There are times in everyone's life when events leave an indelible impression in the mind often lasting a lifetime. A first kiss, a first car, graduation day, your first house, your first child—all monumental moments during a person's life with memories often permanently etched in one's mind.
Of course, if you're a deer hunter there's no finer moment than that "first deer"—especially when you're only 12 years old and still rather new to the sport of hunting.
This past Sunday morning I continued the mentoring process by taking my stepson, Luke, out into the woods with me deer hunting. His enthusiasm was flowing strong, but I could tell his confidence was starting to wane just a bit. You see, in years past we've certainly seen plenty of deer when out hunting together, but none have ever been in close range truly offering that heart-pumping excitement.
That situation certainly changed this past weekend.
Luke and I chose a stand near a river bottom that divided two unpicked corn fields. If you deer hunt the agricultural zone this fall, then hunting in close proximity to any unpicked cornfield will likely be part of that recipe for deer hunting success. It certainly proved that way for us.
As kids do, Luke was fidgeting on his chair to the point he finally laid his gun down to better reposition himself. Most of us experienced deer hunters certainly know what often happens next. With his 20 gauge no longer in his hands…along comes a nice doe on the opposite side of the river. His mentor (that be me) firmly whispered "freeze…don't move. There's a deer coming our way."
During the next 15 minutes there were two nice does that mingled within 45 yards of our location. Often they stared directly at us as if to indicate they were watching us, too…but for the most part they continued on with their planned activities.
With my 12–year old certainly not at the ready, I figured this would be a good learning experience for him to move slowly, but deliberately, to retrieve his gun. The process took several minutes with no sudden gestures that could spook our early morning visitors. Once the gun was positioned back in his lap, I whispered "bring the gun to your shoulder…but leave it on safety."