboats, jet skis, 1. We require a refuge permit except on the watercycles, and waterbikes on all waters South Upland Hunting Area. within the refuge boundaries. 2. Hunting on the Headquarters Deer Hunt 12.
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  • Hierarchical Habitat Selection by Nebraska Pheasant Hunters Lyndsie Wszola University of Nebraska-Lincoln, [email protected]
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  • Attachment 3 Game Bird Program Staff Summary
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  • Pheasant Hunt
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  • The Moon Bear As a Symbol of Yama Its Significance in the Folklore of Upland Hunting in Japan
    Catherine Knight Independent Scholar The Moon Bear as a Symbol of Yama Its Significance in the Folklore of Upland Hunting in Japan The Asiatic black bear, or “moon bear,” has inhabited Japan since pre- historic times, and is the largest animal to have roamed Honshū, Shikoku, and Kyūshū since mega-fauna became extinct on the Japanese archipelago after the last glacial period. Even so, it features only rarely in the folklore, literature, and arts of Japan’s mainstream culture. Its relative invisibility in the dominant lowland agrarian-based culture of Japan contrasts markedly with its cultural significance in many upland regions where subsistence lifestyles based on hunting, gathering, and beliefs centered on the mountain deity (yama no kami) have persisted until recently. This article explores the significance of the bear in the upland regions of Japan, particularly as it is manifested in the folklore of communities centered on hunting, such as those of the matagi, and attempts to explain why the bear, and folklore focused on the bear, is largely ignored in mainstream Japanese culture. keywords: Tsukinowaguma—moon bear—matagi hunters—yama no kami—upland communities—folklore Asian Ethnology Volume 67, Number 1 • 2008, 79–101 © Nanzan Institute for Religion and Culture nimals are common motifs in Japanese folklore and folk religion. Of the Amammals, there is a wealth of folklore concerning the fox, raccoon dog (tanuki), and wolf, for example. The fox is regarded as sacred, and is inextricably associated with inari, originally one of the deities of cereals and a central deity in Japanese folk religion. It has therefore become closely connected with rice agri- culture and thus is an animal symbol central to Japan’s agrarian culture.
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  • Final Environmental Assessment for Big Game and Upland Game Hunting on Hutton Lake National Wildlife Refuge
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  • 2021-2022 Station-Specific Hunting and Fishing Rule National Wildlife Refuges and National Fish Hatcheries Narratives
    2021-2022 Station-Specific Hunting and Fishing Rule National Wildlife Refuges and National Fish Hatcheries Narratives • Alabama o Choctaw National Wildlife Refuge: Open raccoon, opossum, duck, dark goose, light goose hunting on acres already open to other hunting, which opens migratory bird hunting for the first time, and expand deer, feral hog, coyote, beaver, nutria, rabbit, and squirrel hunting. • Alabama/Mississippi o Grand Bay National Wildlife Refuge: Open coyote, rabbit, nutria, and white-winged dove hunting and sport fishing, which opens sport fishing for the first time. • Arizona o Havasu National Wildlife Refuge: Open coyote, fox, feral swine, bobcat, jack rabbit, rabbit, quail, and certain dove species hunting on acres already open to other hunting; and expand existing dove species hunting. • Arkansas o Bald Knob National Wildlife Refuge: Open crow, rail, gallinule, dove, skunk, bobcat, fox, river otter, and mink hunting on acres already open to other hunting; extend hours for hunting of mourning dove and snipe; and expand Turkey hunting through a youth only hunt. o Big Lake National Wildlife Refuge: Open feral hog, bobcat, fox, mink, skunk, turkey, river otter, muskrat, and quail on acres already open to other hunting, and expand existing deer hunting through a youth only hunt. o Cache River National Wildlife Refuge: Open rail, dove, gallinule, crow, fox, mink, striped skunk, bobcat, and river otter, and expand existing snipe and deer hunting. o Dale Bumpers White River National Wildlife Refuge: Open dove, dark goose, light goose, and woodcock hunting on acres already open to other hunting. o Felsenthal National Wildlife Refuge: Open woodcock hunting on acres open to other hunting, and expand existing white-tailed deer, feral hog, turkey, coyote, raccoon, rabbit, opossum, quail, squirrel, beaver, nutria, coot, duck, light goose, dark goose, and teal hunting.
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  • Environmental Assessment
    Environmental Assessment White-Tailed Deer, Squirrel, Rabbit, and Feral Hog Hunt Plan for Sequoyah National Wildlife Refuge August 2016 DRAFT Prepared by: Dustin Taylor & Chad Ford Sequoyah National Wildlife Refuge Vian, OK [Page Left Blank Intentionally] Contents 1.0 PURPOSE OF AND NEED FOR PROPOSED ACTION ...................................................... iv 1.1 Introduction ........................................................................................................................... 1 1.2 Location ................................................................................................................................ 1 1.3 Background: .......................................................................................................................... 3 1.4 Purpose of Proposed Action: ............................................................................................... 3 1.5 Need for Action: ................................................................................................................... 4 1.5 Decision to be Made: ............................................................................................................ 5 1.6 Regulatory Compliance: ....................................................................................................... 5 1.7 Scoping/Public Involvement and Issues Identified: .............................................................. 8 2.0 ALTERNATIVES; INCLUDING THE PROPOSED ACTION .............................................. 9 2.1 Alternative
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  • U.S. Fish and Wildlife Serv., Interior § 32.27
    U.S. Fish and Wildlife Serv., Interior § 32.27 1. We require hunters to obtain an annual BOMBAY HOOK NATIONAL WILDLIFE REFUGE Special Use Permit in advance for permis- A. Migratory Game Bird Hunting. Hunting of sion to hunt in the designated hunting area. migratory game birds is permitted on des- Consult the refuge manager for details on ignated areas of the refuge subject to the fol- how and when to apply for a Special Use Per- lowing conditions: mit. 1. Permits are required for waterfowl hunt- 2. Any person entering, using, or occupying ing except on the South Upland Hunting the refuge for hunting must abide by all the Area. terms and conditions of the Special Use Per- 2. Hunting of waterfowl and coots is per- mit. mitted on the South Waterfowl Area, the 3. You must have all applicable hunting li- West Waterfowl Area, and the Young censes, permits, stamps, and a photographic Waterfowlers Area. identification in your possession while hunt- 3. Only snow geese may be taken on the ing on the refuge. Snow Goose Area. 4. We will limit hunt days to Tuesdays, 4. Hunting is permitted only from des- Wednesdays, and Saturdays during the wa- ignated sites, except on the South Upland terfowl hunting season as established by the Hunting Area and the Snow Goose Area. State. 5. The maximum number of hunters per- 5. We only allow shotguns. mitted per blind is as follows: 6. You must keep firearms unloaded until West Waterfowl Area—4; South Waterfowl you are within the designated hunting area Area—3; Young Waterfowlers Area—2.
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  • General Rules and Information
    GENERAL RULES AND INFORMATION It Is Unlawful • To transfer any license, tag, or permit or use another’s license, tag, or permit. • To hunt on cultivated or posted private lands without permission. See Trespass Law, page 44-45. • To party hunt, or help fill another hunter’s bag. • To hunt or take any wildlife without a valid hunting license on • To take more animals than the hunter has legal tags for that your person. species. • To take any game without the proper tag or permit. • To destroy or disturb traps or remove any wildlife from traps belonging to others. • To shoot from or across the traveled portion, shoulders, or embankments of any road maintained by any government • To enter Idaho with livestock without a health certificate for entity. transport and a brand inspection slip. • To hunt game from any motorized vehicle, except for holders • To intentionally interfere with the lawful taking of wildlife or of a valid handicapped persons Motor Vehicle Hunting Permit. lawful predator control by another. • To operate any vehicle in an area designated as closed for that • To hunt any game animal/bird by means of baiting with the specific vehicle type. exception of applicable rules for black bear baiting permit and gray wolf trapping (see big game rules booklet). Bait is defined • To operate a motor vehicle in violation of area, trail or road as any substance including grain, salt in any form (liquid or restriction. solid), or any substance placed to attract game animals/birds, • To use aircraft, including unmanned aircraft, to locate game except liquid scent for deer, elk, moose, bighorn sheep and and communicate location to persons on the ground, or to use mountain goat.
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  • Article 2710460
    OUTDOORS NOTES Pheasant-release sites hunters were targeting Pheasant chances on 14 select wildlife bobwhites. According to will keep improving management areas continue recent surveys, Nebraskas to be popular in eastern bobwhite population was Pheasant and quail Nebraska, with an additional impacted negatively by severe hunters took to the fields 721 hunters encountered in winter weather this past for the season opener last those areas. They bagged spring. Although this years weekend, and upland hunting 438 pheasants and six quail. production may have offset opportunities should continue More than 85% of roosters some of these apparent to improve as the season harvested on release sites losses, hunters should progresses. were pen-released birds. expect to find lower densities Early season hunting can Based on field reports, compared to past years. be challenging. Birds are hunter success for pheasants Field reports indicate typically spread out due to on the opener was highest that the corn and soybean the abundance of cover, and in the Panhandle (0.73 harvests were highly variable warmer daytime temperatures birds per hunter). Hunters across the state. According limit hunter effort, said John also found good pheasant to the U.S. Department of Laux, the Nebraska Game and numbers in the southwest Agriculture, Nebraskas corn Parks Commissions upland and portions of the northeast harvest was 44% complete, game program manager. where Conservation slightly below the five-year As harvest corn progresses Reserve Program fields were average of 50% by this point and temperatures cool, birds abundant. in the year. Soybean harvest will be more concentrated Public lands were popular, was on schedule at 85% and accessible to hunters.
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