MADELIA, Minn. --
Fourteen-year-olds Stephanie Lohse and Blair Jilek, cradling 12-gauge shotguns, hiked through tall amber prairie grass Saturday, seeking rooster pheasants on Minnesota's ringneck opener.
They didn't bag a bird, but they did bag a photo with Gov. Mark Dayton.
The pair were among eight high school students — and top shooters in the Minnesota State High School Clay Target League — invited to the Governor's Pheasant Opener. Only about 100 people got the coveted invitations, and this was the first time since the event was launched three years ago that high school clay target shooters were invited.
"The goal is to get more youths hunting, and this seemed like a natural fit," said Dan Madsen, Madelia city administrator and an event organizer. "Everyone was excited about it. It's something that hadn't been done."
Getting more kids out hunting, at a time when the number of hunters nationally is on the decline, long has been the goal of conservation groups and agencies such as Pheasants Forever and the Department of Natural Resources, both of whom sponsor youth hunts. In Minnesota, while the number of hunters has remained stable, their average age is getting older, meaning fewer young people are replacing older hunters who drop out of the sport.
The phenomenal growth of the league — 30 students at three high schools participated in 2001, and 3,400 students from more than 200 schools in the league this year — shows kids are interested in shooting sports. How many of those shooters will become hunters is unknown.
Lohse, a ninth-grader at Lester Prairie High School, was the top female shooter on her team this year. Blair was one of the top male shooters on the same team. Both break 85 percent or better of the clay targets they shoot at in competition.