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Average Age of Trad Bowhunters

Started by yogibarrows, October 18, 2012, 09:08:00 AM

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bill langer


**DONOTDELETE**

QuoteOriginally posted by jcar315:
46 years young and I too have noticed more "variety" in ages at shoots.

I'm sure most of us have seen or heard about the "stages of a hunter" and I wonder if this has anything to do with it: (As written elsewhere)

The Five Stages of Evolution of a Sport Hunter  

As with all things in life, a hunter's perspective of his sport changes as time goes by.  According to the Hunter's Education manual used by the Texas Parks & Wildlife Department, the five stages of a hunter's life are (a) the Shooter Stage, (b) the Limiting-Out stage, (c) the Trophy stage, (d) the Method stage, and (e) the Sportsman stage.

As the sport of hunting itself changes through the years, so do the factors that determine what "successful hunting" is.  Add to this the changes that take place in each hunter's life, and things can get a bit confusing.  Some of the factors that can determine or influence what kinds of hunters we become are (a) the hunter's age, (b) his hunting companions, (c) his role models, (d) his personal ethics, and (e) his and years of hunting experience.  All of these affect our ideas of "success."  Where a hunter fits into one of the five groups may change as he progresses in his hunting career.  What stage are you in now?  What stage would you like to be in?

The Shooter Stage

A hunter who is in the Shooter Stage talks about satisfaction with hunting being closely tied to being able to "get-in some shooting."  The beginning duck hunter says that he had an excellent day if he got-in a lot of shooting.  The beginning deer hunter talks about the number of shooting opportunities.  Missing game means little to hunters in this phase.  A beginning hunter wants to pull the trigger and test the capability of his firearm.  A hunter in this stage may be a dangerous hunting partner.

The Limiting-Out Stage

A hunter who is in the Limiting-Out Stage still talks about the satisfaction of shooting.  But what seems more important to him is measuring success through the killing of game and the number of birds or animals that he has shot.  Limiting-out or filling a tag is his absolute measure of success.  Do not let your desire to limit-out be stronger than your concern for safe behavior at all times.

The Trophy Stage

The satisfaction of a hunter in the Trophy stage is determined by the selectivity of game.  A duck hunter might take only greenheads.  A deer hunter looks for one special deer.  A hunter might travel far to find a real trophy animal.  Shooting opportunity and skills become less important than finding and shooting the coveted trophy.

The Method Stage

When a hunter has reached the Method Stage, he has accumulated all the special equipment that he could conceivably need.  Hunting has become one of the most important things in his life.  His satisfaction comes from the method that enables him to take game.  Taking game is important but secondary to how he takes it.  This hunter studies long and hard how best to pick a blind site, how to lay-out decoys, and how to call-in waterfowl.  A deer hunter goes one-on- one with a white-tail deer — studying sign, tracking, and the life habits of the deer.  This hunter often handicaps himself intentionally by hunting only with black-powder firearms or bow and arrow.  Bagging game, or limiting, still is a necessary part of the hunt during this phase.

The Sportsman Stage

Finally, as a hunter ages and after many years of hunting, he tends to "mellow out."  He now finds satisfaction in the total hunting experience.  Being in the field, enjoying the company of friends and family, and seeing nature outweigh the need for taking game.

Not all sport hunters go through all these stages, or go through them in this particular order.  It is also possible for hunters who pursue several species of game to be in a different stage with regard to each species that he hunts.  Some hunters feel that role models of good sportsmen, training, or reading books or magazines helped them pass more quickly through some of these stages.

There you have it, two studies with two very different ways of looking at hunters and how we approach our sport.  Does one of these categories describe you?  Where are you in your hunting career now?  Where would you like to be?  Each of us has to decide for himself what kind of hunter he wants to be, and to be the best hunter that he can be.
57 years young, or old, depending on my mood at the time.


i really enjoyed reading the  "5 stages of evolution" a lot.  I must admit I've been hunting long enough to have gone though this evolution a few times using different equipment, and have enjoyed the challenges along the way reaching small goals i set for myself.


it might be a fun project to write a collective  book on  "The evolution of an archer".  There are many many archers out there that enjoy our sport to its fullest that are not hunters at all.

CLOVIS

67 years old. but  health issues have reduced me to hunting coyotes with a gun and not very far from a 4 wheeler at that. Get out and hunt while you can because you never know when you are on your last hunt.  Good luck to all of you.

mathews8pt

26 here.  Only been shooting trad bows for a couple years but really enjoy it
If your not having fun, your doing something wrong!
Morrison ILF  54@28

Jesse Minish

31 years old been 100% trad since I could walk.

katie

35
Have never shot anyhing but trad. Started as a kid. Took the teen years off due to attitude problems   :)
"Thousands of tired, nerve-shaken, over-civilized people are beginning to find out that going to the mountains is going home; that wildness is a necessity"  John Muir

JJB


roundbal

Kota Prairie Fire 55@28 60"
Thunderhorn Coup Stick 56@28 58"
Treadway Black Swamp 52@28 58"

Medicare Bhtr

Will turn 70 in a couple weeks. Seems there are only a few of us old timers still shooting and hunting. Enjoyed nearly 60 years of archery. Hope each of you can shoot/ hunt many more!

Sirius Black

Wisconsin Bowhunters Association - Life Member

Paul/KS


Cyclic-Rivers

this year I think I am 33.

has anyone found the average yet   :dunno:    :confused:
Relax,

You'll live longer!

Charlie Janssen

PBS Associate Member
Wisconsin Traditional Archers


>~TGMM~> <~Family~Of~The~Bow~<

shadman


cp55002

26 years old, This is my 3rd season hunting strictly with trad gear.

J.Williams


bwana


Shakes.602

"Carpe Cedar" Seize the Arrow!
"Life doesn't get Simpler; it gets Shorter and Turns in Smaller Circles." Dean Torges
"Faith is to Prayer what the Feather is to the Arrow" Thomas Morrow
"Ah Think They Should Outlaw Them Thar Crossbows" A Hunting Pal

aroflyte


RecurveRookie

Maddog Mountaineer 57# and Prairie Predator 52# Wow!, Samick Sage 35 - 60#,  I'm learning.

Richard in OK

68 next week. No one in my family hunted, fished, etc. and especially not with a bow. I started in my 30s, bought a compound, then a friend gave me a Bear grizzly and I learned to shoot trad. Last year I tried to shoot my old compound and couldn't hit anything with it. I've been hunting trad. for about 8 years but haven't killed anything yet (with a bow).


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