15yrs old and she had access to a .20ga mossy. At that age she was already doing complete take down of the AR's.
We did however keep everything else outside the 20ga secure. Her we trusted, her friends who as most kids do, have wandering eyes.
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15yrs old and she had access to a .20ga mossy. At that age she was already doing complete take down of the AR's.
We did however keep everything else outside the 20ga secure. Her we trusted, her friends who as most kids do, have wandering eyes.
When you grow up this way you see guns as tools, just like a drill or a knife.
People don't lock those items up in their houses!! There is no stupidity there if the there was introduction/safety to the kids and the curiosity was culled.
I own safes to protect from theft, not to protect my family from itself.
I also teach that a gun doesn't need to be loaded until your ready to use it. Even while hunting I don't carry a loaded gun. In fact I usually take dry fire shots at the animal while hunting to cure the buck fever before I load and fire the kill shot. I teach this practice while guiding hunts to promote gun safety as well as cure buck fever. It makes those not so familiar with guns feel very confident when they finally take the shot.
I have never needed to carry a loaded firearm except when I worked law enforcement.
If someone wants to hurt themselves they will do it. They will find a way whether it is a gun, knife car, medicine etc. If someone uses a gun to kill themselves it is not the gun's fault or where it was kept. That person had issues and it was gonna happen anyway you look at it.
I feel sorry for folks that don't show kids gun safety and no touch; at a young age get rid of their curiosity and under supervision let them get their curiosity out. My kids can see guns under supervision almost when ever they want. We also go shoot when ever they want or can.
When something has no novelty there is no need for concern.
IMHO gun introduction/safety starts very young when they show interest. Most boys this age is 3-5 years old.
I don't have guns out. They are not all locked up either. I also don't let kids (other than my own) in my house unsupervised... I guess when you live in the country you also don't have kids friends and neighbor kids to worry about stopping by to play.
It all depends on maturity, trust, and experience. My son has access to everything and i have total trust in him. But if something happened i know he would grab his. 22 because he is so comfortable with it but he has shot my Glocks etc. He is 10 and i would have no problem leaving him alone with guns.
My 4 year old daughter goes shooting with us, has shot several guns with help. And has gotten over the "what is that" when she sees my carry piece on the dresser. I wouldnt leave her home alone with unsecured weapons yet, but by the time she is old enough to be home alone i wont worry.
I agree that it's about maturity and respect more than age.. I grew up on a farm with firearms by the door or in the rack over the fireplace and again I was taught to respect them and others.. I have 8 year old twins and an 11 year old and I can tell you watching them handle theirs or my weapons they are much safer than alot of the adults I see. As well the weapons aren't treated as novelties as someone else pointed out. My kids all hunt and have handled some form of firearm since they were 4 and we've always stressed the safety first and although we go out and target shoot and make it fun handling a weapon is still very serious and dangerous.. Long story short I don't worry about my kids in the least.
Food for thought:
While we are in agreement about the maturity and education being key, the law (unfortunately) comes into play as well:
So, with your permission, she would be ok legally on your property.Quote:
Originally Posted by Colorado Revised Statutes
my son (almost 2) "helped" me clean a couple of my pistols after the range this weekend...
now obviously different then the question, i would say it all falls into how much you have prepped her. if it hasnt been to much, start now. just even if its talking about what to do in the situation. like, "if you hear "x", call 911 etc...."
then the next time you talk with her about it... you can say what daddy would do in that situation... depending on her reaction, you can start to include her in your discussion on individual situations.
i did the same thing with my wife. when I bought my first pistol, her automatic reaction was "it needs to be locked up".... "ok.. ".. so it was under the bed, unloaded etc. after awhile, and a few dicusions, it was moved to the night stand. then loaded. then chambered etc. all the while, the dicussions are happening.
long story short, she now knows what the first thing she should do is, where to stand in the house, how and what to do with the dogs, etc... she is no longer somebody that I would have to "worry about" ( not actually worry, but not know what shes going to do) if something ever where to happen. she is fully part of my defense plan now..
you could take a little time, and coupled with shooting alot with her, talking with her etc, eventually make her part of the plan..
I like the idea of giving her limited access. Something like one HD gun and a enough ammo for a realistic scenario.
My worry comes from the angle of the kid's friends and how much you trust the people they might bring into the house. The real catch 22 is that when the kid is home alone is when they might need it but also a time when there might be some mischief about that could lead to another kind of real danger.
Obviously case-by-case, kid-by-kid and all that but it's something to consider.
Food for thought: I came home the other night, found various parts of my reloading stuff in dis-array. I question my 13yo son, knows nothing about it. I investigate a little more and ask again. His response is No Idea.
I check the security cameras, eventually found the photos I needed. Son took a couple of his buddies into my garage, got a soda, left his buddies there alone while he went to the bathroom back in the house. The friends were messing around with all my "stuff".
I'm not happy. Can't trust him or his friends anymore. Had to lock everything up fearing they would decide to play with something.
I trust my kids, but not their friends.
I usually have a .38 available when I'm not home, even though they don't actively know it's available, I'm sure in an emergency and something came up, they would go looking for it, find it and use it as needed. (using fear as the motive of use) They know where I normally keep the .38, so I'm sure it would come to mind that "Maybe Dad's gun is available" when fear sets in.
But now I've had to lock it up too just because the friends who were not supposed to be in or around the house were.
My friends would always come over and look for and ask for where the alcohol was, and I would just play dumb. This was in elementary school too. I never got what their deal was.