Northwest Sportsman – August 2019

(WallPaper) #1

148 Northwest Sportsman AUGUST 2019 | nwsportsmanmag.com


HUNTING


quite often with new hunters, and
it’s OK. In fact, it’s quite preferable
to having your charge go to the plug,
turn around, and ask, “What was
that?” Or worse, turn around after
having fired two of three rounds,
point the gun in your chest, and say,
“Dude! How did I miss!!??”
It all goes back to basic firearm
safety, coupled with you taking the
time to dissect thoroughly each and
every shoot/don’t shoot situation.
No, it doesn’t have to be boring. You

don’t have to come across as The
Bad Guy or a horse’s ass. But you
need to be firm and complete in your
explanation of each instance.

DON’T LIKE QUESTIONS? You might not
be a good mentor, because you’re
going to face a barrage of them.
If you don’t get them, something’s
wrong. Maybe a young person is too
shy to ask. Or doesn’t know what to
ask. Or maybe, with an adult, it’s a
pride issue. “I don’t wanna look like

an idiot,” they’re thinking.
Well, another of your roles as
mentor is to squash those bugs
immediately. Encourage questions.
Ask open-ended questions of your
mentee, those that can’t simply be
answered with a “yes” or a “no.”
Make these new folks feel comfortable
asking this or that. If you have to use
the old cliché – there are no dumb
questions – then use it. The only way
they’re going to learn is to ask.
And to have them do it. It’s
important to remember that your role
as teacher involves teaching, and not
simply doing everything because the
pace isn’t what you think it should be.
There was a time, and not too
long ago, when I didn’t possess the
patience I have now. Yes, and for
those who know me, I’m sure that’s
tough to believe, but it’s true. So,
and as a man o’ little patience, I often
found it quicker just to do things,
e.g. set a decoy spread, position the
boat, stubble the blinds, build a blind,
pluck a duck, and so on, as opposed
to 1) teaching the art, and 2) watching
someone struggle with something it’s
taken me 40 years to do correctly at
least 50 percent of the time.
So either learn to have patience, or
build in a little bit of extra time when
you’re afield. Or better yet, do both.
Whichever you choose, explain the
process, perhaps with the disclaimer,
“There are many ways of doing this;
however, this is the way I do it in this
particular situation,” and explain it
well. Then answer the questions. As
’fowling veterans, it’s easy for you
and I to take things for granted, to
assume that people, especially adults,
understand what we’re doing and
why we’re doing it that way.

HERE’S A FOR-INSTANCE, and a teaching
tactic I used recently. During the
2018-19 goose season, I began taking
a young man – one of my sophomores
at a Lower Columbia high school –
goose hunting. Ashden had a bit of
self-taught duck hunting experience,
but because his people were big game

Don’t like questions? Mentoring might not be for you, because there will


  • and should – be a ton from your charge, from the time you head afield
    until you pick up the dekes, and beyond, and that’s a good thing and
    opportunity for you to explain why we do what we do. (JULIA JOHNSON)

Free download pdf