dadams
New member
- Joined
- Apr 7, 2011
- Messages
- 3
- Reaction score
- 3
- Member of
- Zimbabwe Hunters Association
- Hunted
- Zimbabwe, South Africa
Greetings all,
I have a problem I need some help with please.
My oldest son is nine years old, weighs 33kg (73lbs) and stands 142cm (4'6")
I've promised him his first buck (Impala and possibly Warthog) this hunting season in August.
I went down to our firearms dealer and had a long discussion with the owner who eventually persuaded me to buy a heavy stocked .308 for my son to hunt with.
The reasons for the relatively large caliber boiled down to novice hunter, likely to get it wrong, put a big hole in the buck and won't have to chase a wounded buck for days. My worries about making my son "Gun shy" by letting him shoot too big a calibre too early were allayed by the gun shop owner when he explained that he taught all his children and grand children with the same weapon. It was chosen because of it's weight in order to calm the re-coil. So, all good right? No, I get home and my old man hit's the roof saying I'm going to make my son gun shy for sure. The recoil is too heavy, etc etc
I'm now in a quandry and don't know what to do. Can anyone with experience please advise me if I'm going too quick too fast? A smaller caliber? Some of the smaller calibers recoil just as much as a .308 The last thing I want to do is make my son flinch every time he squeezes the trigger, however, I also don't want to chase wounded buck all over the African veld. He'll be nine and a half by August when we go hunting. I don't think that's too young. He's a big lad for his age and quite confident.
Ideas please gents.
Regards
Dave
I have a problem I need some help with please.
My oldest son is nine years old, weighs 33kg (73lbs) and stands 142cm (4'6")
I've promised him his first buck (Impala and possibly Warthog) this hunting season in August.
I went down to our firearms dealer and had a long discussion with the owner who eventually persuaded me to buy a heavy stocked .308 for my son to hunt with.
The reasons for the relatively large caliber boiled down to novice hunter, likely to get it wrong, put a big hole in the buck and won't have to chase a wounded buck for days. My worries about making my son "Gun shy" by letting him shoot too big a calibre too early were allayed by the gun shop owner when he explained that he taught all his children and grand children with the same weapon. It was chosen because of it's weight in order to calm the re-coil. So, all good right? No, I get home and my old man hit's the roof saying I'm going to make my son gun shy for sure. The recoil is too heavy, etc etc
I'm now in a quandry and don't know what to do. Can anyone with experience please advise me if I'm going too quick too fast? A smaller caliber? Some of the smaller calibers recoil just as much as a .308 The last thing I want to do is make my son flinch every time he squeezes the trigger, however, I also don't want to chase wounded buck all over the African veld. He'll be nine and a half by August when we go hunting. I don't think that's too young. He's a big lad for his age and quite confident.
Ideas please gents.
Regards
Dave