• Starboard Choice Marine
  • Moore Boats
Michiana Outdoors News
Advertise with Us

What's New?

It’s simple math really: Zero eggs equals zero fish for future stocking programs.

So, the spring walleye and steelhead egg collections by the Michigan DNR are critical components of the strategy for maintaining world-class fishing opportunities in the Great Lakes State.

Read more

Nearly fifty years have now passed since the first paddletail swimbaits splashed down in U.S. waters, the earliest designs having likely originated in France. Today, paddletails have almost singlehandedly rewritten the rules of soft plastics engagement. Fans of catching bass, crappie, walleye and inshore slams nearly always cast these ingenious tail-driven baits, each version capable of different retrieve speeds, actions and the almighty thump.

Read more

New Gear

Lew’s introduced the Custom Lite SS at the 2024 Bassmaster Classic in Tulsa, Ok.

The 200 size Custom Lite SS Spinning Reel fits in perfectly with the lightweight design and smooth drag offered in the rest of the series, but specifically excels in situations where one would normally use backing tied to a braided main line.

Read more
Clear H2O Tackle
Comprehending Aquatic Vegetation from a Fish’s View
Comprehending Aquatic Vegetation from a Fish’s View
D&R Sports Center


By Louie Stout

Cale MyersCale MyersCale Myers is the youngest hunter you’ll ever meet.

The Edwardsburg, Mich. tyke tips the bathroom scales at 48 pounds - on a good day - and is still too young to start the first grade.

Yet he killed two deer on back-to-back days.

With a muzzleloader.

I know what you’re thinking. His dad probably held the gun for him and stood behind the young boy when he pulled the trigger, bracing him from the recoil, right?

Nope. Dad was running a video camera next to him. Pops handed him the gun, the boy placed the barrel between shooting sticks, put a bead on the deer and pulled the trigger.

By himself.

Both times.

Lucky shots? Well, his first deer, a doe, was dropped where it stood with an 80-yard shot he made from a box stand about four feet off the ground. The second, a 6-pointer, was killed with one shot from 60 yards out, while the boy hid behind a brush pile.

Now, before you dash to the computer keyboard to spin off a nasty email, Cale’s experience was perfectly legal under Michigan’s new Mentor Youth Hunting program. It’s designed to allow parents who want to teach children under the age of 10 how to hunt and fish.

The way it used to be done.

Chad Myers is a perfect example of that kind of father. He was hunting with his dad at age 8 and killed his first deer when he was 12.

But Cale? He started loooong before that.

“I carried him into the woods to check my trail cameras two days after he was born,” said dad. “He’s been tagging along on my hunts since he was 3.”

So when Michigan passed the law last fall offering the Mentor Program, Chad figured, why not? He took the boy to Lunker’s and videotaped him buying his first hunting license ($7.50).

“Hunting has been a long-time family tradition for us,” he explained. “My 13-year-old daughter (Kelcie) shot a 6-point during the early youth season. Cale has always wanted to kill his first deer so I helped him get ready.”

He got the boy a Thompson Center Omega X7 muzzleloader. It’s a smaller gun, built for women and teens, but not small enough for Cale. The stock was still too long and dad cut off the butt pad so the boy could reach the trigger.

Cale spent a lot of time target practicing this fall. The kid shot the gun, which kicks about the same as a .410 shotgun, about 30 times before his first hunting trip.

So, when that doe walked into sights on Dec. 22, Cale wanted the gun. He was ready.

“I asked him if he could do it and he said, ‘Sure!’” said Chad. “I decided to let him give it a try. It was an excellent shot.”

The next afternoon, they returned to the field and hid behind a brush pile about 4:30 and he shot his buck around 5.

With one shot.

Unlike most fidgety 5-year-olds, the lad stays still, says dad, during the long lulls when the deer aren’t moving.

“He’ll either take a nap or play his hand-held video game,” Chad explained.

But right now, Cale is pumped up. As far as he’s concerned, his season isn’t over.

What’s next?

“I wanna shoot a turkey and a coyote,” he said with a grin.

And he probably will.

JBLP

Powered by Lake Drive Marine

  • Bass Boat Technologies
  • Power Pole
  • Mercury Marine
T-H Marine

Advertise with Us!

Advertise with Michiana Outdoors News

Michiana Outdoors News provides advertisers a cost effective vehicle to target thousands of sportsmen across southern Michigan and northern Indiana.

Find out how here!