Lake County Hunter Safety Courses (Field Days)

Our Hunter Safety field days comply with state law and DNR regulations 1. These require/mandate:
The pre-scheduled field day shall be a minimum of 4 hours.
  1. Students arrive
  2. Materials Review
  3. Laws and Ethics
  4. Exam
  5. Hands-on Portion (Explain, Demonstrate, Teach/Coach)

We confirm knowledge of material already studied before the field day, and augment it with hands-on practice. Our goal is to promote safe behavior including the safe handling of firearms. Most students pass, but a student who is not ready or able, will not receive a Hunter Safety certificate. This happens in cases of failure to complete the prior study or pass the exam, or, based on an instructor's judgment.

Points 1 through 4 above, are kind of self-explanatory. The hands-on portion involves the following 2:

Our shooting is not intended to produce expert shooters, but to ensure safe firearm behavior, and accustom students to live ammunition and a representative variety of firearms and actions. Also it's fun.

Our ideal field day is active from start to finish. Our chapter reviews, question-and-answer sessions, and instruction occur in-field, on-station and/or during activities; for example while walking, during exercises, or between rounds of shooting. Students may (logistics permitting) complete the written exam while standing, or at a shooting station. Snacks typically consist of pocketable, in-field fodder such as venison sausage, cheese sticks, and bagel quarters.

To attend and succeed in a field day, and get their Hunter Safety certificate, students must:

Students who successfully meet the requirements and complete the field day will receive their Hunter Safety certificate on the spot. They may then (outside of/after class) use it to buy a hunting license, etc.


1Regulations quoted from DNR publication IC5189 (Rev. 11/22/2013), "Hunter Education Sample Field Day Outline"
2When possible we may add other activities and drills.

Author: Leo Heska
Revision: January 23, 2017