For to say guns and hunting are a big deal here is shooting well below the mark.
Any lawmaker or lobbyist who ever sought even modest gun control can attest to the power the NRA and sportsmen's clubs hold over the Legislature.
And deer hunting is the crown jewel of the game game.
Each year, 300,000 deer are "harvested" during weeks for archery, rifle and muzzle-loaders, the latter usually older rifles loaded through, well, muzzles.
Today is the start of rifle season, a two-week period in which 200,000 deer are killed. The rest (77,000 archery; 22,000 muzzle-loaders) are taken during other defined weeks, September through December.
State Game Commission spokesman Jerry Feaser says "roughly 60 per cent of the deer harvest will be taken" today.
So seems a good day to review a fight over the state's 1873 ban (Ulysses Grant was president) against hunting on Sunday.
I was shocked to learn of a hunting ban of any kind.
Heck, public schools in rural counties close for opening day of deer season. And even the ban has exemptions - for fox and coyotes - in case hunters get itchy fingers on the Lord's Day.
Still, Pennsylvania banning hunting on any day during deer season doesn't sound like the state I know and love.
So back in June, the Game Commission adopted a resolution lifting the ban and giving itself authority over Sunday hunting.
It cited economics and tradition. It noted declines in licenses (in the 1980s, we had 1.3 million), said hunters are going to neighbor states and said ending the ban means $18 million in new taxes, 5,300 new jobs and $629 million in new spending for lodging, food, gas and "other," presumably ammo.
But resolutions don't change laws, so Rep. John Evans, R-Erie, chairman of the House Game and Fisheries Committee, is pushing his bill to do so.