looking for hunter ed classes ===

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Dr. Trout
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2012/02/23 09:17:32 (permalink)

looking for hunter ed classes ===

GAME COMMISSION HTE CLASSES STARTING TO FILL UP

HARRISBURG – With the junior spring gobbler season set for April 21, and the general spring gobbler season opening on April 28, Pennsylvania Game Commission Executive Director Carl G. Roe is reminding all first-time license buyers to make plans to attend a Hunter-Trapper Education (HTE) course now.


To register for a course in your area, visit the Game Commission’s website (www.pgc.state.pa.us), and click on the “Hunter Education Classes” icon in the center of the homepage. From here, you can elect to take either the basic “Hunter-Trapper Education” course, which is a 10-hour course held on two or more days; or the “Hunter-Trapper Education Independent Study” course, which is a home-study course followed by a one-day, four-hour classroom review and test. Once determining which course format best fits your schedule, you can register online by selecting a course in your area and then following the instructions.


“Right now, volunteer instructors are meeting with Game Commission Wildlife Conservation Officers to schedule courses, review curriculum updates and prepare for this year,” Roe said. “Courses are being posted on our website’s Class Calendar as soon as arrangements have been finalized. This process will continue throughout the year, especially for courses this fall and winter. Check the website regularly for a class near you or that fits your schedule, and remember more will be added.”


Game Commission Hunter-Trapper Education Division Chief Keith A. Snyder noted that establishing the state’s annual slate of Hunter-Trapper Education classes is always an ongoing operation, based on the availability of instructors and facilities, and our ability to meet the growing demand for more classes in some counties.


“If you don’t see a class being offered in your area, please continue to check the website as more classes are added to the Class Calendar,” Snyder said. “Please know, though, that some areas have a limited number of classes that may be held at times that are inconvenient to you. Our limited number of instructors cannot always meet everyone’s needs and wants. But they amazingly offer more than 900 classes annually.


More than 35,500 individuals took HTE courses throughout the state last year. There is no fee for the basic HTE course. Pre-registration is required and online registration is available for all courses through the Class Calendar.


Taught by dedicated teams of trained volunteer instructors, the basic HTE class lasts at least 10 hours over two or more days, and participants must attend all instruction before taking a test at the end of the course. Youngsters must be at least 11 years old to receive HTE certification.


Successful completion of a basic Pennsylvania HTE class, or another state’s equivalent course, is required by state law to obtain a first-time hunting or furtaker license, regardless of age.


Registrations also are being accepted for the independent study version of the basic HTE program, which also is available for those 11 years of age or older. A fee of $1.59 may apply if applicants order a printed copy of the study manual, or they can review the course materials online free of charge, and then attend the one-day, four-hour classroom review and test.


In addition, registrations are being accepted for other educational programs offered by the Game Commission, including Successful Bowhunting, Successful Turkey Hunting, Successful Furtaking and Cable Restraint Certification.


The Successful Bowhunting course is a one-day voluntary training program for those seeking to expand their skills and knowledge of bowhunting. Although Pennsylvania doesn’t require archers to complete a bowhunting education course before they purchase an archery license, certification for this course is required to bowhunt in some other states. There is a $20 course fee, which covers the cost of the online study course required before attending the class.


The Successful Turkey Hunting course is designed to provide the knowledge and skills needed to hunt safely and confidently in both spring and fall seasons. Veterans will learn methods and techniques that will help them become better hunters. Students will receive a 140-page student guide and a diaphragm turkey call as part of the program. Classes will start this spring and continue through the summer and early fall. A $15 fee is being charged to offset costs.


Successful Furtaking is a one-day training program that provides extensive hands-on training to new and experienced furtakers. The course promotes Best Management Practices and is designed for any person seeking to learn more about furtaking and to improve his or her skills and success. The course includes the cable restraint certification that is required to participate in Pennsylvania’s cable restraint season for foxes and coyotes. This course also fulfills the requirement that all first-time furtaker license buyers pass a basic trapper education course. A $15 course fee is charged.


The Cable Restraint Certification course is required for those trappers seeking to participate in Pennsylvania’s annual trapping season in which cable restraints are used to capture coyotes and foxes. The course fee is $15, and students will get to keep various education materials and one legal cable restraint provided as part of the course.


“We are planning to offer additional advanced courses in the future focusing on specific sporting arms and certain species-specific seasons, such as Successful Muzzleloading and Successful Deer Hunting,” Snyder said. “We will be working with interested groups of sportsmen specializing in each of the areas to develop curriculum and solid hands-on training that will emphasize methods and techniques.”


In 1959, the Game Commission began offering a voluntary hunter safety program, and about 25,000 students participated in that program annually. Beginning in 1969, the General Assembly required all first-time hunting license buyers under the age of 16 to successfully complete a four-hour hunter education course. The course requirement was expanded to six hours in 1977. The program became mandatory for all first-time hunting license buyers regardless of age in 1982.


Finally, in 1986, the safety program was increased to 10 hours of class time and trapper training was included. The name of the program also was changed to Hunter-Trapper Education, and was required for all first-time furtaker license buyers, too.


Since 1959, more than 1.8 million students have been certified through this course.



#1

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    bingsbaits
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    RE: looking for hunter ed classes === 2012/02/23 09:24:59 (permalink)
    I remember taking my test in 1972.
    Had to wait outside for a couple of my buddies who had to take it 3 times before they could get a passing score..


    On the Bowhunting Course, have they added the crossbow to this course or is it just longbows and compounds ?? A little training would be good for the newer crossbow users.
    Hope there would be a segment on judging yardage, can be the downfall of many new archery hunters.

    "There is a pleasure in Angling that no one knows but the Angler himself". WB
     
     


    #2
    TastyTrout
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    RE: looking for hunter ed classes === 2012/02/23 09:51:03 (permalink)
    Anyone know if they keep track of people who take the course? I took mine back in 93 or 94 and have no proof at all that I ever took it. Just wondering...

    Men and fish are alike. They both get into trouble when they open their mouths.
    Jimmy D Moore

    #3
    Pork
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    RE: looking for hunter ed classes === 2012/02/23 09:55:27 (permalink)
    Not sure...
    took mine in '92 and still have my orange 'hunter/trapper education' card in my wallet.
    *don't know why?*

    "If you ever get hit with a bucket of fish, be sure to close your eyes." ><)))*>
    #4
    Dr. Trout
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    RE: looking for hunter ed classes === 2012/02/23 09:56:28 (permalink)
    judging yardage, can be the downfall of many new archery hunters.


    AMEN....


    I believe it is not always just the "new archers" though .. yardage is hard for many folks to learn and judge, even for rifle hunters, all though they can get away with a lot more of a wrong calculation of yardage...

    well off to work, had a later starting time today ...
    #5
    TastyTrout
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    RE: looking for hunter ed classes === 2012/02/23 09:58:35 (permalink)

    ORIGINAL: Pork

    Not sure...
    took mine in '92 and still have my orange 'hunter/trapper education' card in my wallet.
    *don't know why?*


    I had the orange patch that they used to give. I still remember getting home from taking the course and begging my grandmother to sew it onto my hunting suit. Unfortuntaly being a youngin at the time that hunting suit is nowhere to be found these days.

    Men and fish are alike. They both get into trouble when they open their mouths.
    Jimmy D Moore

    #6
    S-10
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    RE: looking for hunter ed classes === 2012/02/23 10:09:27 (permalink)
    Hope there would be a segment on judging yardage, can be the downfall of many new archery hunters.


    I don't have a lot of the new gadgets on the market. One that I do have is a range finder. I think they would be particularly useful with a crossgun.
    #7
    psu_fish
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    RE: looking for hunter ed classes === 2012/02/23 10:48:38 (permalink)
    I took mine in 1997, lost the original card so I sent into the PGC for a replacement card this past year, so when I hunt out of state I'm covered since most states require people born after 1980 to prove they have passed the class
    #8
    retired guy
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    RE: looking for hunter ed classes === 2012/02/23 10:56:18 (permalink)
    Think mine was bout 1958 or so here in CT - Like Tasty took that big patch and had Mom sew it right on the shoulder of my Woolrich. Had some kinda card for the course but whre it is ????    No record now either-- think they threw out the flat stones those records were chipped into.
    #9
    draketrutta
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    RE: looking for hunter ed classes === 2012/02/24 00:33:42 (permalink)
    I hunted deer way back when in Pa as a teenager..
    technically, no actually, I could have bought a license 4 years ago (when I decided to get back into hunting) no problem - jand by-passed the Hunter-Ed Course with just a little white lie?? - not really sure about that since I previously had a license - many moons earlier.

    but I decided to take a course to learn any new tricks of the trade..

    Gotta give the PGC props for the great course taught by a very knowedgeable WCO at a local Gun/Sportsman Club..

    **************
    Biggest tip - that I never really agreed with (being a crow/predator hunter primarily) is still vivid:

    Requirement to wear a minimum orange hat while moving during small game season...

    The WCO showed a video of a hunter (without orange hat) ascending a hilly terrain in the midddle of a big open space..

    300 or so yards away is a woodchuck hunter, in sniper mode - ready to enjoy a "pink mist" moment,

    He focuses on a little brown turd bouncing along the top of that little hill,,,

    which turns out to be the brown/camo/hatless head of the hunter without an orange hat on...

    needless to say, I understand the logic of that "inconvenience" now and in the future...
    , no biggie, I just carry an orange binni in my vest pocket and flop it atop my cammo headgear once I start moving to another set.

    No matter what you know, there is always room to learn a new trick - which may prevent a tragic mistake in the field.

    post edited by draketrutta - 2012/02/24 00:36:38

    SR Glass Hole - Where Fragile, See-Through Ego's get BROKEN.
    #10
    dpms
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    RE: looking for hunter ed classes === 2012/02/24 07:24:38 (permalink)
    ORIGINAL: bingsbaits

    On the Bowhunting Course, have they added the crossbow to this course or is it just longbows and compounds ?? A little training would be good for the newer crossbow users.


     
    It is my understanding that the crossbow is covered as well.

    My rifle is a black rifle
    #11
    S-10
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    RE: looking for hunter ed classes === 2012/02/24 07:57:56 (permalink)
    Decades ago I was one of a local group of long range chuck hunters. One warm spring day two of my friends were working a field trying for a few critters one last time before the grass was too high to see them. They glassed a chuck's head bobbing up and down as they do while feeding several hundred yards away. The fellow who's turn it was to shoot took careful aim and let one go. The chucks head was the foot of a teenager lying in the middle of the field with his legs crossed soaking up some sun. Why pick that spot no one knows. The shooter was a avid hunter with a reputation for being careful and cautious as was his pardner. The shot was deadly accurate and a lot of local folks decided it was time to quit chuck hunting. Assume nothing.
    #12
    draketrutta
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    RE: looking for hunter ed classes === 2012/02/24 12:22:11 (permalink)
    Good Point S-10

    CARDINAL RULES:
    1 Every gun is loaded - until you verify (twice) that it is not.
    2. ID your target and backdrop before squeezing off round.
    3. Do not Scan for targets via Scope..

    do not mean to off on a tangent,

    butt

    the recent craze of "TACTICOOL" Scope Mounted Red Scanning Lights is

    IMO Insane Mindsets - by both the gunners and the sellers..

    you wanna really be TACTICOOL -vs- being a "Tacticool Fool"

    join the Military,,


    if you served, thank you for your Service, and refer back to rule #3 - because you should know better.

    STOP THE NONSENSE,
    and strap a light to your head (which should contain a brain)

    btw the headmounted lights are much more efficent way to scan/control halo effect..
    butt - not as tacticool...
    post edited by draketrutta - 2012/02/24 12:24:14

    SR Glass Hole - Where Fragile, See-Through Ego's get BROKEN.
    #13
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