国产吃瓜黑料

GET MORE WITH OUTSIDE+

Enjoy 35% off GOES, your essential outdoor guide

UPGRADE TODAY

If you buy through our links, we may earn an affiliate commission. This supports our mission to get more people active and outside. Learn more

Hunting with dogs is an especially cool experience. But, not every dog is cut out for it. Specially trained bird dogs are raised specifically for hunting, from early puppyhood. You'll need to find a guide or outfitter who has bird dogs you can use, and who knows how to handle them in the field.
Hunting with dogs is an especially cool experience. But, not every dog is cut out for it. Specially trained bird dogs are raised specifically for hunting, from early puppyhood. You'll need to find a guide or outfitter who has bird dogs you can use, and who knows how to handle them in the field.
Indefinitely Wild

So You Want to Be a Hunter

If you've never picked up a gun before but are interested in harvesting your own healthy, sustainable, humane meat, here's why you should get started with birds

Published: 
Image

New perk: Easily find new routes and hidden gems, upcoming running events, and more near you. Your weekly Local Running Newsletter has everything you need to lace up! .

Hunting has an image problem. Something that contributes huge amounts of money to animal conservation is seen as a blood sport. is seen as cruel. is seen as gross. But just because other people aren鈥檛 prepared to apply critical thinking to their food sources doesn鈥檛 mean you can鈥檛.

This is the easy way to start harvesting your own wild protein.

#1. Get Your Hunting License

Hunting licenses are affordable and easy to obtain. Individual states issue them, and you鈥檒l need one both for where you live and where you plan to hunt. License requirements and fees vary by state.

In most places, you鈥檒l first need to take a hunter鈥檚 ed course. This is typically a one-day class taught by volunteers. It鈥檚 equivalent to the driver鈥檚 ed course you took in high school鈥攁 basic introduction. Even if you鈥檙e already familiar with firearms and the outdoors, hunter鈥檚 ed is a fantastic refresher in all the nitty-gritty details of remaining legal and safe in the field. The class covers important things like and what kind of ammunition will bring you the most success.

Hunter鈥檚 ed classes tend to be hosted at gun ranges and take place infrequently. Consult your state鈥檚 for a list of classes and dates, and sign up for one now. Trying to get into one at the last minute can be a real hassle and often impossible. You鈥檒l also need proof of completing a hunter鈥檚 ed course to buy out-of-state licenses, so keep your certification card in a safe place.

Once you鈥檝e completed the class, you can buy a license online or at pretty much any gun store or big-box store that caters to hunters. You鈥檒l also need a specific tag for the kind of animal you want to shoot, but again, that varies by state. Here in California, my yearly hunting license is $47, and an upland bird tag, which covers the doves, pheasants, quail, and turkeys we鈥檒l discuss later, is just $8.

#2. Get a Gun

Rifles net you big game at a distance. Bows maximize the challenge and expand the seasons and areas in which you can hunt. For birds, you use a shotgun. A shotgun聽is the most affordable of the three, which is one reason I鈥檓 suggesting you start with that.

What you鈥檙e looking for is a 12-gauge shotgun with a 28-inch barrel. All other factors are just icing on the cake. ()

It鈥檒l work, and it鈥檒l last a lifetime. I shoot a , which is a little more expensive at $750 but handles quicker and, unlike the Remington鈥檚 pump action, allows me to stay on target as a new round is cycled into the chamber, thanks to its inertia-driven, semiauto action. I also find it also shoots a little quieter, a boon for sports like bird hunting and clay shooting, where you鈥檙e firing often.

Just like people debate cars, they鈥檒l argue the merits of different types of shotguns until the cows come home. Get caught up in all that if you like nerding out on stuff, but there鈥檚 no need to. Any 12-gauge shotgun with a 28-inch barrel is all you need for any bird or clay pigeon.

Never bought a gun before? Don鈥檛 be intimidated. Most gun stores are friendly places staffed with聽knowledgeable people. Make sure you have a driver鈥檚 license in the state where you鈥檙e shopping. If your state has a waiting period, expect to pay for your gun ten days before you鈥檙e able to take it home. You can use that time to install your gun safe. ()

One note on gun stores: most will automatically enroll you in the NRA with any purchase. If, like me, you find the NRA to be super-creepy, you鈥檒l need to opt out. And yes, this is how that organization is able to claim such a large membership. You don鈥檛 need to drink the NRA Kool-Aid to be a gun owner.

[Correction: As has been pointed out by several readers, the NRA enrollment process is more of a high-pressure sales tactic than it is automatic enrollment. My apologies for the confusion. You should still say no, especially if you’re a hunter. .]

#3. Practice

Jakes that Scott and I shot, pictured here with his Element. We both have fancier shotguns but prefer shooting the Element in the field. It's easier and more versatile than a double-barrel and typically faster to follow up than a pump gun.
Jakes that Scott and I shot, pictured here with his Element. We both have fancier shotguns but prefer shooting the Element in the field. It's easier and more versatile than a double-barrel and typically faster to follow up than a pump gun. (Scott Nathan)

The best way to develop competence on your new shotgun is to shoot clays. There are three types of clay shooting: trap, skeet, and sporting. Trap is where the clay shoots directly away from you. With skeet, the clay pigeon flies across you, at varying speeds, from two directions. Sporting clay shooting聽is golf with guns: you walk through a course and face different challenges at each station. Start with trap, and then progress as you develop skill.

Visiting your local gun range shouldn鈥檛 be an intimidating experience. Google the gun laws in your state to see how they want you to transport your gun. I live in California, which probably has the most restrictions, and there鈥檚 really nothing to it. Here, we鈥檙e supposed to carry our guns in a locking case (soft is fine), separate from our ammo. Keep your gun in its case while traveling between your home and the range until you reach the shooting station. Once there, make sure the barrel stays pointed downrange and away from people at all times. The range will instruct you on the rest.

You鈥檒l be able to buy ammunition at most ranges, as well as eye and ear protection. The latter tend to be of poor quality, so go ahead and . You鈥檒l learn what kind of hearing protection you prefer; I wear for everything from riding motorcycles to shooting guns. You鈥檒l also want at least a shell bag to wear around your waist, possibly a shooting vest to hold all your stuff, and some extra padding at your shoulder.

#4. Find a Hunt

Before smoking the turkey, I stuff it with lemons, butter, rosemary, and sage. I carry that little ESEE Camp Lore CR2.5 as my field knife for processing fish and birds and use a WorkSharp Combo Knife Sharpener to keep an edge on it as I work in the kitchen.
Before smoking the turkey, I stuff it with lemons, butter, rosemary, and sage. I carry that little as my field knife for processing fish and birds and use a to keep an edge on it as I work in the kitchen. (Wes Siler)

Finding, stalking, and taking big game is really hard and can be really expensive, especially for a new hunter. You鈥檒l spend days in the field and maybe get one shot, which probably won鈥檛 be successful. And that鈥檚 before you get to cleaning, transporting, and processing the meat. In contrast, birds exist in far greater numbers, and finding them is easy. Cleaning and cooking birds are also straightforward鈥攏o more difficult than doing the same with fish.

Bird hunting has multiple seasons and can be enjoyed across the country. We recently hunted turkeys in Southern California for the spring season, and there鈥檚 another turkey season in the fall. There are different seasons for pheasant, doves, quail, ducks, and more.

There are some fantastic, organized hunts that take the guesswork out of finding a good location. For the past few years, I鈥檝e gone on dove openers with , who operates on 9,000 acres of beautiful ranchland in California鈥檚 Imperial Valley. This year, my friend Scott and I visited for spring turkey and a pheasant hunt.

Birds are drawn to food sources and cover provided by crops and water brought in by irrigation. So, in the California desert, most bird hunting takes place on private land. Farmers lease hunting rights to outfitters like Mendel, who then organizes and manages the hunting. That makes it easy to visit and enjoy a successful hunt.

Hunting dove with Mendel, you visit cattle feedlots, where the grain is a major food source. Hunting pheasant, you walk with his dogs among rows of crops, where these birds hide. Hunting turkey, you stalk the brush in arroyos and drainage ditches between fields. It鈥檚 fun shooting and a fun day out with friends. Think golf, but with enough meat to throw a dinner party afterward.

#5. Cook

The birds were such a hit that my girlfriend had to cut her way through the line and fix me a plate to make sure I got some.
The birds were such a hit that my girlfriend had to cut her way through the line and fix me a plate to make sure I got some. (Scott Nathan)

Driving back to Los Angeles with two turkeys and eight pheasants in my Land Rover鈥檚 freezer, Scott and I texted our friends and invited them over for a barbecue the next day. Then we spent the rest of the ride Googling recipes.

So long as you kill it instantly and get it cooled right away, wild meat doesn鈥檛 taste gamy, but it is leaner than the commercially produced alternative. Wild turkeys for instance, aren鈥檛 raised on grain and aren鈥檛 injected with hormones while they鈥檙e alive or butter and salt after they鈥檙e dead. Cooking methods have to concentrate on retaining moisture. Be gentle so the meat doesn鈥檛 dry out or get tough. In general, that involves lower heat for less time, but there鈥檚 a ton of collective wisdom to draw from across the internet.

After cleaning the birds, I filled a large cooler with cheap champagne聽and brined the birds in it overnight. The acids and sugars are ideal for breaking down connective tissue and permeating the meat with moisture and flavor.

The next day, I slept in, scrambled to clean my house, and then smoked one turkey on my Big Green Egg and deep-fried the other in peanut oil. For the pheasants, we breasted them out and roasted those cuts. The rest we turned into a pheasant au vin. Between those dishes and the sides everyone brought, we fed about 30 people.

Judging by the amount of people who tried their first game meat at my house that night, and then asked how they could get started hunting themselves, we did a pretty good job. This article is my answer. Becoming a hunter is easier and more fun than you think.

Popular on 国产吃瓜黑料 Online