Youth Deer Hunting Day is set for Sept. 25. The day was established six years ago by the N.C. Wildlife Resources Commission to increase interest in deer hunting among youth, potentially increase their success at hunting and highlight the need to engage youth in hunting.
                                 Courtesy photo | NCWRC

Youth Deer Hunting Day is set for Sept. 25. The day was established six years ago by the N.C. Wildlife Resources Commission to increase interest in deer hunting among youth, potentially increase their success at hunting and highlight the need to engage youth in hunting.

Courtesy photo | NCWRC

RALEIGH — Sept. 25 has been designated Youth Deer Hunting Day for 2021 by the N.C. Wildlife Resources Commission.

Youth Deer Hunting Day was established in 2015 by the Wildlife Commission to increase interest in deer hunting among youth, potentially increase their success at hunting and highlight the need to engage youth in hunting.

On this day, youth ages 17 and younger may use any legal hunting implement to hunt deer. Anyone 18 and older may only use the hunting implement legal for the type of season open in their county. Hunters 17 years old and younger may also hunt deer of either sex and are not required to be accompanied by an adult if they have completed a hunter education course. All deer hunters must wear blaze orange on the 25th, even if using archery equipment, and the use of dogs is allowed in areas where hunting deer with dogs is lawful.

During the remainder of the hunting season, youth 17 and younger are required to use the legal hunting implement for the open season in the area where they are hunting.

Hunters 16 and older need to buy a license with a Big Game Harvest report card by going online to www.ncwildlife.org, calling 1-888-2HUNTFISH (1-888-248-6834), or visiting one of more than 1,000 Wildlife Service agents located across the state.

License-exempt youth must obtain their own Big Game Harvest Report Card at no cost from a wildlife service agent or by calling 1-888-248-6834. License-exempt cards are not available online.

For more information on hunting in North Carolina, visit www.ncwildlife.org/hunting.