4-H Shooting Sports
4-H Shooting Sports
Ask your local Extension agent for the most recent copy of the 4-H Shooting Sports Event Handbook (Extension Publication 2752).
4-H Shooting Sports is a national program with 428,020 young people taking part, making it one of the largest shooting education programs in the United States. Here in Mississippi, 4-H Shooting Sports involves thousands of kids and continues to grow annually. An established core of over 700 adult volunteer instructors and 4-H agents provide training and leadership for our program throughout the state. So you want to join 4-H?
Select a discipline below to learn more.
Archery
The bow and arrow have helped shape the history of the world, and the challenge and fun of archery continue today. This competitive sport teaches patience, skill, repetition, and attention to detail.
Muzzleloading
Smokepole and frontstuffer are just a couple of the names used to describe this fun and exciting discipline. You will learn how to use this firearm as well as how to clean and care for it.
Pistol
Through the 4-H Shooting Sports Program, you will learn the safe and correct way to use handguns. Steady hands and a keen eye will help you “keep on target.”
Rifle
Keep your eye on the target, control your breathing, and squeeze the trigger. In the rifle discipline, you’ll learn to use your body to steady your shooting form and improve marksmanship.
Shotgun
Pull! Few things can compare to the feeling of watching a clay target flying through the air to be broken by a well-placed shot. The shotgun discipline helps develop hand-eye coordination.
Hunting
Do you want to learn to identify wildlife, call to game, select camo, and plan for a camping trip? These are just a few of the things you’ll learn as you “travel the trails” in this discipline!
Publications
News
Success Stories
Brad Parsley partners with Ginger Cook, local agent with the Mississippi State University Extension Service in Panola County, to deliver the 4-H Shooting Sports program to local youth.
A Smithsonian Institution exhibit about rural communities continues its journey in public libraries across Mississippi.
“Slow down. Relax. Focus. Find your balance. Imagine your problems are the arrow, but you are the bow. The string is God’s power, handling all the work. The bow holds the string that shoots the arrow.”