Free: Contests & Raffles.
Regardless of the type of action, or whether a firearm is fully functional vs. inert, the four basic rules of firearm safety never change. I honestly don't care of Little Johnny next door sees a Marlin lever action .22, so long as he learns and strictly obeys the four rules.If I give a kid a gun he or she has never seen before, and that kid obeys all four rules, there should be no issue in talking them through how to work the firearm. I care that they keep their finger of the trigger and show safe muzzle control.Law enforcement professionals use inert firearms for training exercises all the time. I teach with "red guns" and don't feel I've lowered myself because of it.I am not saying that exposure to many different makes/models is a bad thing. I don't see it as a huge issue in the grand scheme of things. Your mileage may vary.
I agree with GH. LEO and military training is for older people. The young children in HE would not benefit from RED guns as that would, in my opinion, keep the video game aspect of the gun in their mind which is a key component to dismiss. Real firearms have that mystique which holds their attention.
CF In understand where you are coming from... The WDFW seems to not pay attention to the slow demise of the sport due to recruitment. Do you think they would pay more attention to a large scale walk off?I don't think that is necessarily the best course of action, however how do we get OUR WDFW to recognise our needs as hunters? I feel a strange disconnect between me the hunter, and the organisation WDFW that is managing and "promoting" our sport. I am often at a loss how we can send them a loud clear message that they will listen to for more than just one second, on one issue...
I have been a certified hunter education instructor for 9 years and lead instructor for the last 6, we have a great teaching team that combined has around 50 years experience teaching hunter education, theres one thing that everyone can agree on and that is we don't like change, if its not broken don't mess with it, our classes are full of excited Young adults wanting to learn safe gun handling skills and practices, and everything else that goes into the required content of the class, we have the local wildlife enforcement officer attend our class and he helps instruct the wildlife laws, rules bag limits etc. section of the required elements, and of coarse has his service weapon, another one of my instructors is a state patrolman, he also carries his, I had a federal agent as an instructor for a few years, if there on duty of coarse they have a firearm. For a few years we held our class in a school, that had a zero tolerance for guns, we were allowed to bring guns into the school because of the importance of education, we need to educate young people on the safe handling of firearms and what better way is to expose them to lots of different models, rifles, handguns, shotguns, and actions, what a concept, it works theres nothing to fix. The new on-line registration process for students is in effect this year and I have some real issues with the overall process, its real confusing,, my students are having a hard time with it , my class enrollment is way down because of it and I blame the new computer on-line process for this, again if its not broken don't mess with it, not everyone has access to a computer. We instructors volunteer our time to teaching because we want to pass on our skills to a new generation, and without new generations of educated hunters we loose. We will adopt to the new format and registration process whatever it ends up being because were not willing to throw in the towel not yet, knowing how the state operates and the fact that changing times with everything going to electronic computerized gizmo's for getting anything done these days is the future, but don't throw out everything that's worked in the past.