September 4, 2010
DNR hoping to score big with expanded youth season
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West Virginia wildlife officials are hoping a small change in a hunting-season regulation will make a big difference in the number of people who hunt.

We'll find out Oct. 2, when the state holds a one-day, youth-oriented hunt for small game.

In past years, that single-day season was called the "youth squirrel season." Hunters age 8 to 14, when accompanied by properly licensed adults, were turned loose on the state's bushytail population.

This year they'll be turned loose on nearly everything that runs or flies.

"As long as an animal is considered 'small game,' it will be legal for kids to hunt on that day," said Scott Warner, a Division of Natural Resources biologist.

Deer will be off-limits, of course, as will turkeys, bears, wild boars and migratory game birds such as woodcock, mourning doves, ducks and geese. Everything else - squirrels, rabbits, grouse, quail, crows, coyotes, foxes, bobcats, raccoons and snowshoe hares - will be fair game.

Warner said the season's main goal "is to provide additional opportunities [for young people to harvest game] and to increase [adults'] interest in getting kids afield."

"We're very concerned that the number of young people getting started in hunting has declined so much in recent years," he added. "Our youth seasons have been very popular since we started having them, and we thought that converting the youth squirrel season to a youth small-game season was a logical way to get more parents and kids into the woods."

Roughly one-third of all the adults who responded to the DNR's annual Bowhunter Survey said they took a youngster hunting during at least one of the DNR's four youth seasons.

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DNR hoping to score big with expanded youth season

West Virginia wildlife officials are hoping a small change in a hunting-season regulation will make a big difference in the number of people who hunt.

We'll find out Oct. 2, when the state holds a one-day, youth-oriented hunt for small game.

In past years, that single-day season was called the "youth squirrel season." Hunters age 8 to 14, when accompanied by properly licensed adults, were turned loose on the state's bushytail population.

This year they'll be turned loose on nearly everything that runs or flies.

"As long as an animal is considered 'small game,' it will be legal for kids to hunt on that day," said Scott Warner, a Division of Natural Resources biologist.

Deer will be off-limits, of course, as will turkeys, bears, wild boars and migratory game birds such as woodcock, mourning doves, ducks and geese. Everything else - squirrels, rabbits, grouse, quail, crows, coyotes, foxes, bobcats, raccoons and snowshoe hares - will be fair game.

Warner said the season's main goal "is to provide additional opportunities [for young people to harvest game] and to increase [adults'] interest in getting kids afield."

"We're very concerned that the number of young people getting started in hunting has declined so much in recent years," he added. "Our youth seasons have been very popular since we started having them, and we thought that converting the youth squirrel season to a youth small-game season was a logical way to get more parents and kids into the woods."

Roughly one-third of all the adults who responded to the DNR's annual Bowhunter Survey said they took a youngster hunting during at least one of the DNR's four youth seasons.

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