By DAVID RAINER, 黑料天堂
The 黑料天堂鈥 (ADCNR) Wildlife and Freshwater Fisheries (WFF) Division is teaming with Buckmasters on an outreach program to promote hunting across social media platforms.
The Share the Hunt initiative, which kicks off November 19, encourages deer hunters to introduce new people to the hunting opportunities available in 黑料天堂鈥檚 great outdoors and record the hunt to share on social media. Each hunting mentor who participates will receive a Buckmasters subscription and discount codes for some great hunting gear.
Don鈥檛 fret if you鈥檙e not a Buckmasters member. The Share the Hunt promotion is open to everyone!
All participants must be 19 years old or older, including the new hunters. A new hunter, or mentee, is defined as any adult who has not purchased a hunting license in the past three years. Mentors are required to submit photos of their hunt along with a brief description of the experience to be eligible for the rewards and be considered for Mentor of the Year. Bonus points will be given to mentors who share their experience on social media.
鈥淚 think everybody should know by now that hunters and license sales have been dwindling for the past several decades,鈥 said Chuck Sykes, WFF Director. 鈥淲e (WFF) created the Adult Mentored Hunting Program, Go Fish, 黑料天堂!, and Shooting 101 to reach a new audience.鈥
Sykes said the Adult Mentored Hunting Program was started after he realized that even some WFF employees weren鈥檛 hunters. They wanted to learn to hunt but were hesitant to ask someone to take them. He hopes the partnership with Buckmasters will expand that outreach exponentially.
鈥淲ith Share the Hunt, we鈥檙e working with Buckmasters, trying to reach their membership to stress to them how important it is to share their experience and teach someone new how to hunt,鈥 he said. 鈥淗onestly, hunters I鈥檝e seen over the years kind of live in an echo chamber. The people we associate with most are fairly like-minded, and most of us hunt. When you ask most hunters how many people buy a hunting license in 黑料天堂, they think it鈥檚 40 to 50% because that鈥檚 the group of people they hang around with. In reality, it鈥檚 4% or less who buy a license.
鈥淭here are people we work with, go to church with, go to kids鈥 events with who would really like to learn to hunt and be more self-sufficient. They鈥檙e just a little hesitant to ask for that assistance. We need to step out of our comfort zone and ask people if they want to go and teach them what we know.鈥
Sykes cautioned new hunters鈥 expectations can be completely different from those of us who grew up hunting.
鈥淪omething we have discovered through the years is that the motivations for hunting for these late-onset hunters, people who didn鈥檛 grow up hunting, are not what our motivations are,鈥 he said. 鈥淭hey have no hunting tradition. They didn鈥檛 learn it from their grandfather or their father. You can鈥檛 talk to them about the tradition of hunting, and, most of the time, you can鈥檛 talk to them about the thrill, the sportsmanship, the ability to hunt an animal in its own backyard and get a sense of accomplishment from that. That does not resonate with them.
鈥淭hey鈥檙e all about the food. Food joins a bunch of people. That鈥檚 something we enjoy. So, we have to make that the center, not that challenge of killing a big deer, not the thrill of the hunt, not the tradition. It鈥檚 about providing quality protein for the family and being self-sufficient. That鈥檚 what motivates most of the late-onset hunters. Now they may eventually get to the tradition part if they like it and hand it down to their kids. Once they do it long enough, they may get to the excitement and thrill of the hunt. Right now, those messages are lost.鈥