By
Allison Matthews MISSISSIPPI
STATE -- The dream-granting program Bruce Brady envisioned
while fighting his own battle with cancer was realized this
year when 13-year-old Richard Dickson Jr. of Greene County
experienced an outdoor adventure to remember. Dickson,
who has battled T-cell lymphoma for three years, was hosted
with his family by Brady's wife, Peggy Brady, son, Bruce
Brady Jr., Mossy Oak executives and Catch-A-Dream team
members for a weekend of outdoor fun in January.
Dickson
became the first youth to participate in an outdoor
adventure granted by the Bruce Brady Memorial Catch-A-Dream
program. The program memorializes Bruce Brady Sr. of
Brookhaven, who died last year. Brady gained considerable
notoriety among outdoor enthusiasts during his career as a
field editor for Outdoor Life magazine. Brady also was an
accomplished sculptor, whose subjects were inspired by
nature and the outdoor life he enjoyed. The
Bruce Brady Memorial Catch-A-Dream program is hosted by the
Mississippi 4-H Foundation to grant outdoor adventures to
"youth with precious little time to waste." "Catch-A-Dream
has been established and managed to ensure it will provide
children and youth with life-threatening illnesses not only
the opportunity to 'catch an outdoor dream,' but also
spiritual encouragement that is often badly needed by these
children and youth," said Marty Brunson, Catch-A-Dream team
member and Extension wildlife and fisheries specialist at
Mississippi State University. MSU's
Department of Wildlife and Fisheries, through its Field and
Stream Youth Program, has partnered with the Mississippi
Wildlife Federation to develop and implement the
Catch-A-Dream program on behalf of the Brady family and the
4-H Foundation. Dickson,
along with his parents and sister, enjoyed a weekend filled
with plenty of food and Southern hospitality, but the
highlight for Dickson was a Saturday morning deer hunt. He
was accompanied by Brady and Mossy Oak Camo Camera Pro
Ronnie (Cuz) Strickland. The
Camo Camera captured the hunt on video as Dickson harvested
a five-point, white-tail buck just after
daylight. Bruce
Brady Jr. was seated next to the young hunter as he picked
his shot and made a clean and efficient one-shot
kill. "This
was the experience of a lifetime for both of us. The morning
was perfect," Brady said. "Ducks were highballing in the
distance overhead, owls were serenading and the orange
sunrise was gorgeous." The
entire hunt will be featured on an upcoming segment of Mossy
Oak's top-rated outdoor show, TNN's "Hunting the Country."
The MSU Extension Service's own "Farmweek" crew was also at
the event and will feature the inaugural Catch-A-Dream
adventure in a future broadcast on Mississippi ETV.
Brunson
said the program is granting outdoor adventures to
Mississippi children and youths 18 years of age or younger.
He said he expects to see Catch-A-Dream grow quickly and
expand to grant the wishes of children who live outside of
the state. "In our
inaugural season, we wanted to make sure we could meet the
needs of children in Mississippi first. But we have already
begun to see a wonderful response from people who want to be
a part of this program or support Catch-A-Dream in one way
or another," Brunson said. Released:
Feb. 26, 2001
Forestry,
Wildlife & Fisheries News
Catch-A-Dream
begins with
hunting adventure
The
Dickson family stayed at the grand antebellum home that
serves as Mossy Oak's hunting lodge at the renowned Lee
Haven Plantation bow hunting club in west
Alabama.
For more information, contact: Dr. Marty Brunson, (662)
325-3174
Visit: DAFVM
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Last Modified: Friday, 19-Dec-08 10:29:26
URL: http://msucares.com/news/print/fwnews/fw01/010226.htm
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