dalto wrote:My daughter who is 7 has a Bolt action cricket. My son who is 12 has a 10/22.
My experience is that they find the 10/22 more fun because you can take more shots with it but my daughter shoots more accurately because she has to load and line up each and every shot.
BTW, my daughter at 7 couldn't even come close to holding a 10/22. She isn't even really big enough to hold the cricket.
Or if you were really nice you could set her up with an M&P 15-22 with FDE MOE furniture.
I don't think there is a right or wrong answer, but I know what my preference and recommendation would be....
I started my son with an antique single shot "catalog gun" when he was 6 years old. It was a Springfield bolt-action .22, about the size of a Cricket, that one could buy from the Monkey Wards catalog 60 years ago. He had to load each round manually, and then cock the action after closing the bolt by pulling a knob back on the end of the bolt body to fire each round. It did teach him patience, and it taught him a sort of intangible thing I call "riflemanship"—the ability to know where the rifle was going to shoot to, relative to point of aim; the effect of wind on the shot; stuff like that. I'm not saying he wouldn't have eventually learned those things shooting a semi-auto, but the design of his rifle slowed the shooting pace down considerably, and kind of enforced a certain amount of shooting discipline on him without me having to hover over him too much. I think he found that hitting a bullseye was much more satisfying when he had to really prepare the shot, as opposed to being able to simply keep pulling the trigger until he got one.
That said, he shoots his semi-autos far more frequently these days than he does his bolt rifles, but he applies the disciplines he learned as a bolt rifle shooter to make himself a better all around shooter, including with his AR15s and his M1A.
But like I said at the top, there is no wrong answer. Only preferences.
“Hard times create strong men. Strong men create good times. Good times create weak men. And, weak men create hard times.”
― G. Michael Hopf, "Those Who Remain"
#TINVOWOOT