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Kids, Turkeys and Tips

If you’re a seasoned, veteran turkey hunter like me, one of the most rewarding experiences you’ll find is to take a kid to the field for the spring season! No question!

My youngest son Noah with his first Nebraska spring gobbler taken several years ago.
My youngest son Noah with his first Nebraska spring gobbler taken several years ago.

Be sure to check the regulations/requirements for youth turkey hunting here in Nebraska. You’ll note that there are no minimum age restrictions and that the youth turkey hunting permit price is only $5.00!

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Conservation Officer Rich Berggren and 12 year-old Trevor with his gobbler from the 2014 Nebraska Youth Spring Shotgun Turkey Opener.
Conservation Officer Rich Berggren took 12 year-old Lexie spring shotgun turkey hunting for the youth opener. She shows off her 2014 Nebraska Spring Gobbler.
Conservation Officer Rich Berggren took 12 year-old Lexie spring shotgun turkey hunting for the youth opener. She shows off her 2014 Nebraska Spring Gobbler.

Conservation Officer Rich Berggren of Waterloo, NE, myself, and many, many others at Game and Parks continue to work hard to pass along that great Nebraska turkey hunting heritage to young people and instill in an interest in the lifestyle with an appreciation for nature.

Gobbler
Gobbler up close.

With that stated, here are Rich and I’s top ten tips for taking kids spring wild turkey hunting. Remember to pack your patience, not make hunting a competitive thing and accent the positives!

1. Involve the Kids in the Entire Process. It is important for young hunters to understand the hunt from beginning to end. Involve youth with everything from preseason scouting to patterning their shotgun to calling to cleaning and cooking their gobbler.

2. The Right Clothing. Young hunters need to be comfortable at all times in the field and the appropriate clothing for the weather is critical. Layering is best and it’s always goo to add an extra one! Remember to tell the kids that turkey hunting is not a fashion show!

3. Leave Your Own Shotgun or Bow at Home. Concentrate on the kids and the safe handling of his or her shotgun that they’ve been shooting. YOU can hunt another day!  Stress safety at all times, most notably getting in and out of a ground blind with an an unloaded shotgun.

4. Kids and Landowners.  I always make it a point to have my kids visit with landowners.  You may even go as far as to prearrange having your kids go up and ask landowners for permission to hunt!

5. Teach and Preach Conservation. Make certain your kids understand why you’re planning to hunt in a certain location and point out the importance of good turkey habitat. We are here to hunt bearded birds because of these key habitat components: _________, _______ and _________.

6. Wildlife Lessons. Kids need to comprehend the connections in nature as well as the role that nongame wildlife species play. One thing that my kids and I have always done is to enjoy a fun game of wildlife identification when our quarry isn’t moving. Whether it is trees or songbirds, we assign points for what’s positively identified with our small field guide books kept in our packs or through an app on a mobile device.

The bark of an Eastern Cottonwood tree.
The bark of an Eastern Cottonwood tree.
housesparrow
House Sparrow near the turkey blind.

7. Bring the Binocs. Oh yeah, one particular piece of equipment that helps keep kids focused and occupied while hunting is the use of binoculars or other similar optics. Have them continually scan field and woodlands edges for movement of turkeys.

8. Pack the Snacks, and the Technology? I cannot stress to you how crucial it is to pack some snacks (and quieter ones at that). I’d recommend bringing a couple sandwiches, a few soft granola bars along with a couple bottles of water. Believe it or not, you should strongly consider allowing kids to bring their technology to the field. We’re talking about hand-held mobile devices, cell phones and video games with the sound muted or off. These help to pass the time when the birds aren’t being seen or heard. The mobile devices are also great for snapping quick pics or video of the hunt to share online immediately with others.

9. Ground Blinds, Little Rug and Shooting Stick. Forgiving on movement, protection from inclement weather and having that fortress-like feel, kids love and appreciate being in portable, camouflage ground blinds while hunting. It’s a very good idea to bring along a little rug, perhaps a 6-foot by 6-foot piece of material to cover the floor of your blind to help curb sound, spot crawling insects and provide additional warmth. It may also be critical to bring a shooting stick to assist that young person in having a sold rest to set that shotgun.

10. Keep the Session Short. If your kids have whined about not being in the field for a very long time, you’ve done your job! Keep ‘em hungry to come back for more! Happy hunting!

[youtube]http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=qZucf6861uo&feature=youtu.be [/youtube]

About greg wagner

A native of Gretna, NE, a graduate of Gretna High School and Bellevue University, Greg Wagner currently serves as the Communications and Marketing Specialist and Manager for the Nebraska Game and Parks Commission's Service Center in Omaha. On a weekly basis, Wagner can be heard on a number of radio stations, seen on local television in Omaha, and on social media channels, creatively conveying natural resource conservation messages as well as promoting outdoor activities and destinations in Nebraska. Wagner, whose career at Game and Parks began in 1979, walks, talks, lives, breathes and blogs about Nebraska’s outdoors. He grew up in rural Gretna, building forts in the woods, hunting, fishing, collecting leaves, and generally thriving on constant outdoor activity. One of the primary goals of his blog is to get people, especially young ones, to have fun and spend time outside!

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