chris patterson
New member
Waltonville, NW corner of Rend Lake
Thats awesome. Honestly, it wasnt the recoil that scared me so bad, it was the shell hitting me in the face. That scared the living snot out of me. All I saw was bead, then bang, and then the gun felt like it was falling apart and this brass was coming at me like a rocket. I still remember all of it like it was yesterday. It happened all in a second but it felt like it was slow motion when it happened. It traumatized me for sure. I guess, that gun still does, as it sits perfectly clean, and unfired since that day lol. I always say im going to grab it and take it along for coyotes, as its light and little and convenient. When it comes time to grab a shotgun.... I always just grab my O/U instead.@William Reinicke that reminds me of my son’s first duck hunt. He was 9 and had never shot his single shot 20 before. I gave him a 3” 1 oz load. Ducks came in, he fired, and fell over backwards into the brush… but he got a drake green wing!
That's a good story. Dogs are such an important part of bird/duck hunting. I don't want to hunt anymore without mine. Every kid should grow up with a dog, I bet your son became best buddies with the dog? And to Dave's point earlier in the thread, nothing teaches a child more about life than when they lose their buddy. It's a tough life lesson the first time it happens, and never gets easier. It breaks the stone cold heart of a killer, speaking from experience.When my son was 6 I told him we were getting our Boykin. He quiet then started crying. I was shocked- what kid doesn’t like a puppy?
He had always been my dove fetcher and thought I was taking the dog instead of him.
Curious, does she still enjoy hunting? My wife enjoys upland hunting, she loves to watch the dog. Duck hunting is too cold for her. My sisters hunted with my dad until he passed away, just because they wanted to be in the field with him.I took my daughter on a dove hunt at 14 mo. Just 30 minutes in the back yard but she watched me shoot 2 doves and saw the dog fetch them. At 16 months she was in a backpack on a pheasant hunt. At 18 mo. she spent the morning in a pickup with two buddies at the edge of a corn field watching the action as I guided two kids on a junior goose hunt. Shot her first bird at 4, a pigeon on the ground with a .410. First duck was at 8 on a nasty rainy day. Then an elk at 12. Start EARLY! But make it fun and more about getting them out than trying to get your llimit.
Troy,10yo (with supervision until 16 and completion of Hunter Safety) was the law in Maine back in 70's. My daughter never hunted so I don't have a dog in the fight. 10 was a long time waiting for me, I do recall that. I wish there was a national minimum age requirement so the states would all be the same. Not sure if small game and big game should be different? Thinking the smaller caliber rifles nowadays probably recoil a lot less than a .410 so that's why you see more younger kids shooting off a bi or tripod after big game or turkeys, than we'll say waterfowling where they need to be bigger and stronger to effectively get on target with a shotgun. I guess the bottom line is that these kids, no matter the age, are outside in the woods and fields enjoying time with family and carrying on traditions of our elders.
It is at parent discretion in Maine, so no minimum. 4 seems to be the youngest I've seen on social media, and that was a recent turkey hunt in NH. The lifetime licenses here in Maine are a great thing. I purchased both hunting and fishing for my daughter when she was born. She's never hunted a day in her life, but she does fish. I pay the same non-resident fees in NH every year, but it's nice being able to bounce between states.Troy,
My read of the regs in Maine is there is no minimum currently. Is that yours as well? I know our neighbors take their kids as young as four, I don't know if they shoot. I like the lifetime licenses for kids, my buddy in CT has a son in ME with three kids under six, (yikes!)![]()
all of whom were bought lifetime licenses. I wish they would do that in every state, and sell lifetime licenses to folks of all ages. I'm 65 and would gladly pay $1,500 each for lifetime non-resident ME combo licenses for my wife and I. Right now we pay $150 each a year.
Yes she does. But it's limited now as she got married, moved to North Carolina where she doesn't know where to go, and has a new career and home to take care of.Curious, does she still enjoy hunting? My wife enjoys upland hunting, she loves to watch the dog. Duck hunting is too cold for her. My sisters hunted with my dad until he passed away, just because they wanted to be in the field with him.
(Proverbs 22:6 KJV) Train up a child in the way he should go: and when he is old, he will not depart from it.I was to act as if it were loaded and dry fire at every covey/single rise - and he wanted to be sure he heard the safety click off as it went to my shoulder and back on as it came away from my shoulder
Silliest thing I've ever heard - sadly I've heard the same.Over the years I've encountered numerous individuals who insist on carrying a gun with the safety off when pheasant hunting to "save time."