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Started by jshark14, May 10, 2018, 05:13:34 PM
Quote from: howl on May 10, 2018, 08:35:54 PMKinda depends on your priorities. I treat hunting with kids as old school classes. Killing a bird at all costs is not a lesson I want to teach. I teach: do it the right way and success will come. And have fun doing it!
Quote from: Sir-diealot on May 11, 2018, 11:20:43 AMQuote from: howl on May 10, 2018, 08:35:54 PMKinda depends on your priorities. I treat hunting with kids as old school classes. Killing a bird at all costs is not a lesson I want to teach. I teach: do it the right way and success will come. And have fun doing it!There is no right or wrong way unless it is illegal.
Quote from: howl on May 11, 2018, 11:54:31 AMQuote from: Sir-diealot on May 11, 2018, 11:20:43 AMQuote from: howl on May 10, 2018, 08:35:54 PMKinda depends on your priorities. I treat hunting with kids as old school classes. Killing a bird at all costs is not a lesson I want to teach. I teach: do it the right way and success will come. And have fun doing it!There is no right or wrong way unless it is illegal.Right and legal are often very different. What is right for you might be different than what is right for me.
Quote from: Marc on May 10, 2018, 08:54:32 PMI have taken my little girls hunting, and each girl has been a different experience... I would recommend some type of blind, and I have used a leafy ground blind on stakes... Something that they can see through that keeps them hidden...This season, I ended up killing a bird with each of my young girls, and we were not in a blind for either bird... But the bird I killed with my youngest was a miracle (I was literally holding her down with one hand, holding the gun with the other, and calling with the mouth call).Here is the blind I generally use with the kids:http://www.hunterspec.com/product/collapsible-super-light-portable-ground-blindYou have to remember that it is a different experience to take a child, and there are (or should be) some different activities and expectations. Walking with my oldest (at 7 years old), I saw a pine cone on the logging road as something to avoid stepping on, and she saw as something to stop and investigate...As birds are gobbling and coming in, they might see a frog , hawk, or coyote that interests them far more than the bird you are working...I make sure they have binoculars that they can use, a box call that they can play, and that they have a "job" to do while turkey hunting. I also make sure I have some activities that are fun and rewarding after sitting quietly and still for extended periods of time... Whether it be sitting on my lap and driving the truck down a dirt road, taking the quad for a ride, looking for or trying to catch frogs, pollywogs, or even bluegill in the pond after hunting, etc... The drive home always consists of stopping for pancakes...And, the "not talking" is the most difficult and least fun aspect of turkey hunting for the kids (and most of the adults) I have taken... I made it more fun by coming up with some goofy hand signals...
Quote from: BrowningGuy88 on May 11, 2018, 01:18:20 PMI'll take him intentionally to kill one when he is 5 or 6 probably, but if he asks to go before then and I don't have a guest coming I will take him. And I will cherish every moment.