My First Whitetail: A Triumph of Humility
For those who didn't come up in a hunting family, learning the ins and outs of whitetail hunting wasn't a generational lesson; it was a years-long, cold, and often humiliating trial-and-error education. Years ago, a junior high friend mentioned his family’s yearly pilgrimage to the state’s Upper Peninsula, better known as the U.P., for a weekend of whitetail deer hunting. That evening, I approached my father, who was not a hunter, and asked him to take me hunting. Shortly thereafter, I obtained my hunter education certificate in Michigan, and didn’t step into the woods until my freshman year of high school. By this point, we had relocated to Missouri, and mid-November was all about rifle season. At the time, Missouri allowed one antlered deer per season, and, according to most of my friends, just seeing one was considered a bonus. My father swore that all rifle hunters were careless and spent the fall shooting one another. It was an uphill battle to get him to agree to take m...