Orlando Sentinel

Women sign up for thrill of hunt

Outdoor sport also features economic, health benefits

- By Lisa Rathke Associated Press

MONTPELIER, Vt. — More women are taking up the male-dominated sport of hunting to stock their freezers with local foods and as cultural influences, including movie heroines and marketers, make it more socially acceptable.

Many of the new female hunters did not grow up hunting and are joining spouses or boyfriends in the sport, researcher­s say.

Hunting outfitters are taking advantage. Movies like “The Hunger Games,” “The Hobbit” and “Brave,” which feature skilled female archers, have driven more girls and women to the sport, researcher­s say.

According to the most recent data from the National Survey of Fishing, Hunting, and Wildlife-Associated Recreation, the number of female hunters rose from 1.2 million in 2006 to 1.5 million in 2011, a 25 percent increase.

From 2001 to 2011, the percentage of hunters who were women rose from 9 percent to 11 percent.

One of them is Tammy Miller, 46, of Fairfax, Vt., a bow hunter who this month got a 931-pound bull moose, setting an archery record in Vermont, after scouting the area for weeks.

She got interested in hunting more than 10 years ago after divorcing and becoming a single parent trying to make ends meet. She then met the man who is now her husband, an avid hunter who taught her and bought her first bow.

“Once I started, the experience of being quiet in nature and being able to provide for my family, I was hooked,” Miller said.

For fellow hunter Cheryl Frank Sullivan, 34, of Underhill, Vt., hunting provides a sense of empowermen­t to be able to be self-sufficient.

Researcher­s say marketers are helping to lure women to hunting.

“It’s almost like the chicken-or-egg thing. There’s certainly been a slight increase in female hunters. The marketing folks have grabbed on to that, they’ve started using images of females hunting and shooting, so more and more females are doing it,” said Mark Damian Duda, executive director of Virginia-based Responsive Management, which does surveys for federal and state fish and wildlife department­s.

Lisa Stinson of Velpen, Ind., got drawn in when she tried hunting about 12 years ago. The 33-year-old likes the peacefulne­ss of being outdoors, away from everyday life.

The food is another bonus.

“I like the fact that it is fresh, and I know where it came from,” she said. “I know that there’s no added hormones.”

More families also are taking their daughters, as well as sons, hunting, said Michelle Cain, a wildlife informatio­n specialist with the state Division of Fish and Wildlife in Indiana, where the number of hunting licenses sold to women rose from 17,541 in 2006 to 33,922 in 2014, a 93 percent increase.

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