OntarioHunter
Well-known member
- Joined
- Sep 11, 2020
- Messages
- 5,990
I am glad I started out with the same cartridge my dad and mom used for hunting. Dad shot the other surplus Springfield (he ordered a pair from an ad in American Rifleman) and mom used the 760 30-06 her dad gave them a few days after I was born. I was legally just old enough to hunt. If I was that grown up, why shouldn't I shoot a grown up gun? I think it would have been a let down to be given a "lightweight" gun. That would speak "You're still just a little kid" every time I picked it up. Dad only had loading dies for 30-06 ... but he and a coworker shared loading tools (loading was done at Bob's place) and the coworker did have dies for .243 as that's what his wife shot. So I suppose one of those could have been a starter gun for me and my three brothers. We lived in grizzly country and I suspect that may have influenced Dad's decision to have us start out with a man-sized caliber.
Anyway, the point I'm trying to make is you should maybe consider the psychological effect of buying a special kid's gun for a thirteen year-old boy. If it was me, I would get him a "grown up" gun, especially if I was shooting one. Hunting is a grown up thing after all.
Edit: It is interesting that Dad bought both me and my older brother 16 gauge pumps to start bird hunting while he shot a Model 11 twelve gauge. There was some sense in that choice. First, for many reasons he never considered semiautomatic anything a good option for starting kids. I agree. Second, back in the days when we could use lead shot and before geese made a recovery from near extinction, a 16 gauge was an excellent duck and upland gun. And we were almost exclusively limited to jump shooting which involved a lot of walking. I'm sure there were many days Dad wished he was carrying something lighter, especially after he developed back problems. Perhaps Dad bought Mike and I the kind of shotgun he wished he had.
Anyway, the point I'm trying to make is you should maybe consider the psychological effect of buying a special kid's gun for a thirteen year-old boy. If it was me, I would get him a "grown up" gun, especially if I was shooting one. Hunting is a grown up thing after all.
Edit: It is interesting that Dad bought both me and my older brother 16 gauge pumps to start bird hunting while he shot a Model 11 twelve gauge. There was some sense in that choice. First, for many reasons he never considered semiautomatic anything a good option for starting kids. I agree. Second, back in the days when we could use lead shot and before geese made a recovery from near extinction, a 16 gauge was an excellent duck and upland gun. And we were almost exclusively limited to jump shooting which involved a lot of walking. I'm sure there were many days Dad wished he was carrying something lighter, especially after he developed back problems. Perhaps Dad bought Mike and I the kind of shotgun he wished he had.