4-H Shooting Sports
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Been thinking about youth shooting programs lately after a conversation at the counter over at Sportsman's Warehouse — a dad asking where to start his 10-year-old. I pointed him toward 4-H Shooting Sports. Here's why.
Youth development first, marksmanship second — the program uses shooting as a vehicle for building character, not the other way around.
That framing matters more than it sounds. Programs that lead with competition tend to burn out kids who aren't immediately good — or worse, they attract adults who care more about the scoreboard than the shooter. The fact that 4-H flips that priority is exactly why it produces shooters who actually stick with the discipline long-term.
The program also explicitly targets youth who aren't traditional athletes, recognizing that precision sports don't require the physical attributes that exclude many kids from conventional team sports.
This is something most people outside the shooting community genuinely don't understand. I've watched a kid who gets cut from every rec league absolutely clean house on the smallbore line because he has patience and steady hands. That's a real thing — and 4-H is structured to find those kids and give them somewhere to belong.
A county with an active, long-tenured certified instructor running a well-equipped club will look nothing like a county where the only option is a club that meets twice a year with borrowed equipment.
That's the honest caveat. The national structure sets a floor, but local execution is everything. If you're thinking about getting your kid involved, the first call is to your county Extension office — not to find out if the program exists, but to find out whether it's actually active and who's running it.
The NRA Foundation provides equipment grants and funding to state 4-H Shooting Sports programs... This funding relationship draws occasional criticism from opponents of the NRA, who argue it blurs the line between an educational youth program and a firearms industry advocacy pipeline.
The criticism exists, but I've never seen it play out at the club level. The instructors I've known who ran 4-H programs were there because they wanted to teach kids to shoot safely — full stop. Equipment grants paid for .22s and air guns that a county club couldn't have otherwise afforded. You can have opinions about the NRA as an organization and still acknowledge that the Friends of the Banquet money went somewhere useful.
For anyone who's been through 4-H Shooting Sports — either as a kid or as a volunteer instructor — what discipline did you start with, and did it actually translate into how you shoot today?
Read the full article in The Handbook → | By The Boise Gun Club Team
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