Ben Long
Well-known member
How many of you have volunteered as a hunter ed instructor? Ever thought about it? I got strong-armed into it 4 years ago and I have to say it's very rewarding. The more I do it, the more I enjoy it. It's very refreshing working with 11 and 12 year olds who are not jaded by hunting media and just want to be outdoors for the love of it and the love of their families. Tell me your experiences. I'll share a couple stories.
Opening Day of the general big game season 2023. I got a text message at 5 a.m. from a young gal who was in my class five months earlier. It read: "Tell me again where you aim at an elk... I'm about to go elk hunting." She didn't get an elk but she did later send me pix of a whitetail she killed her first season, with perfect bullet placement.
Just last year, one of our students was a 12 year old boy who had bone cancer. Aggressive. Really wanted to hunt but his doctor was leery of the recoil. He already had to have his shoulder blade removed because of the cancer. My co-instructor set him up with a single-shot 20 gauge, with plenty of weight, light loads, red-dot, and a double shoulder pad. He also built a blind out of plywood and straw that looked exactly like a round bale, and got permission from a landowner who had too many deer in their alfalfa. Some six or eight first time hunters shot deer out of that blind, including the kid with the cancer. When he went to his doc in Seattle, he showed him pictures of his buck on his phone. Anyway, the kid's doing better and planning on next season.
That's why we do it.
Opening Day of the general big game season 2023. I got a text message at 5 a.m. from a young gal who was in my class five months earlier. It read: "Tell me again where you aim at an elk... I'm about to go elk hunting." She didn't get an elk but she did later send me pix of a whitetail she killed her first season, with perfect bullet placement.
Just last year, one of our students was a 12 year old boy who had bone cancer. Aggressive. Really wanted to hunt but his doctor was leery of the recoil. He already had to have his shoulder blade removed because of the cancer. My co-instructor set him up with a single-shot 20 gauge, with plenty of weight, light loads, red-dot, and a double shoulder pad. He also built a blind out of plywood and straw that looked exactly like a round bale, and got permission from a landowner who had too many deer in their alfalfa. Some six or eight first time hunters shot deer out of that blind, including the kid with the cancer. When he went to his doc in Seattle, he showed him pictures of his buck on his phone. Anyway, the kid's doing better and planning on next season.
That's why we do it.