6-year-old among the 1st minors to legally shoot a deer after new Wisconsin law

Wisconsin Gov. Scott Walker eliminated the minimum hunting age on Nov. 12.

ByABC News
November 21, 2017, 5:08 PM
Lexie Harris, 6, poses after bagging a buck in Taylor County, Wis., Nov. 19, 2017. Lexie is among the first youngsters to bag a buck under the state's new law that eliminates the state's minimum hunting age.
Lexie Harris, 6, poses after bagging a buck in Taylor County, Wis., Nov. 19, 2017. Lexie is among the first youngsters to bag a buck under the state's new law that eliminates the state's minimum hunting age.
Tyler Harris via AP

— -- A 6-year-old girl has become one of the first minors in Wisconsin to legally shoot and kill a deer after Gov. Scott Walker signed a new law eliminating the minimum hunting age.

On Sunday, one day after the 2017 hunting season began, kindergartner Lexie Harris posed next to a deer she killed under the supervision of her father, Tyler Harris, The Associated Press reported.

The law, signed by Wisconsin Gov. Scott Walker on Nov. 12, lets hunters of any age carry a weapon while participating in a mentored hunt.

Before the inaugural hunt, Harris had taken Lexie to a shooting range to practice with the youth rifle he bought her, which is less powerful and easier to handle, according to the AP. The rifle is also equipped with a smartphone on the scope to help her target the weapon.

In the woods near their home in Medford, the father-daughter pair saw several deer before coming across the one that would provide the novice hunter with a perfect shot, according to the AP.

PHOTO: Lexie Harris, 6, poses after bagging a buck in Taylor County, Wis., Nov. 19, 2017.
Lexie Harris, 6, poses after bagging a buck in Taylor County, Wis., Nov. 19, 2017. Lexie is among the first youngsters to bag a buck under the state's new law that eliminates the state's minimum hunting age.

While Harris said Lexie was "shaking" when she pulled the trigger, she managed to hit the buck. But when it came time to claiming her prize, Lexie refused to get her hands dirty, her father said.

"She looked at me right away and said, 'I'm not gutting it because that's gross,'" Harris said.