So for Christmas I bought my son (3y/o) a Henry Mini-Bolt .22lr. Basically a beefed up Cricket. However I notice at the normal outdoor range I go to there was a sign that said; "Must be 11 years old to shoot rifles." So I'm curious where I can take him to shoot?
How about setting up a pellet gun range at home for live fire training? Then, using that neat .22, use dry fire drills in positions or off of a rest. You can rig the rifle with a laser to see if he stays on target. Any practice is good for him and promotes bonding with Dad. Unfortunately, rules are gonna get in your way at a public range.
I taught my son safe gun handling with a .25 cal semi auto pistol (with my direct supervision) at age 3. He was very receptive and safety conscious. Believe me, I'm on your side!
Too young he needs to be on private property. Would be the best thing anyways so he's not getting scared from the concussion of other firearms going off. I never took my kids to the range until age 10 but that's just me. I'm all for kids shooting with parents though and hope you find something that will work for you!
I believe making guns normal and exposing them as soon as they show interest is the best answer.
I used a Red Ryder here in the yard to see how well the kids followed directions. Unfortunately, my grand kids showed no real interest so I didn't push it on them. My oldest grandson recently decided he wanted to learn so I have just started him training at 15. He's doing fine.
Unfortunately, nobody wants to get sued so there's not a lot of places that will let a little kid shoot.
Hopefully you can hook up with somebody that has some private land and do it there. Would be better than a range anyway- when they are young they are distracted easily...
Good luck, and good on you for being willing to teach that young man right.
If nothing else, take him a few times and be spectators. If he does good, I definately like to take new to shooting kids when they are the only ones shooting. One on one. Everthing revolves around them having fun. Don'y pressure them to shoot more than they want to.
Thanks for the interest and ideas guys! I was more pressuring mama about buying him a gun before he started asking me for an "adult gun, not a toy gun." Since he started showing interest I've slowly been talking more and more about going shooting when he bring it up. I like the pellet gun idea. Might have to look into that. I do have a co-worker that has some land and a 9y/o son that shoots. Been talking to him, co-worker not son, about coming out as I feel my son might be more attentive with a fellow child/kid shooting as well.
There are lots of cool ideas to get him started shooting but don't delay. You'll blink twice and he'll be asking to borrow your car to go out on a date. They grow up fast!
I think what you are doing is great. My 7 year old is very comfortable around rifles, we started young too. We have personal property so age was never a problem, but I have talked to Hot Wells on 290 and they are good as long as the kid can safely sit in the seat with no problems.
I started shooting a full size single shot 20 gauge at 7. Granted it was our own light loads but still bruised my arm bad for awhile. Shot a deer with dad's 308 when I was ten. First time I'd ever shot that rifle and he was smart enough to stand behind me so I didn't fall.
I don't believe either range I use has an age restriction. Just the ability to follow safety rules and 100% adult supervision at all times. But I'm on the other end of Texas.
Thanks for the info and support guys. I spoke with one of the managers at SGA and he said he'll open up their back range for me and my son so I can teach him without the distractions of others. I'm not trying to teach him ¼" MOA shots. I want to teach him the safety and fundamentals of shooting. As he gets older will progress.
Try a precision air gun instead. There are high-power PCP air rifles that will make the best 22LR look like a toy. I started my kids on my air rifles at about 4-5yr old. Their hands need to be large enough to reach and pull the trigger comfortably.
With air rifles, I taught them the same safety and fundamentals... right in my own back yard. Very practical too. My son and I popped a bunch of mice feasting on our orange tree a few weeks back.