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I resemble that comment. As I've started to suck less at glassing, it's gotten marginally less boring, but I'm a lot better at burning boot leather than I am finding animals. I don't have kids yet, but I do have the attention span of a small child, and I've found I get a lot more enjoyment out of a morning hunt (that can extend longer if successful) or an evening hunt, but being out all day can be a drag.-Kids are not going to like glassing. Glassing is boring.
Yeah, I have to say that my childhood was very similar to wllm's and I don't think selfish is the right word. I think kids are literally designed to fit into the life their parents need them to and giving them all the choice is not necessarily a kindness.Yeah my dad went to every single ballet recital and coached both my sister and my's soccer teams. He was pretty adamant against us playing a summer sport as that was hiking/camping season. I think the "pursue our passions as equal to their own" part is key.
Did my mom and dad support me in whatever I wanted to do? Unequivocally yes, was I the center of the universe... absolutely not. Did I have to do things I wasn't interested in at the time, yes.
I feel pitty for people whose parents just catered to their every desire. How are you supposed to build a relationship with a spouse with that kinda upbringing? I feel like my upbringing was very much 'you are a member of this family' you get a 1/4 share of the families energy and are expected to support others when it's their turn.
My mom and dad did toned down trips with us, and took time to do some agro one's without us to keep sane.
All that being said, from all your past posts it seems like you're doing it right.
I think that's great.
But... if you have a couple of kids, spaced out a few years, your looking at 10-15 years where you're at peak physical capability but instead you're walking old logging roads while listening to a constant stream of whisper fighting 10 yards behind you...
Yes, I recognize that my hesitancy to embrace this is selfish. But it's real.
Amen WLM. My wife grew up in a family where her dad and mom were off every night doing something else... without the kids. Golf/bowling/hunting/pool etc.. all the while my wife and her brother went to their baseball, basketball games by themselves.. And my wife played college basketball. Now I was just the opposite. Both my parents were teachers so we didn't have alot of $$. My little brother was always sick ( he died in 95 from cancer) but my parents never took a vacation together. Sure we went to florida until I was 8, but then sports took over. My sister and I were pretty damn good, my baseball skills paid for college so I can't complain.Did my mom and dad support me in whatever I wanted to do? Unequivocally yes, was I the center of the universe... absolutely not. Did I have to do things I wasn't interested in at the time, yes.
I feel pitty for people whose parents just catered to their every desire. How are you supposed to build a relationship with a spouse with that kinda upbringing? I feel like my upbringing was very much 'you are a member of this family' you get a 1/4 share of the families energy and are expected to support others when it's their turn.
My mom and dad did toned down trips with us, and took time to do some agro one's without us to keep sane.
Outside of the fact that I still have some bucket list goals here in WA, I should take your advice, it would certainly alleviate some of the stress.Neffa3, you need to make your home state hunting about your kids and make an out of state trip for yourself. It sounds like you just aren’t getting enough hunting time in for yourself. That, or take the entire season off.
You know you had one tooSweet bowl cut!
I was more the “verrry aggressive part” type.You know you had one too
So I just got back from a bit of a failed hunting trip where I took both of my kids (7 and 10) hunting for the weekend and it has me pondering all sorts of things related to kids and hunting.
1. So there are two general ideas for getting kids into hunting. One is to take them along as soon as they show interest, make it fun and easy and enjoyable, and slowly build up to this. The other is to hold them back until they are actually ready for the activity. I have tried and mostly failed at the first method with my kids. But my grandfather implored the latter method with me. I now unconditionally love hunting. And my kids, well they like it, but I'm not sure I'm setting them up for long-term success. There's a lot of drive you can build for an activity by making it exclusive, which is what my grandfather did. I don't think I went deer hunting until I was at least 12 or 13, and didn't get to go to elk camp till either 14 or 15.
2. Sacrifice... There are only so many days we get to hunt each year (at least for those outside of the free-for-all of Montana). How much do you sacrifice your season for your kids? How much does your family sacrifice for your hunting? We only get two weeks here in WA for deer season. I spent one watching kids soccer and took the kids on the other this last weekend. I can count the # of hours of actual "hunting" I did this deer season on one hand. Now it's a 340-ish day wait.
And because no one likes a post without pics...
Here they are pretending their butt pads are computers.
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As you can see, one is cold-blooded like me, the other runs hot.
And here is what they did why we tried to watch a hill side in the afternoon.
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And for sh!ts and giggles, what is this giant orange horn-butt spider?
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