Getting Started Outdoors - Ft Bragg AFI

Author: Tom DiMiero, BHA Fort Bragg Installation Club Leadership

On a recent warm but rainy Sunday morning, twenty newly initiated hunters entered the woods of Fort Bragg, North Carolina armed with a deer rifle, a passion for the outdoors, and a newly acquired knowledge on the art and science of whitetail hunting. These dedicated service members, veterans, and family members alike made up the inaugural class of BHA Armored Forces Initiative’s Getting Soldiers Started Outdoors Program.

Ft Bragg GSO 1

The BHA AFI seeks to empower service members and veterans while  assisting them in breaking down  barriers to hunting, fishing, and experiencing the public lands they serve and protect.

This month, BHA AFI at FT Bragg partnered with the North Carolina Wildlife Resources Commission’s (NCWRC) Recruitment, Retention and Reactivation (R3) Getting Started Outdoors (GSO) Hunting Initiative, Fort Bragg Wildlife,  Fort Bragg Ducks Unlimited (FBDU) and Military Warriors Support Foundation (MWSF) for a two-day GSO Deer Hunting Workshop meant for service members, veterans, and their families.

The first day of the Getting Soldiers Started Outdoors first annual, pilot Whitetail Deer Hunting Workshop  focused on white-tailed deer hunting knowledge and skills whereas the second day provided a mentored deer hunting opportunity on Fort Bragg Public Hunting Land.

NCWRC, Fort Bragg Wildlife, BHA AFI, FB DU and MWSF members served as instructors providing insight into subjects regarding scouting, tree-stands and blinds, archery and firearm familiarization, and game tracking and recovery. The training day culminated with an NCWRC Wildlife Enforcement Officer providing a detailed deer processing overview walking the students step by step first including some video footage of field dressing and skinning the harvest followed by a live processing demonstration with an actual, pre-harvested deer. Ultimately, each student attendee would go home with a sample of venison to wet their primal appetites.

After planning hunts one-on-one with their mentors following the workshop, students were up before dawn and heading into the woods in an attempt to harvest a deer on their first hunt. Students unequivocally agreed that without this mentorship program, they would not have known where to start and would have struggled to find their way into the activity. The new hunters enjoyed varying results ranging from “dry holes” to observing game to a successful harvest. This array of experiences served well to impart one of the most important lessons of all; doing everything right does not always result in a harvest and hunting is about the pursuit of wild game, the outdoor experience and the importance of conservation.

Husband and wife new hunters Shawn and Jessica Hanrahan who attended together said they had heard about hunting from family and friends at work and were interested in hunting because of its usefulness, but agreed that without the clinic they would have maintained interest but put off the idea of actually participating. 

With continued participation in hunting declining across the country, BHA AFI has found a way to bring new hunters into the fold while simultaneously giving back to those that serve and sacrifice for our nation. These new hunters are an asset to conservation and have found a new way to enjoy and experience the incredible lands they selflessly serve.  

Military bases across the country can be tremendous sources of public land for hunting, fishing, and outdoor recreation. Yet the means to take advantage of these benefits are unknown to most of the thousands of Soldiers who make up the populations in these areas. These patriots who raised their hand in service of our nation to protect our country deserve to experience all our public lands have to offer, and BHA AFI has taken the first step of many in making that happen.  

About Morgan Mason

Hot on the heels of pointing dogs, Morgan cut his teeth on life and hunting in the milo stubble and CRP fields in northeastern Kansas. He spent his adolescence and teen years hunting, fishing, and working on the family's quarter-section cattle farm. At

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