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Joined: Mar 2002
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Sidelock
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70 is too young to give it up. My great grandfather was still having kids at that age with his second wife. She was 35 years his junior. They kids did age him though. He died at 109. I was told he still went duck hunting up into his 80's.

It is all about how well you get around and how you feel about hunting. I took my father dove hunting for the last time at 90. Now six years later he has no interest in hunting at all. Still fairly mobile I would gladly take him again if he changes his mind. Age is a number it is all about how you feel and what level of activity you can handle.

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Sidelock
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I have shot clays and hunted with men 70+ and had no worries and also been at clay shoots with much younger and older people that I wouldn't want to be around again. If you follow safe practices and don't worry about your score on either game or clays you will be fine.


This ain't a dress rehearsal , Don't Let the Old Man IN
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Geo,
Hopefully, you have some opportunities to hunt that dont involve running with the youngsters. It is common on pheasant and deer hunts in this part of the world for the oldsters to block the ends of driven fields, taking what comes out before the people pushing it. This give guys an opportunity to avoid being dedicated camp cook for a few more years, if nothing else.
I would tell you bravo on having a clear mental picture on what you are, and are not up to at the moment. Perhaps you will see some improvement that allows more participation, but, participating in some is better than none.

Best,
Ted

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I am 70 and was out in my canoe and on shore for a duck hunt this morning.

BUT I am extremely careful and not near as agile as I once was.

You are wise to protect yourself and others in proper decorum.

I find that I am hunting in smaller and smaller parties of folks and am now down to me and at most two others, in that way we can insure safety of all

Mike


USAF RET 1971-95 [Linked Image from jpgbox.com]
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A few years ago, on a cold snowy afternoon in January, during our late flintlock deer season, I happened upon an interesting scene. I was still hunting and came to the edge of the woods where a small overgrown field dropped down toward a small wooded creek bottom. Out in the field, overlooking the creek bottom was an old man in a folding lawn chair. He had hunting clothes on, and was cradling his rifle. An old wool Army blanket was partially wrapped around him. I'd say he had to be in his mid 80's or older, and he seemed to be napping. Four wheeler tracks in the snow showed that he was transported there, and left to his hunting. I'm quite sure no one forced him to be out there, but given the opportunity, he made the effort to get dressed and go and sit for hours in the cold, snow, and wind. I assume his son was probably not far away, and would come to do any gutting or dragging if the old guy happened to shoot a deer.

He never knew I was there, and I slipped back into the woods, changed direction and circled toward the other side of the hollow, hoping I might push a bedded deer toward him. I thought it was really cool that he still wanted to be out there, and if I could choose the time and place where I am when my life comes to an end, it would be doing just as that old guy was doing.


A true sign of mental illness is any gun owner who would vote for an Anti-Gunner like Joe Biden.

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Originally Posted By: Geo. Newbern
Originally Posted By: HomelessjOe
Originally Posted By: Geo. Newbern
one Tennessee Red lit in an oak tree over the Polaris while the others were out on a round. I got off the wagon and shot him.

So what do you think?...Geo


I don't think you should go out with a quail shot off a limb....


jOe, that bird was in the air and all I can tell you was he did not have a foot on the ground. No ground sluicing! And I ain't 'going out'! I just ain't messing with group shooting kick-em-up quail anymore...Geo


You said he "lit"

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Keith,
Thanks for sharing that great story. It's nice to imagine doing what we love when our expiration date comes. I hate to think of giving it up when the time comes due to age, but we have to know our limitations. I want to make the right choice if that happens.
Karl

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A friend of mine killed his nice buck for the year, last week. He is 93.

SRH


May God bless America and those who defend her.
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My dad was in his 80's when the doctor said he shouldn't be shooting guns with oxygen on. He was still golfing, he just got a longer tube for his oxygen when he had to keep it on to hit the ball.

I'm 72 and am looking at getting a motorcycle for back country coyote hunting as I don't spend enough time on the bicycle to ride it very far on back country trails anymore.

Like I say retirement is great, the only draw back is you have to be old to do it. I did take a number of years out in mid-life and spent them hunting, fishing and trapping. When fur prices dropped I went back to work to make a grubstake for retirement. I've been retired 10 yrs and love every minute of it, just wish I had the body I had 30 years ago.

I'm pretty sure I'll know when it is time to hang it up.

Last edited by oskar; 11/16/18 08:47 PM.

After the first shot the rest are just noise.
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The guy I inherited my blind from shot ducks there on his 93rd birthday.

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