ROANOKE TIMES 
                      Copyright (c) 1996, Roanoke Times

DATE: Monday, February 26, 1996              TAG: 9602270142
SECTION: EXTRA                    PAGE: 1    EDITION: METRO 
DATELINE: WASHINGTON
SOURCE: PETER FINN THE WASHINGTON POST 


MORE WOMEN FEEL THE PULL OF HUNTING TRADITION

Snow fell in the winter afternoon, hushing the woods that surrounded Brandon Miner as she hid behind low brush in a clearing on a farm in Spotsylvania County.

In her arms, the 33-year-old Annandale woman cradled a 12-gauge shotgun, and the misting whiteness rejuvenated her senses after a long, cold, damp day.

Tripping from among the pine trees, driven by dogs whose barks could be heard in the distance, a young doe emerged. As the animal whipped across Miner's sightlines, she snapped her shotgun up and fired twice. In an instant, the doe was dead, hit twice in the side.

``It's very invigorating,'' said Miner, who has been hunting deer for two years. ``The quiet. Listening to the sounds in the woods. Watching the shadows change. I really have my senses stimulated.''

Once an almost exclusively male preserve - big-bellied lads with beer cans remain the stereotype - the world of hunting is changing with more women out in the field.

Of the estimated 14 million hunters in the United States, 7.5 percent are women, according to a 1995 survey by the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service. The service has not tracked the increase in female hunters, but observers say it has been significant during the last several years.

``There has been an incredible explosion,'' said Sue King, president of the Houston-based Women's Shooting Sports Foundation. ``My guess is that the numbers of women have multiplied 20 times in the last eight years. Women have more leisure time, and they are discovering all kinds of outdoor activities.''

``When I first went out, you'd hear, `Ah, a woman hunter,' but now it's getting ho-hum,'' said Sharon Borg Wall, 45, a Washington resident who owns a farm on Maryland's Eastern Shore, where the fourth annual Ladies Duck Hunt was held in December. ``The shooting sports are just as challenging for women as golf, for instance, and there is just as much opportunity for business networking.''

The trend has been encouraged by state wildlife agencies, which have sponsored special hunts and training seminars for women in recent years. Maryland and Virginia wildlife officials say that promoting hunting among women is part of their agencies' mission, just as they encourage bird-watching or hiking by as many residents as possible.

``We want to capture that audience. I'll be blatant about it,'' said Robert Beyer, deputy director of the Wildlife Division of the Maryland Department of Natural Resources.

But anti-hunting groups say that state government should not be promoting an activity that part of the citizenry finds repugnant, even though the wildlife agencies depend on hunting-license fees for much of their funding.

Maryland officials offer hunting classes for women as part of a series of seminars called ``Becoming an Outdoors Woman,'' a program that began in Wisconsin five years ago and has spread to 37 states.

On March 29-31, the Virginia Department of Game and Inland Fisheries will be the host of a three-day, Spring Turkey Hunting Weekend for Women. It will be the first such state-sponsored event in Virginia, and officials expect to hold regular women's programs on hunting all kinds of game. Information on the March event can be obtained by calling (804) 367-6778 or (804) 598-3706.

By creating programs for women, state officials say they are not recruiting women to hunt, but responding to a demand that already exists.

``We are charged with bringing recreational opportunities to as many people as possible, and that includes women,'' said Rich Jefferson, a spokesman for the Department of Game and Inland Fisheries. ``That's what we do. And we saw that more and more women were interested.''

The Fund for Animals, an anti-hunting group with offices in Silver Spring, Md., argues that the state officials' interest in women emerged just as the traditional male hunting population declined in the 1980s.

``Although these programs are spin-doctored as an opportunity to `get acquainted with nature,' the obvious intention is to recruit women hunters or, at the very least, to increase women's acceptance of hunting,'' wrote Heidi Prescott, national director of the Fund for Animals, in a letter she sent to wildlife agencies in 37 states last month, asking that the women's programs be dropped.

``The American public is rapidly changing its view of killing animals for recreation, and that change is reflected nationwide in a dramatic, long-term decline in the number of hunters,'' Prescott wrote. ``It is entirely inappropriate for a public agency to play social engineer by attempting to reverse this deep societal trend.''

According to the fund, the number of male hunters older than 12 has declined from 11 percent of the American population in 1980 to 7.5 percent in 1991.

But several female hunters in the Washington area said they came to enjoy the sport with no prompting from the states.

Symone Grauer, who lives in the Lake Ridge section of Prince William County, Va., said her interest started when she married an avid hunter.

``He was gone all the time,'' she said. ``He encouraged me to go out, and I thought, `That's one way to get to spend some time with him.' So I went out, and I really enjoyed it. It's not just about getting a deer. It's very calming, very peaceful. And you have time to think when you spend all day on your own.''

Grauer, 40, continued to hunt after she divorced. She remarried last year - to another hunting enthusiast, a Virginia state game warden. She was out 20 times, with both her bow and gun, during the deer-hunting season that ended Jan. 6.


LENGTH: Long  :  104 lines
ILLUSTRATION: PHOTO:  The Washington Post. Symone Grauer of Lake Ridge, Va., 

peers through a telescopic sight used by hunters. She is among a

growing number of women taking up hunting. color.

by CNB