The Little Hunter
Submitted By: © 2005 James L. Bruner on 8/30/2005
The purpose of this article is to bring awareness to the safety factor
when hunting with firearms. Many times the simplest elements are overlooked and
for some it comes with a heavy pricetag.
Though many days had passed spent fishing, I often wondered just how much of
the outdoors I had instilled in my daughter. At 6 years of age she was as good
with a rod and reel as many twice her size and enjoyed watching the fish swim
away after we released them as much as catching them. Proud to show off her
tackle box to anyone who happened by, she would pry open the tiny lid and spread
the trays out revealing her meager fortune of assorted tackle. In a gesture that
reminded me of a grown up, she would clench a can of soda in her tiny hands, lean
back, and swallow a large drink as the fellow fisherman gazed at the tackle she
so proudly displayed. Always courteous the fisherman would compliment her on the
arsenal of lures she possessed. One can only suggest that the lures must have
looked like precious jewels of many shapes and colors to such a young girl.
Through the course of the afternoon the interest in fishing would fade as the sun
would begin its descent for another nights rest. We would spend the last minutes
of light trying to catch crayfish as they back peddled to the safety of the
nearest rock. The ducks that were lazing the afternoon away would begin to fly
down the river to the open waters of the lake. I noticed a glimmer in her eyes as
each duck passed and her body turned to follow the ducks out of sight. I placed a
hand on her shoulder and explained the naturally poetic flight of the ducks in
great detail. Was she merely showing an interest in the wildlife or had the
stories I told of hunting waterfowl come to life as the ducks raced past us.
Fall grew near quickly and the changing of the leaves were as spectacular as
ever in the Michigan forest. Our newly developed one-acre pond provided many
hours of watching the local wildlife make use of this new resource. Ducks, geese,
whitetails, and an occasional bear, all brought endless questions from my little
comrade’s inquisitive growing mind. As we sat watching a lone doe sip from the
ponds cool waters the little hunter leaned back to me and explained what she was
seeing. "Daddy, do you see the trees reflecting in the water?" "I wonder what the
deer thinks when she sees her reflection." "I wonder where she'll sleep tonight."
With that the sun faded behind the horizon and the doe disappeared into the
brush. We sat for several minutes in silence before walking back to the cabin,
hand in hand, taking in the beauty of the outdoors. As we rounded the corner near
the old basswood tree she stopped and looked up at me. She asked, "Daddy, why do
you hunt?" I explained that I enjoy the outdoors and the meals that are provided
by hunting. It's something that makes my heart pound like it's going to jump out
of my chest. It's like being excited and nervous at the same time. My Dad taught
me to hunt and fish when I was your age. Of all the things my dad taught me, this
is what I still cherish most. It's why I enjoy teaching you." She replied,
"Daddy, can you take me hunting with you?" It was hard to hold back my emotions.
I realized that the tradition had come full circle and I was ready to pass onto
my child a gift that had been given to me by my father. I cleared my throat and
answered, "Of course honey. I'll take you hunting."
We spent the next day brushing in an old forgotten deer blind that we would
use for the upcoming rifle season. We adorned boots and gloves to minimize our
impact in the area. As quickly as I snipped twigs from a nearby balsam she wove
them carefully into place. As we stood back and looked at our finished product
she instructed me to stay there while she fumbled a few more loose twigs and
branches into the cluster. I gave the "thumbs up" and hoisted her to my
shoulders. We made our way back home ducking the lower branches and playing the
occasional "cover daddy's eyes" with her sap covered gloves. It was a productive
afternoon with plenty of learning and a little bit of fun thrown in for good
measure. I'll never forget her laughter as she slid off my shoulders and her
sticky gloves securely held tight as I began to walk away.
Time seemed to slide by slowly for the next week. My new hunting partner had
reverted back to her video games and cartoons. She wrapped herself in any chance
she had to play with the new kittens, laughing as she made them dance for a
string she dangled overhead just out of their reach. Their antics of tackling one
another and jumping sideways brought plenty of entertainment on those late
October evenings. Her days were filled with gathering rocks and leaves as I
worked on splitting the firewood and rescuing the occasional kitten that climbed
too high in the tree to come down on it's own. One law of physics that I quickly
learned is: "While rescuing a kitten from a tree, you're sure to have more
scratches than if you had actually fell from the tree yourself!" Let's not forget
that there will be a kid of some sort, with tears in her eyes from laughing so
hard, waiting at the base of the tree to comfort the kitten. Not you! And that
same wildcat of a kitten that nearly shredded you to bits will now be as gentle
as...well, as gentle as a kitten.
I felt it essential to renew the lost interest in our hunting expedition,
which was coming up shortly. I keep a small pine box, with a colorful image of a
nice buck on its cover, filled with calls of all sorts. As I opened the container
her little eyes peered meticulously at each item. She looked to me for approval
and I instructed her to choose one. Call after call I explained what each one was
and how to use it. Before long the cabin was filled with the sounds of a forest
alive of turkeys, deer, ducks, and geese. We experimented in the flickering dim
light of the pine and hazelnut candles for hours before she made her choice of
which call she would use for our hunting trip. I rigged a makeshift lanyard and
she proudly walked around with her own call hanging loosely from her neck. We
added a small pair of camo binoculars and over sized orange coat to complete her
new ensemble. The thought of her walking through the cabin in her usually
bouncing manner, tooting on that call, in that oversize coat, could make anyone
smile.
On the eve of our hunt it became increasingly apparent that she was as excited
as I for the dawn of our first days hunt. We watched numerous hunting shows while
eating quadruple buttered popcorn. Every shot that rang out from the television
produced an unscripted response as we marveled at the bucks folding into a heap.
In each scene a larger buck was taken and we began to claim each as our own.
"That's my buck!" "There's the one I'll get!" "That one's mine!" In any event it
was shaping up to be a great day regardless if we took a deer or not and the
morning couldn't come soon enough.
I think we may have gotten 3, possibly 4, hours of sleep. I was tired but
pumped up. She was tired and just realized that it would be pitch black as we
walked to the blind. Her concern about the local bear population was only
heightened when she realized that the woods were as black as the bears were and
we probably wouldn’t see one until he opened his mouth and exposed those pearly
white teeth. Although I never asked, I would assume that would be right before
she imagined big Mr. Bear having us for breakfast. After a quick pep talk and
about 100 "You're safe with Daddy" speeches we were out the door. Her little hand
nearly squeezed my fingertips to the bone all the way to the blind and it was a
relief to finally get the feeling back in my trigger finger.
During the first hour we were treated to a number of does walking by and a few
small bucks. We held tight to the promise of only taking a decent 6-point or
better. My little hunter seemed in total awe that the animals walked by,
sometimes so closely, without realizing we were there. I offered the comment that
it must be due in part to the great job she had done hiding the blind on our
initial visit. My comment was returned with a smile that quickly turned into a
look of amazement as she peered through the opening if the front of the blind. I
turned slowly and saw a wide 8-point with his nose to the ground making his way
towards the natural shooting lane which stretched roughly 150 yards in length and
30 yards in width. I shouldered the gun and in one slow motion the little hunter
covered her ears and watched. At 70 yards the buck stepped into the opening and I
clicked the safety off after finding the deer in my scope. In the instant I was
about to squeeze the trigger I noticed a glimpse of orange in the background just
beyond our shooting lane. As the words "Oh my god" began to fall from my lips a
shot rang out. Shards of wood and splinters filled the blind as another shot
followed. I yelled to grab the hunter’s attention while clearing debris from my
face and eyes in a desperate measure to check my daughter’s condition. She was
visibly shaking, curled into the corner crying, but she was safe. I knelt to pick
her up and her arms squeezed tight around my neck as I fell in pain with a
tightness in my chest. The last thing I remember is a hunter in obvious shock
standing outside the blind stammering through sentences and directions on a cell
phone claiming that he had shot someone. The little hunter sitting in the corner
with her face in her hands crying was my last vision before everything turned
cold and black...
.... Many years later a scene unfolds of a beautiful sunny day along a
familiar riverbank. A mother and her son are ending a day of fishing by trying to
catch crayfish. As the whistle of the ducks wings catch the young boys attention
he stands and watches them fly out of sight towards the lake. His mother places a
gentle hand on his shoulder, and with a tear in her eye, begins to explain.
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