jbseamus83
Well-known member
My 12 yr old drew the youth only draw bull tag here in UT. Youth get to hunt this tag with a rifle right after archery season before the general seasons open up. We prepped over the summer and did a good amount of shooting and he was comfortable shooting the 7mm-08 out to 300 yds. We hunted an area that my 16 yr old shot a bull a couple years ago. We didn't see anything the first evening, but it was a good hunt and he had fun.
We got back to camp and I started to get things ready for dinner and my son comes out and says he's feeling really sick. He's always struggled with motion sickness and we recently learned that he is sensitive to altitude sickness as well. We were camped around 9400 ft. I gave him some nausea meds and he tried to lay down and get over it, but just couldn't. We decided the best thing to do was drop elevation, head home and then try again another day.
A couple days later we headed back out, but pre-medicated on nausea meds. We went into an area that I had very high hopes of and sat some meadows and cow called with a cow decoy (no other hunters during this portion of the hunt so I felt comfortable using the decoy). We hadn't been there more than about an hour and he started getting a raging headache. I gave him meds and he laid down, but just couldn't shake it. We finally decided to pack it up and throw in the towel. Without gaining elevation, we weren't going to see elk, and he just isn't able to handle the elevation right now. He had fun and we will focus on lower elevation hunts moving forward until we can figure out something else.
Any suggestions that anyone has who has experience with altitude/elevation sickness in kids - I'm all ears. We are originally from Texas and have been out here 5.5 years, but just don't have the experience with it. Everyone says to give them time to acclimate, but it's just hard with school schedules. Sometimes you only have 2-3 days to get them out before you have to get back. How do others deal with this?
We got back to camp and I started to get things ready for dinner and my son comes out and says he's feeling really sick. He's always struggled with motion sickness and we recently learned that he is sensitive to altitude sickness as well. We were camped around 9400 ft. I gave him some nausea meds and he tried to lay down and get over it, but just couldn't. We decided the best thing to do was drop elevation, head home and then try again another day.
A couple days later we headed back out, but pre-medicated on nausea meds. We went into an area that I had very high hopes of and sat some meadows and cow called with a cow decoy (no other hunters during this portion of the hunt so I felt comfortable using the decoy). We hadn't been there more than about an hour and he started getting a raging headache. I gave him meds and he laid down, but just couldn't shake it. We finally decided to pack it up and throw in the towel. Without gaining elevation, we weren't going to see elk, and he just isn't able to handle the elevation right now. He had fun and we will focus on lower elevation hunts moving forward until we can figure out something else.
Any suggestions that anyone has who has experience with altitude/elevation sickness in kids - I'm all ears. We are originally from Texas and have been out here 5.5 years, but just don't have the experience with it. Everyone says to give them time to acclimate, but it's just hard with school schedules. Sometimes you only have 2-3 days to get them out before you have to get back. How do others deal with this?

