I don't know that I can name any one person who mentored my interest in hunting and associated pursuits, but I had many influential personalities in my young life.
My youth was spent in the country, among family and friends who were almost entirely country folk ... and that makes a big difference ... so much so, in fact, that I don't even think of loving the outdoors, knowing it's ways, and practicing outdoors activities as anything but normal. It's what I saw growing up, it's what I did growing up, and it's what I do now.
That said, here are some influential people in my life:
My maternal grandfather (deceased), a trapper and small game hunter who I loved like no other on earth. His old bolt-action shotgun was my first firearm.
My paternal grandfather (deceased), who was a woodsman, root-digger, trapper and small game hunter of unusual ability. I've never known anyone who knew the woods and it's plants and animals any better than he did. I've never met anyone to this day who knows more about the flora and fauna of the woodlands in our home region than he did ... and that's not just youthful adoration speaking. He was a distinctive individual, in many ways, and a vast repository of knowledge; a nurseryman, amateur botanist and ornithologist, author and poet. Although I wasn't all that close to him, he still influenced me.
A friend of mine, whom I first met when I was 13 and he was 26, who was and is a Conservation Officer. From him I learned a deep respect for protecting the resources that we all love, and from him I developed an appreciation for and interest in the work that goes into protecting those resources. He introduced a certain honor into my practice of outdoor pursuits that perfectly compliments my backwoods country background.
My dad, who while no hunter, is still a woodsman of a different sort, who modeled for me the life that respects the world as God made it; who gave me a passionate hatred for litter and the abuse of natural splendor; with whom I picked mushrooms, dug sassafras root, cut bean-poles, gathered bittersweet and walked the hardwood forests of home.
A friend of Dad's, who shared his interests, and who bothered to include me me not only in their ramblings, but also in fishing trips to local placid farm ponds and laughing streams and creeks; who made a difference in the life of a boy.
And finally ... my maternal grandmother (deceased) ... who did not hunt, but who was the quintessential country woman, herself a vast repository of skills handed down from her pioneer Kentucky ancestors. She was the one who showed me how to skin my first squirrel; she showed me how to cook and process a hog's head; she showed me how to make soap; how to "make garden", how to can produce, how to cook from scratch ... how to do a thousand things that have now become knowledge kept alive by enthusiasts.
There are many more ... too many to name, but loved the same.
I think that the influence of individuals upon our
formative lives is like the work of craftsmen upon a building; there are those who lay the foundations of our experience; those who frame who we will become, those who finish our structure, and those who finesse our interests.
In our
continuing life, there are countless individuals who contribute to the maintenance of what has already been built, and the occasional few who build additions or who remodel what already was.
I believe this forum is a body of such people.
Let's give ourselves to building the young, finishing the advancing, and maintaining the accomplished! What good work we have to do!
