Recent

Check Out Our Forum Tab!

Click On The "Forum" Tab Under The Logo For More Content!
If you are using your phone, click on the menu, then select forum. Make sure you refresh the page!

The views of the poster, may not be the views of the website of "Minnesota Outdoorsman" therefore we are not liable for what our members post, they are solely responsible for what they post. They agreed to a user agreement when signing up to MNO.

Author Topic: Who was your first hunting partner ???  (Read 3256 times)

0 Members and 1 Guest are viewing this topic.

Offline T.R. Michels

  • Xtreme Outdoorsman
  • Posts: 225
  • Karma: +0/-0
    • Trinity Mountain Outdoors
First Hunting Partner

I lost a hunting partner a few years ago. When I heard of his death I was quite shaken. I hadn't known him long, but, as hunting partners are apt to, I felt a special bond with him; both of us hunted geese, ducks, pheasants, deer and elk. We planned a goose hunt in North Dakota that got called off due to snow. He couldn't make it to a turkey hunt in Nebraska and I couldn't make it to the elk hunt in Montana. I wish we had gotten together more. His name was Norman Strung, a well known writer for Field & Stream. 

Recently I lost another hunting partner. This time it was someone I had known for years, actually it was the first hunting partner I ever had. He taught me to shoot a .22 rifle and hit the target. He took me squirrel hunting and watched as I shot my first bushytail. When duck season came around he gave me a duck call, and even though I wasn't old enough to buy a license he took me along in the square stern canoe. I remember slogging through the cattails, pulling the canoe with the duckweed pouring into the tops of my waders. I made the mistake of standing on the seat to watch as a flight of mallards came in to the decoys and our calling. I got wet when I sat down.

I remember having to clean those first ducks, plucking first the feathers and then the down from the pink bodies. Then I made the first cut to open the duck before I placed my hand inside to dislodge the entrails. While hunting, even with all the cold, wet work and early hours was fun, I didn't much like cleaning the animals. He told me, "If you're going to hunt, you're going to eat what you bring home. And if you're going to eat it, you’re going to clean it."

He was there when I shot my first pheasant out of a cornfield. I shouldered the gun, pulled the trigger, heard the gun go off and saw a puff of feathers and the bird falling. As I ran to take the big rooster from the jaws of the black Labrador I heard him say, "Nice shot." I didn't realize until years later that when I looked at him for approval his gun was smoking. I know now that he shot too. But, he didn't tell me that then. He was also there when I shot my first mallard, a nice red legged, curly tailed greenhead. He shot too, but this time I knew that even if he hit the duck, I did too. He knew it too, and told me we would make sure I got to eat it when we cooked our ducks that night. On the first bite of mallard breast I bit into a pellet. I secretly pocketed it to look at later, and kept it in my dresser drawer.

He not only took me hunting, he taught me about hunting. He showed me how to hold a gun so that the muzzle never pointed at anyone. He reminded me to check the safety before loading and after shooting, and to check the chamber before I cased the gun. He taught me to hold another hunter's gun or bow while he crossed the fence, or place my gun or bow on the ground a fence post away before I crossed on my own. He taught me to always ask before I entered private land, to offer the landowner some of the game we shot, to always close the gate and not to drive on the fields. We never left any trash and always picked up our shells.

He would never let me shoot a duck on the water unless it was crippled. We always searched for any downed game and never shot before or after legal shooting hours. We never took more game than was legal. If another hunter needed help getting unstuck, hauling out a boat, or if they were broke down we always lent a hand. He taught me not only how to hunt, but safety, morals, ethics and respect for nature, my fellow man and God. He was a good teacher.

He was the same first hunting partner many other hunters have had; their father. It has been many years since we hunted together. I grew up and moved away, spending time in the Rockies, learning to hunt big game on my own. But the lessons learned with him in my early years are still with me. I'm teaching those same lessons to my son and youngest daughter.

Each fall while I hunt I remember many of the experiences we had hunting and fishing together. I wish we could have hunted together one last time. I wish we could have shared another early morning together on a cattail slough, paddling the same canoe across the still, flat water, covered with duckweed and reeds; listening to the sound of the dipping paddles, dripping water and the lazy quack of a hen mallard; watching the mist rise from the water, and the sun come up as the ducks whistled by overhead, bluebills on their way to big water. I wish I could have taken him on a whitetail or elk hunt, to show him how much I had learned. Maybe I could have taught him something. Maybe I could have guided him to his first elk. I hope he would have been proud of me, and how I remembered his early lessons.

As I give my seminars at the hunting shows; write my stories and articles; and take my own children hunting, I hope I can pass on to others, especially the children, how wonderful nature is, and how enjoyable hunting is as a sport. And I hope I can pass on the idea that quality time can be spent between parents and children as they enjoy the beauty of the outdoors that the Great Creator made. Hopefully the theme of respect, ethics and morals will reach enough people; hunters, fishers, trappers, bird watchers, outdoor enthusiasts, conservationists, and even anti-hunters and animal rightists, that they will see that hunting, fishing and trapping are not wrong or bad. Hunting fishing and trapping have helped preserve wilderness areas and game species through the efforts of the hunters, fishers, and trappers, and the conservation organizations they belong to.

If enough people learn the positive qualities these outdoor activities impart, taught by concerned parents and friends, we can save the wild places, wildlife and our hunting heritage. I want to thank my father and his hunting partners who taught me, and all the friends I have, who hunt and serve as role models for my children and the children I reach through my seminars and articles.

Thanks to all of you.



God bless and good hunting,

T.R.
T.R. Michels
TRMichels@yahoo.com

Trinity Mountain Outdoors Hunting E-Magazine
Guide Service, & Hunting University / Guide School

Natural History E-Magazine & Tours

Outdoor Photography

www.TRMichels.com

Commit a ranodm act of kindness everyday, and give the credit to Yahweh-God

Offline tripnchip

  • Master Outdoorsman
  • Posts: 715
  • Karma: +1/-1
Thanks TR, sure does bring back a lot of memories.

Offline wischunter08

  • Outdoorsman
  • Posts: 75
  • Karma: +0/-0
My first hunting partner was my uncle.....and he is still my ONLY hunting buddy.   Being able to build a relationship while hunting sure is a great thing.

Offline UncleDave

  • Master Outdoorsman
  • Posts: 766
  • Karma: +0/-0
Mine was the whole family (mom, dad and brothers).  We used to go on family grouse hunting trips to Isabella and stay in an old leaky, rickity cabin with a toilet that rocked left and right.  That was back in the day when most folks "road" hunted.  GREAT memories from 30+ years ago!

Offline Bobby Bass

  • Master Outdoorsman
  • Posts: 5203
  • Karma: +8/-28
Mine was the whole family (mom, dad and brothers).  We used to go on family grouse hunting trips to Isabella and stay in an old leaky, rickity cabin with a toilet that rocked left and right.  That was back in the day when most folks "road" hunted.  GREAT memories from 30+ years ago!
Hmmm Road hunting, did a lot of hunting back then and most of the time it was guys and dogs working the tote roads. Then the 4 wheelers came several years later and the road hunters flourished. When we saw "road hunters" we alwys dumped out the dogs and worked where they had been. Lots of birds left by the lazy hunters.
Bobby Bass


Bud and now Barney working the trail again in front of me.

It is not how many years you live, it is how you lived your years!

Offline 22lex

  • Master Outdoorsman
  • Posts: 926
  • Karma: +0/-0
  • Photo-op
Thanks TR, sure puts things in perspective.
Marry an outdoors woman. Then if you throw her out into the yard on a cold night, she can still survive.
-WC Fields

Offline Duckslayer

  • Xtreme Outdoorsman
  • Posts: 230
  • Karma: +0/-0
Very well stated TR!  I wish for the same things with my dad... just one more time...

THANKS!

Offline thunderpout

  • Master Outdoorsman
  • Posts: 2804
  • Karma: +0/-0
Mine was carrying an unloaded 22 trudgin through the woods grouse hunting with my dad and his best buddy Willy, who died years before I became a grown man... (which is debateable ;)) but I was always mystified how Willy could hear and almost sense where birds were gonna be.  He was kind of a hero to me because of his knowlege and passion for all things outdoors...My dad lost his love for the hunting way of life after Willy passed away at a early age, so I kinda picked it up with friends as I got old enough to drive and then buy a little double barrel with money I saved from a few summers of doing odd jobs... My dad's still alive, as is Willy's brother, and I see them reliving memories of grouse hunting trips past when they get together from time to time.  You can see it when they look at the latest little grouse gun you have wrangled to get or when they scratch the ears of your current bird dog... the stories come out, and they get that far away/teary look in their eyes cementing the fact that chaseing birds was on their "A" list of fond memories that they will take to their graves...  Sometimes we forget how important things are and how quickly things can, and do change... you can try, but ya cant go back in time... so its important to make as many memories as you can and enjoy the people and places on the way... we take for granted the things we treasure the most, that can be taken away from us, but not from the memories.

Offline RavenDog

  • Outdoorsman
  • Posts: 67
  • Karma: +0/-0
Thanks for the positive story!  I just had my first kid (son) a month ago and am looking forward to everything my partner (my dad) taught me!   Thanks!

Offline dakids

  • MNO Moderator
  • Master Outdoorsman
  • *
  • Posts: 5070
  • Karma: +9/-6
  • 2013 MNO Fishing Challenge Champ!
My first hunting partner was Dad.  We always picked up the corn cobs that fell on the ground when the feilds were picked and would keep them for the beef cow that we would buy in the spring.  Well the squirrels would try and steal the fruits of our hard work. When I was 7 I got Mono and missed a lot of school that year, About everyother day. It became my mission to watch for the theifs.  When I would spot one I would go and wake up dad ( he worked nights).  He would shoot them with a nylon 66 22, and then I would clean them so he could go back to bed.  I was hooked from the start.

Anything that is free is worth saving up for.

Offline Outdoors Junkie

  • MNO Director
  • Master Outdoorsman
  • *
  • Posts: 3915
  • Karma: +7/-0
  • AKA "Outdoors Junkie"
My dad and I have been hunting together since I turned 12 years old.  It has been 23 years.  He has taught me a ton about hunting.  I get to bring my 12 year old along with my dad and I this year.  We can't wait!

 :toast:
www.mnoutdoorsman.com
Voted #1 Outdoors Website in MN

Offline ViperDXT

  • Outdoorsman
  • Posts: 13
  • Karma: +0/-0
I wished that I had a chance to hunt with my dad.  When he was still hunting,  we were too young.  Now,  he doesn't hunt anymore and too old.   :cry:

Offline deadeye

  • MNO Moderator
  • Master Outdoorsman
  • *
  • Posts: 6220
  • Karma: +19/-13
Too old? Maybe not.  I still deer hunt with my dad.  He didn't get a deer last year but did get one the year before.  He said he could have gotten more but he ran out of bullets. I have a hard time keeping him out of tree stands.  But at least he leaves his gun on the ground when he goes up in one.   Oh, did I mention he turned 90 this spring. 
***I started out with nothing, and I still have most of it.***

Offline 22lex

  • Master Outdoorsman
  • Posts: 926
  • Karma: +0/-0
  • Photo-op
Too old? Maybe not.  I still deer hunt with my dad.  He didn't get a deer last year but did get one the year before.  He said he could have gotten more but he ran out of bullets. I have a hard time keeping him out of tree stands.  But at least he leaves his gun on the ground when he goes up in one.   Oh, did I mention he turned 90 this spring. 

That's absolutely awesome. I really hope I live to be that age and can still get out in the woods!
Marry an outdoors woman. Then if you throw her out into the yard on a cold night, she can still survive.
-WC Fields

Offline MnMoose

  • Xtreme Outdoorsman
  • Posts: 135
  • Karma: +0/-0
WOW!!!!!!!
Great article my friend.  Aside from my Dad who got me into all of this, my dad introduced me to an older farmer out in the west central part of MN.  We had kinda a unique deal with him and his family.  Somehow years back my family met him, they all made a deal and we I guess leased the land for hunting.  However my dad wasnt the wealthiest guy on the block so I remember when I was younger, he asked ol' Ray if we could come up as a family and do misc. chores help out whatever.  Ray thought my dad wouldve never asked. Well as years went on we moved a mobile home on to the property and spent virtually every weekend there gardening farming fishing...But what pissed me off and a youngster I couldnt go hunting yet.

Got my little orange gun card..and off I was.  Got to the farm that year with a big ol grin on my face.  Time to start my duck hunting.  My dad borrowed me a beautiful Remington 1100 20 gauge as my first gun.  bang bang bang and no duckies for me.  bang bang bang no duckies for me.  Ray is in the corner of the duck blind just laughin.  We leave the blind drive to the local fleet farm where he buys me my first gun.  Everyone of you know what I got!!! A single shot 12 gauge to quit wastin them damn shells!!

I practiced I got really good with my equipment.  I made many a harvest with that ol' gun.  Never sold it like he said, just upgraded accordingly.  I watched every move that man made for many years.  He was so wise and very witty.  And loved teachin the new generation morale and decency.

Ray past away in 95. Cancer got the best of him.  His wife was done with the hunting thing due to memories and whatnot.  On the other hand I still hunt there faithfully every year as she sold it to the neighbor boys who are my age and remember me helping them out as a kid.

I was blessed knowing a man that was more than just a hunting buddy but that he was.  A great mentor friend teacher and just a simple ol farmer that would just look at you in the old pick up truck when you did something funny and giggle.  If it wasnt for him I bet the bank I wouldnt be where I am today...

Heres a little one liner he always told me...
" A good hunter will never offer a farmer money, they would offer a couple hours of their time."

Offline fubar

  • Xtreme Outdoorsman
  • Posts: 198
  • Karma: +0/-0
my first hunting partners were my dad and brother, i started before i can realy remember but since then our hunting party has grown to about 20 people during waterfowl season and 10 people at deer camp