The influence of women in the outdoors is growing and we
must all be ambassadors for them and the children being raised by them.
Although I am not a mother myself I was influenced from an extremely early age
by my mother about the great outdoors and I try to pass it on to any children I
am in contact with. Although my dad was a gun enthusiast, I know my mom played
a huge part in my love for the outdoors, especially being a woman.
Every summer our entire family would vacation at the same
cabins on the gulf coast for weeks at a time. It was nothing fancy and we never
had money for guided fishing trips or our own boat, so we fished off of a pier,
all day and all night. The days were spent with my mom showing me how to tie
chicken necks in a crab trap to lower into the water from the pier with the
hopes of catching some big crabs, walking the sand bars, exploring the tiny
shell islands, and always learning. Mom would teach me to slide or drag my feet
in the water instead of walking to prevent stepping on stingrays, to watch the
current for floating jellyfish passing by, and not to freak out when seaweed
brushed across my legs. I learned strength and common sense from her.
I would watch in awe as she would throw a huge cast net with
perfection to catch her own bait that I knew we would be using later that
night. I would watch as she hurled the net into a perfect circle landing on top
of the miniature perch and mullet she had spotted in the water. Her strength
and dedication was definitely rubbing off on me. Occasionally, we would have to
spend some hard earned money to buy bait, even after all day of trying to catch
it, but mom always tried to prevent that. As the evenings would begin to near,
mom would make me sit out at her spot on the pier with her tackle box and bait
buckets while she would make a quick dinner for us. She had fished up and down
that pier for years and knew which spot produced the most fish. I learned persistence
from her.
Somebody was always ‘holding down’ her fishing spot at some
point and rotations would start with me, my brother and my dad to make sure
momma had her spot! I will never forget the moments I spent sitting next to her
at that spot, fishing until the sun came up. Not only would I watch her fish
for hours but stare as she would bait her own hook, remove her own fish, re-tie
her own tackle, clean and gut her own fish, then cook it up for the family. If
we ran out of bait and the fish were still biting she would task me to catch a
small fish with my cane pole to use for cut bait. She was the real deal and I
was learning and soaking it all up. I learned patience and self-sufficiency
from her.
My point behind this personal story is how much my mother
influenced me. My dad would come out and fish a little but the dedication I saw
in my mom was beyond what I have ever imagined. It didn’t matter the weather
(it was always windy on the pier) she was out there; we would always joke about
how our hair would look after a night on the pier but it didn’t matter because
we were having fun and providing fish for the family. I learned humility from
her.
Young children will always want to be like their parents for
at least a short period of time and it’s crucial that we as parents, mentors,
friends and family seize those moments and make the biggest impact we can. It’s
typically expected that the father or male figure hunts or fishes but I
guarantee that if children see their mother or greatest female influence not
only participating but dominating in outdoor adventures, it will remain
engrained in their mind and influence them in a positive way.
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