What age did you start hunting?

JKT

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Hi Guys!!

What age were you when you first started hunting?

I first began 2 years ago. I am sad to say most of my life was surrounded by anti hunters which did skew my view a good long while, so I never knew the joy and pleasure I could derive from the sport. Now that I have started I am completely hooked :)

I just feel so sad that I have left it so late to start hunting. I feel as if I have wasted decades by only discovering hunting now, and by extension lost so much time to gain experience and good marksmanship skills. I am hoping that I will improve over the next few years and hopefully tick off all the critters on my bucket list.

Cheers!
 
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I hunted with my dad a time or two when I was 6. Then over the years a few times, but it wasnt until I was about 20 when I really started getting into it, especially big game. Now its a passion!
 
Better late than never JKT.

I started going hunting with my Dad before I was old enough to keep up. He actually carried me in the game pouch of his coat. I do remember that and my first encounter with a skunk.

As I grew I became his retriever for ducks & doves. No later than 10 or 11 years old I was handed a 12 gauge O/U and have been at ever since.

It's been good.
 
I'm 53. My first "hunting trip" was at the age of 4. My dad and uncle took me duck hunting. I fell in and dad and Earl had to rescue me, getting wet and cold in the process. On the way home - with them dressed in spare clothing from my great uncle who owned the ponds and me wrapped in blankets - they told me that if I ever wanted to go hunting again, mom and Aunt Donna didn't need to know about this.

Started hunting on my own at 11-12, but didn't really get hooked until I was in the Navy and opportunities weren't so plentiful. I think I kind of took it for granted before that. I've been mostly a small game and upland bird hunter, but I think I'm going to take up waterfowl again (and try not to fall in this time)
 
I started hunting deer with a bow at the age of 13. At 14 I was hunting small game with a shotgun. In the early years I had to rely on my Uncles to take me because my Dad wasn't a hunter.
 
First hunting trip with my Dad was when i was either 7 or 8, shot a reedbuck.
Had been shooting a pellet gun from when i could hold it, then on to the 22hornet which is what i used on the reedbuck, 12ga for pigeon and snipe around 11. Started out as the retriever for pigeon over the maize fields before i was allowed to take part.
Will never forget that first hunting trip!
 
Squirrel hunting with my dad at age 5. At age 7 I was able to squirrel hunt by myself in an 8 acre patch of woods with him on the other side of the railroad track. Started deer hunting around age 10.
 
I think I was about 8-10 when I carried a firearm. I did go before that but did not have a lic so no firearm.

My daughter was 2 the 1st time she went with me. She feel asleep in the truck and when I saw a nice deer I did not shoot because I did not want to scare her. When she was in 6 grade she went with me and I shot a deer. She helped gut, skin, drag and load the deer into the truck. I took a polaroid photo of her with it and she took it to school. She was so excited and proud of the photo. She shared it with her teacher who was shocked and taken back. She told her to hide the photo. My daughter was confused and somewhat crushed the teacher did not approve. I laughed my butt off and told her not to worry. Then went to the school and had a little(one sided) talk with the principal. That never happened again.
 
I started shooting young (maybe about 7 or 8?)... and hunted occasionally with my dad and grandfather from that age until my early teens..

started regularly hunting in my mid teens for a few years.. but then fell back to hunting only being an occasional activity (once or twice a year) by the time I was 20... things pretty much stayed that way for the next 20 years... I got caught up with school, then work, then marriage, then kids, etc.. and just didnt make the time to get out into the woods more than every now and then for a long, long time..

It wasnt until my oldest child, and then wife, both started showing an interest in hunting more frequently about 7 or 8 years ago that I started pursuing it again with any passion or real frequency..

Now just about all we think about or do is related to either finding time to spend in the mountains in southern colorado.. or trying to figure out whats "next" on the hunting bucket list to accomplish :)
 
Shooting started at age 12. Rifles to start and then shortly the shotguns.
At 13 I took my Hunter Education course and at that time you were not allowed to legally hunt until you were 14. I have held a hunting license every year of my life since.

The Ducks, Pheasants and Partridge got the first attention then on to the Deer.
I was let go in the woods and told to go hunting. Of course I was clueless. It took five years of bumbling around in the woods learning by trial and error before I shot my first deer.

Now, I take every rookie I can find who might even have an inkling of interest. Since hitting African soil I have taken two rookie Africans (aged 14 and 20) hunting in Africa aiding in them getting their first animals.
I just have to share the experience!
 
Hello JKT,

My mother now age 91, still tells the story of myself at age 3 or 4, being absolutely riveted by a cork gun that I saw in a toy store, (in 1956 or '57).
And I apparently pined away for it to the point that my Grandmother's sister no less, had mercy on me and bought it for me.
I remember this "weapon", it was a side by side, made of stamped sheet metal that, hinged in the middle and, I was not yet strong enough to cock this mechanism.
The adults being good and tired of me asking for help, soon instructed me to "make my shots count" (the strings that kept the corks from flying far from the gun had been cut by one or the other parent, Great-aunt, uncle or whomever).
To this day, I am quite fond of side by side shotguns and rifles, yes quite.

My father was not interested in hunting or guns, although growing up on a farm in Iowa, he was as familiar with same, as most farm boys would be and, he had reportedly done some small game hunting, with his brothers in those days (1930s).
He was just simply not interested in guns and hunting after "The War" and it's likely that terrible experience had everything to do with his disinterest in guns and hunting.
He had been a Paratrooper in the 101st Airborne "Screaming Eagles", and witnessed some of his friends get blown to pieces and/or get shot, during the "Battle of The Bulge" and my mother recalls that he suffered nightmares of being on the bloody battle field for years afterward.
He preferred sailing, tennis and golf.
I'd rather pour salt in my eyes than to play golf ("One man's bread is another man's poison").

However, he was a good man and very intelligent so, according to my Christmas wishes, he gave me a 2nd hand but good quality air rifle at some point, when I was still in elementary school (German, possibly "Walther"?) hinge cocking, single shot .177 pellet caliber, with rifled barrel and oiled leather O-ring pressure seal, adjustable sights and adjustable trigger weight, walnut stock as well - wish I still had it.
Then, he used my air rifle to his advantage to both drum the safe gun handling mindset into my little brain plus, to take my rifle away from me if I misbehaved, as children will do now and then.
Perhaps this is why I'm seriously against gun control now - my father traumatized me by sometimes revoking my air gun rights as a child ! (Now, may I sign up for disability welfare benefits ?).

Back then (early 1960s) I bagged more than one or two sparrows ("California impala") with it, in the famous big game hunting grounds of South-Central Los Angeles - once I bagged a careless dove (California eland) that landed in our back yard (baited field LOL).
In more recent times, leftist Hollywood, especially Producer / Director, Quinton Tarantino, likes to make hoodlum/gun violence movies in South-Central Los Angeles.
Around age 12 or 13, my father presented me with a hideous Montgomery-Wards / "Hercules" brand single shot 20 gauge shotgun.
It was made on an overly heavy 12 gauge frame that, is possibly cast iron and the barrel had an extra-thick chamber.
It is a real prize, with the above features plus, a birch (or perhaps ash tree) wood stock and a stout main spring, such that I could not cock the hammer with my thumb.
I had to use the heel of my hand to accomplish it, until I got a bit older and stronger of thumb.
This wretched shotgun seemed like it must've weighed about as much as a motor bike or, at least about as handy as a motor bike to swing on fast movers, like quail and doves.

Sometime before age 16, we had already moved to Sacramento, 400 miles north and at that stage, I really hit the sporting goods jackpot.
Christmas then saw me with a new "Harrington & Richardson" brand single shot 12 gauge, birch stock again and genuine plastic trigger guard - beauty !
I never removed/examined the internal parts but, the main spring may have only been a rubber band, by the way it felt to cock the hammer.
This conversely, way too light for gauge shotgun "kicked a bit".
When firing slugs from same, it was deadly at both ends.

Simultaneously, I had been working as one of the cooks, in a greasy-spoon all night restaurant, so with my massive paychecks, I saved up enough to buy an unmodified, Smith-Corona made, 1903-A3 Springfield, .30-06, from a schoolmate for $40.US, in darn near unfired condition (those were the days !)
Likewise that year, one of my childhood friends from back in L.A. told me he was "getting out of shooting" ( !!!! ) and gave to me a Remington single shot .22 Rifle, Model 514, in pristine condition, I was on a roll.
If that's not enough, my father was working long hours then and so, my mother got elected to do a "strawperson" buyer, with my money for me, on my first handgun - a new Ruger "Bearcat" .22, single action.
In 1969, the retail price was a whopping $37 bucks.
I soon sold this revolver to another friend, (after my father cleared this deal with that boy's parents) and then bought a larger framed Ruger .22 revolver, "Single-Six Convertible" (extra cylinder in .22 magnum).

Long boring story short (with my apologies to anyone suffering through my long blathering rant here), hunting and fishing are deep seated in my every fiber, evidently beginning at quite an early age.

Cheers,
Velo Dog.
 
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About 8 or 9. Our parents would give my brother and I a can of 500 pellets a couple of air rifles and leave us to amuse ourselves at the cottage for the weekend.
 
My Dad started taking me out on his trap-line and duck hunting when I was 3. My very first time he took by brother (who was 2) and I trapping with him, he had my brother on the snowmobile with him and I was riding in the bob-sleigh behind. In one marsh, he had a mink in a leg-hold trap that was very much alive. He konked it on the head and it was lights out, but I didn't know that would kill something. He put me back in the sleigh to move on and plopped that mink on the floor between my feet. All the rest of the way home, my eyes never left that damn thing! I was sure it was going to wake up and run up my pant leg! By the time we were nearly home, it was dark and when Dad hit a bump, the sleigh I was riding in came unhitched from his snowmobile, and he kept right on going without me. I was not a happy camper. He was nearly out of sight before he realized I wasn't behind him anymore and I think he felt pretty bad when he came back for me!

Grandpa got me into gopher hunting when I was 6 and that put the bug in me. But I had to wait until I was 12 before I could get a hunting license here. For the first 5 years of my hunting career, I went after a lot of waterfowl and upland birds as well as whitetail deer. But once I hit my twenties and started hunting other big-game species as well as getting into archery, I pretty much stopped bird hunting. I'm 47 now and have hunted every year since 1981.

As was said before, better late than never. Don't worry about what's behind you...look forward to what's ahead!
 
My Dad started taking me out on his trap-line and duck hunting when I was 3. My very first time he took by brother (who was 2) and I trapping with him, he had my brother on the snowmobile with him and I was riding in the bob-sleigh behind. In one marsh, he had a mink in a leg-hold trap that was very much alive. He konked it on the head and it was lights out, but I didn't know that would kill something. He put me back in the sleigh to move on and plopped that mink on the floor between my feet. All the rest of the way home, my eyes never left that damn thing! I was sure it was going to wake up and run up my pant leg! By the time we were nearly home, it was dark and when Dad hit a bump, the sleigh I was riding in came unhitched from his snowmobile, and he kept right on going without me. I was not a happy camper. He was nearly out of sight before he realized I wasn't behind him anymore and I think he felt pretty bad when he came back for me!

Grandpa got me into gopher hunting when I was 6 and that put the bug in me. But I had to wait until I was 12 before I could get a hunting license here. For the first 5 years of my hunting career, I went after a lot of waterfowl and upland birds as well as whitetail deer. But once I hit my twenties and started hunting other big-game species as well as getting into archery, I pretty much stopped bird hunting. I'm 47 now and have hunted every year since 1981.

As was said before, better late than never. Don't worry about what's behind you...look forward to what's ahead!

I love shooting gophers, have to make a special trip out west this summer. We used to have plenty of ground hogs to hunt but the coyotes have all but eliminated them
 
I started hunting at 4 years old.
 
Hello JKT,

He was just simply not interested in guns and hunting after "The War" and it's likely that terrible experience had everything to do with his disinterest in guns and hunting.
He had been a Paratrooper in the 101st Airborne "Screaming Eagles", and witnessed some of his friends get blown to pieces and/or get shot, during the "Battle of The Bulge" and my mother recalls that he suffered nightmares of being on the bloody battle field for years afterward.

Thread drift alert, but I'm a bit of a WWII history buff and I couldn't help it reading Velo's post. I couldn't help but wonder if maybe your dad would have known this man, please watch the video below.

http://tpt.pbslearningmedia.org/res...940dd6e/silver-star-clayton-byrd-wwii-europe/

One day a few months back I was watching tv and actually mostly farting around here on AH with my laptop, but the tv was on and running a documentary of WWII and specifically the war in Europe. The documentary was interviewing a number of veterans of the war. As I was typing/reading away, the name Clayton Byrd was mentioned which caused me to raise my head and look with hearing Clayton and also Byrd. The Clayton part is obvious why, but the name Byrd is spelled the same as friends of the family.

I looked up to see the gent in the video above being interviewed about his experience at the Battle Of The Bulge. Sometime during the interview, they showed a picture of him in his younger days wearing his WWII uniform. I about dropped my computer as he was the spitting image of a daughter of the family friends I mentioned above. Turns out Clayton Byrd is her uncle and I had met the man many years ago when I was just a kid. I wished I'd know then what I know now as I would've been absolutely at attention listening to him tell his story.

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Back to the thread. Short of the starlings I shot with my BB gun when I was a kid, I didn't really start hunting until I was 19. Ironically enough my dad was also from Iowa and hunted as a kid out on the farm. But as he grew up I guess he lost interest. His youngest brother that I bear some resemblance too was a stud of a deer hunter taking some absolute monster whitetails along the bluffs of the Missouri river in western Iowa. Guess we shared the same genes much to my very prim and proper British mother. Still miss you Uncle Dale, sure wish we'd have made a trip to Africa together!
 
I grew up with my father's hunting stories from India and a neighbor who, I realize now, was an avid trophy hunter. As a youngster my parents bought me a Crossman pellet gun as a reward for good marks and I really enjoyed archery. But, being a city boy I never went hunting. As a youth I forgot about all those outdoors things and drifted into the professional big city life. Got my firearms license while living in Winnipeg during law school but didn't do anything with it. Career, family, three kids. One day we went back to the lake where I would spend summers and my older boy caught a beauty fish. I took it to eat and the kids were horrified that I would kill it. That fall I got my license again and my hunting license as I was horrified my kids were so clueless as to where their food came from. That was about eight years ago. I now feel like I am catching up with something I forgot to do so many years ago! I love the discovery and sharing it with my kids. It is better late than not at all.
 
Thread drift alert, but I'm a bit of a WWII history buff and I couldn't help it reading Velo's post. I couldn't help but wonder if maybe your dad would have known this man, please watch the video below.

http://tpt.pbslearningmedia.org/res...940dd6e/silver-star-clayton-byrd-wwii-europe/

One day a few months back I was watching tv and actually mostly farting around here on AH with my laptop, but the tv was on and running a documentary of WWII and specifically the war in Europe. The documentary was interviewing a number of veterans of the war. As I was typing/reading away, the name Clayton Byrd was mentioned which caused me to raise my head and look with hearing Clayton and also Byrd. The Clayton part is obvious why, but the name Byrd is spelled the same as friends of the family.

I looked up to see the gent in the video above being interviewed about his experience at the Battle Of The Bulge. Sometime during the interview, they showed a picture of him in his younger days wearing his WWII uniform. I about dropped my computer as he was the spitting image of a daughter of the family friends I mentioned above. Turns out Clayton Byrd is her uncle and I had met the man many years ago when I was just a kid. I wished I'd know then what I know now as I would've been absolutely at attention listening to him tell his story.

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Back to the thread. Short of the starlings I shot with my BB gun when I was a kid, I didn't really start hunting until I was 19. Ironically enough my dad was also from Iowa and hunted as a kid out on the farm. But as he grew up I guess he lost interest. His youngest brother that I bear some resemblance too was a stud of a deer hunter taking some absolute monster whitetails along the bluffs of the Missouri river in western Iowa. Guess we shared the same genes much to my very prim and proper British mother. Still miss you Uncle Dale, sure wish we'd have made a trip to Africa together!

Wow ! What a man among men Clayton Byrd was.
My father passed away two and a half years ago (aged 91) and is buried in a military cemetery in central California.
So, I cannot ask him if he knew Sgt. Byrd.
I expect that he did not since, as far as I know, my old Pops was not part of the apple orchard incident.

If you ever saw the movie, "Band of Brothers", he was one of the replacement troopers who, after a long and snowy, death riddled gauntlet on foot, were received with cold reception, by the battle hardened ones that had been dug-in and already had suffered heavy casualties.
When asked why, some battle hardened paratrooper quipped something like: "Because you're all just gonna die anyway and we don't want to feel bad when it happens" or words to that affect.
My father was one of the ones expected to die but, somehow managed to make it through to the end of the War, marry my mother and lucky you guys, they had me - to join this forum and derail this thread.
(My apology for same).
 

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