
Franklin Clayton with a compass for orienteering
Four teens from
St. Louis have earned their first visit to the U.S. Youth
Hunter Education Challenge competition.
Two older area
kids are part of a five-member senior team that returned to
the national championship after finishing second in 2000.
The older team
is named Missouri Magnum. Franklin Clayton of Robertsville
in Franklin County and Mick Muckerman of Chesterfield are
the two area kids involved. The other three team members are
from the Jefferson City area.
Sixteen-year-old
Franklin said he's been hunting "pretty much my whole
life." Of course, his opportunities are quite a bit better
than most kids in and around a major city.
He said, "The
hunting is pretty fair right in my back yard." He bagged
his first deer with a bow and arrow when he was 11. "I
was only about 100 yards from my house," he said.
The national Youth
Hunter Education Challenge is more than just shooting. There
is competition with light hunting rifles, shotguns, muzzle-loading
rifles and bow and arrow. But, kids also compete in orienteering,
wildlife identification and hunter responsibility.
Orienteering involves
finding your way in the woods with only a compass and a topographical
map.
The emphasis during
the whole hunter challege is on being responsible in the outdoors.
Franklin said
he met other members of the Missouri Magnum team during state
youth hunting competitions. "We didn't have a team at
first. But, we started hanging around together and formed
the team," he said.
This will be Franklin's
third visit to the nationals.

Danielle Metzger handles a muzzle-loading
rifle
Four members of
the junior team from the Jay Hentges Range and Training Center
qualified for nationals. They are Danielle Metzger, Cameron
Hall, James Vest and John Marshall. The Hentges range is operated
by the Missouri Conservation Department. The range is located
at Exit 269 (Antire Road) on I-44 west of I-270.
Young Saint
Louis.com featured a story about the early training of
the Hentges junior team in its January, 2001,
edition. To get more details about the Youth Hunter Challenge
program from that earlier article, just click
here.
The junior kids
were entered as a five-member team in the state finals in
June at Jefferson City. But, only four qualified for the nationals
so they can't compete as a team.
The trip to the
nationals is quite an experience. The U.S. competition runs
from July 30 through Aug. 4 at the Winnington Center near
Raton, N.M. That's the huge National Rifle Assn. facility
in the northeast corner of the state, just south of Colorado.
Danielle and Cameron
are both 14 and students at Parkway South High School.
Danielle said
the shooting competitions at nationals are set up different
from the state meet. At the state tournament, shooters fire
from set positions. She said, "in the nationals, the
targets are set up as if you were walking on a regular hunt."
She said she's
very excited about her first chance at the nationals.

Cameron Hall with a telescoped .22 rifle
Cameron said he
scored best during the state competition on the hunter safety
trail. There were 15 stations but these didn't involve targets
and shooting.
One test checked
to see if the kids showed proper gun safety precautions when
crossing a fence. Another tested their knowledge of first
aid in case of an hunting accident.
Fourteen-year-old
James Vest will be a 9th grader at the College School in Webster
Groves. He said he likes bow and arrow hunting the best.
Like the others,
he started hunting early, at age 11. "Normally, I hunt
water fowl with a shotgun. But, this year, I'm going to try
deer hunting with a bow and arrow," he said.
Cameron said one
of his first hunting experiences was during a hunter education
class. "I was introduced to trap shooting when I came
to the range," he said.
He said his favorite
hunting is for quail. He said he usually hunts in the Bootheel
area of southeast Missouri.
Danielle said
she was 11 when "I went duck hunting with my dad."
She said she didn't bag any birds that first time but did
better in later trips. She said she gets to hunt quite often
because her family has had permission for many years to hunt
on land near Rolla.

James Vest with a muzzle-loader