By DAVID RAINER, Alabama Department of Conservation and Natural Resources
Buckmasters, the renowned outdoors organization that started in Montgomery, is celebrating milestones that include the 30th Buckmasters Expo, founder and CEO Jackie Bushman’s 70th birthday this fall and the organization’s 40th birthday in January.
The 30th Expo at the Montgomery Convention Center attracted massive crowds for its three-day run last weekend. Not only did plenty of Alabamians enjoy the show – archery competition, loads of vendors and even Bulls & Buckmasters, a bull-riding competition in downtown Montgomery – but visitors came from all over the nation and even the world to participate.
The Expo started as the Buckmasters Country Jam, which was held in Atlanta at the Georgia Dome for two years.
“There was a little event called the Olympics that took our place,” Bushman said. “We thought we were a little bigger but they didn’t. So, we came here to Montgomery. Alan Brewer went down to the Convention Center and measured everything from the archery tournament to the vendor space and said, ‘Bush, we can do it.’ We thought we would do one year here and take it back to Atlanta. So, we did it here, and every vendor walked up to Donna Gross (former Buckmasters’ Sponsor Coordinator) and said, ‘Do not take it back to Atlanta. This is the best hospitality we’ve ever had. We sold out of product.’”
Except for a three-year stint in Greensboro, North Carolina, when the Convention Center was being renovated, the Expo has been in Montgomery ever since.
“We got the governor, mayor and City of Montgomery involved so we could let everybody in for a canned good,” Bushman said. “People can bring their whole family. We wanted to make it a family show, and we wanted for people to find their hunting products. We have it the third weekend in August because you can’t compete with dove season, and you can’t compete with football. This is the last show before hunting season starts, so our vendors are selling at discount prices because they don’t want to haul anything back home.”
Bushman said he was impressed by the number of people coming from long distances to join in the celebration of the outdoors and hunting.
“I sat there in the Buckmasters booth for one hour, and I didn’t meet one person from Alabama, not one,” he said. “People were from Kentucky, Illinois, Tennessee, Georgia and a bunch from Florida. I don’t know what it is about Florida, but they’re all coming from northwest Florida. I had a kid from Norway.
“And now we’ve got the whitewater (Montgomery Whitewater Park) rafting. That’s a wonderful park. There’s only three of those parks in the country. We’re just trying to make it a destination vacation. I’m always trying to figure out how to make it bigger and better.”