Moon, who says she has never been much of a follower, focused more on defining her own
expectations of herself and defining her own identity.
“I take what I do very seriously, whether it’s hunting and fishing, or being glamorous and
going out for a night on the town,” she says, adding that her attitude and her willingness to
learn have earned her the respect of fellow hunters – both male and female. She says all the
hunters she has met and hunted with have been happy to accept her.
“From true hunters, I have never been laughed at or made fun of or left out of a conversion in
a club,” she says, pointing out that many of the male hunters try to involve the women in their
lives, whether it is a wife, a daughter, or a friend, in their hunting activities – sometimes
successfully, sometimes not so successfully.
“If you’re serious, and if you want respect in what could be called a ‘man’s world,’ you have to
know your stuff. You have to earn respect, you have to pull your weight,” she says. “Hunters ...
sportsmen, they are good people just like me who love the sport, and if you respect them,
respect their stand, and respect their land, they will respect you. It’s all in how you carry
yourself and your knowledge base.”
That knowledge, in hunting, is a key aspect of success, Moon says. The best shot in the world
will walk out of the woods with nothing to show for the hunt if they do not prepare. Learning
about your quarry – whether it is deer or boar or squirrel or any other prey – is vital, she says.
Efforts taken to learn about their habits, their preferences, and their thought process will go a
long way toward a successful hunt, as will learning everything you can about your land, your
weapon and your equipment.
Success in the hunt means, of course, bagging the big buck, but there is more to hunting than
that, Moon says.
“Some of the things I’ve seen out there are absolutely amazing. It’s quiet, it’s a place for me to
pray and meditate; it’s where I do my best thinking,” she insists, saying that she often will go
out into the woods and not even take her bow or her rifle, taking instead a camera or just
walking through the woods with no intent but to enjoy the beauty and solitude.
The hunt, though, is still the hunt, and there is a feeling that takes over when you are looking
down the barrel of your rifle, or sighting along the shaft of your arrow, that can’t be explained
to someone who hasn’t experienced it, she says.