Category Archives: Blog

Beaver Creek Sportsman Club

Beaver Creek Sportsman Club

The Beaver Creek Sportsman Club is located 1/4 mile north of Rt.14, on Washingtonville Road, in Washingtonville, Ohio. They have approximately 120 acres of property, ideal for hiking or exploring. They have a mix of woods and fields, with some planted habitat fields to attract a variety of game. They have an 11 acre stocked lake. They also have both an indoor and outdoor gun range. The indoor range is open for club shoots only and the outdoor range is open nearly year round, closing only for deer gun seasons and an occasional 3-D Bow shoot or maintenance.

Range Access: Private Ohio Gun Club

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THE OUTDOOR RANGE

The Outdoor Gun Range is open from dawn till dusk, seven (7) days a week, with a few exceptions.
The Outdoor Gun Range is closed during ALL Ohio Deer Gun seasons.
Occasionally, the Outdoor Gun Range is closed for a 3-D Archery Shoot or for maintenance.

INDOOR GUN RANGE

THE BEAVER CREEK SPORTSMAN CLUB INDOOR GUN RANGE IS A LEAD ONLY RANGE
NO JACKETED AMMO OF ANY CALIBER IS PERMITTED
NO SHOTGUN SLUGS OF ANY GAUGE
MOST STRAIGHT WALLED HAND GUN CALIBERS PERMITTED
NO .22 MAG

Address:

Beaver Creek Sportsmans Club (BCSC)
14480 Washingtonville Rd
Washingtonville, Ohio 44490

Contact:

(330) 337-8801

Website: https://www.bcscclub.com/

Club Contact: https://www.bcscclub.com/contact

Membership information: https://www.bcscclub.com/membership

If you are a shooting range and would like to list your facility –  email us

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The Beaver Creek Sportsman Club is located 1/4 mile north of Rt.14, on Washingtonville Road, in Washingtonville, Ohio

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Oyster Poachers Found Guilty

Oyster Poachers Found Guilty with Help of New Radar Network

Two Somerset County watermen were found guilty Monday of harvesting oysters from a State of Maryland sanctuary.
Officers used the Maritime Law Enforcement Information Network (MLEIN), a radar and camera system, on Nov. 25 to track a vessel moving in and out of the Somerset Sanctuary in Tangier Sound. They subsequently charged William Catlin and Irving Lee Catlin with dredging in the protected area.
District Judge Paula Price ordered the vessel’s captain, William Catlin, 64, of Upper Fairmount, to pay a $1,000 fine ─ $550 above the preset fine ─ and the mate, Irving Catlin, 55, of Westover, to pay a $450 fine. She gave them 30 days to appeal.
“When we launched our initiative in 2010 to restore Chesapeake Bay oysters, we included a tough conservation law enforcement component to protect this invaluable resource and let Marylanders know our commitment was rock solid,” said Governor Martin O’Malley. “I’m pleased the court recognizes the importance of this effort.”
After viewing images recorded by the MLEIN system, Judge Price ruled that despite the watermen’s denials to the contrary, “it is clear to this court that you were in and out of the sanctuary, oystering.”
“We are grateful to the court for accepting the use of MLEIN in our conservation law enforcement efforts and to Governor O’Malley for supporting the development of this system,” said DNR Secretary Joe Gill.
Judge Price noted that William Catlin has a history of crabbing, oystering and fishing violations dating back to 1982, and that Irving Catlin has natural resources convictions going back to 1979.
She dismissed the watermen’s claims that it is sometimes difficult to stay outside the protected area and offered a suggestion: “If you’re afraid of drifting into a sanctuary then don’t go anywhere near one.”
MLEIN, adapted from the Pentagon’s geo-fencing initiative, became fully operational last fall. Each of the units in the network is able to cover up to 20 miles on the Chesapeake Bay, reaching from the mouth of the Susquehanna River to the Virginia state line.
“This is MLEIN’s first full season on the Bay, acting as an extra set of eyes for our officers,” said Col. George F. Johnson IV, NRP superintendent. “As we refine and expand its capabilities, and officers grow more comfortable working with it, we are confident the result we be more arrests and more convictions of poachers who steal Maryland’s natural resources.”