Young hunters

from Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

As a young hunter is called regardless of age in hunting a budding hunters , the hunting license examination filed and the first hunting license received.

Germany

While the term young hunter is not legally defined in Germany, it is generally considered to be such in the first three years after receiving the hunting license.

A hunter (with the exception of the federal state of Saxony ) only achieves the ability to lease hunting, i.e. the authorization to lease a hunting ground , after having held a hunting license for three years.

Up until the 1970s, a three-year training period with the Lehrprinzen was compulsory for young hunters. Proof of the time spent with the teaching prince also had to be provided if the hunter wanted to lease a hunting ground. In the past, those interested in hunting completed a nine-month course before taking their hunting license test. This was - and is still today - mostly offered by the district hunting associations . Since the late 1990s, professional hunting schools have played a large part in training for the hunting license test. There, the knowledge required for the examination is imparted in courses that usually last two or three weeks.

literature

Individual evidence

  1. Julia Numßen: Manual hunter language . BLV, Munich 2017, ISBN 978-3-8354-1728-1 ( limited preview in Google book search [accessed on February 5, 2020] without page numbers): "Young hunters - hunting beginners, regardless of age."
  2. ^ Siegfried Seibt: Basic knowledge of the hunter test . Kosmos, Stuttgart 2017, ISBN 978-3-440-15956-9 .