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South Carolina Youth Raccoon Hunt Set Nov. 1 in Anderson

Posted by ODC Editor on Oct 28th, 2008 and filed under Outdoor kids. You can follow any responses to this entry through the RSS 2.0. You can leave a response or trackback to this entry

South Carolina Youth Raccoon Hunt Set Nov. 1 in AndersonThe S.C. Department of Natural Resources, South Carolina State Coon Hunters Association and the Anderson County Coon Hunters Association will sponsor a youth raccoon hunt near Anderson on Saturday, Nov. 1. The winners in this event will qualify to participate in the state championship at the Webb Center in Hampton County on Feb. 28, 2009.

For additional information and applications for the Anderson youth raccoon hunt, contact Troy Wolverton at (864) 353-8739.

Two age groups will be participating in the youth coon hunt, ages 6 to 13 and ages 14 to 17. Each youth is required to bring a guardian, and there is no application fee. There will be door prizes for all participants. The deadline for the bench show is 4 p.m. and the hunt begins at 6 p.m.

Before the actual competition, participants will attend seminars on sportsmanship, scoring and hunter safety. Contestants are then divided into groups, or “casts,” for the evening competition. Efforts are then made to group the participants within each age division with similarly aged contestants to further even out the competition within each cast. Each cast consists of a judge and guide, and three or four youth hunters, each with a dog. Parents are allowed to follow along and observe from a distance, but each youth handles and calls his or her own dog.

In accordance with competition hunt rules, no raccoons are killed during the competition. Winners are determined based on the dog’s ability to “strike” a trail and tree a raccoon. The hunt awards points based on the order of striking and treeing and the dog handler’s ability to interpret correctly the dog’s actions.

DNR protects and manages South Carolina’s natural resources by making wise and balanced decisions for the benefit of the state’s natural resources and its people.

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