Too young to walk while following her father atop south-central Minnesota's snowy farmlands, Melissa Bachman instead was towed in a sled, bundled up.
This was in the mid-1980s, near the family's home outside Paynesville, Minn., and the little girl accompanied her father willingly while he hunted fox, his rifle in hand.
She was then, and remains, an enthusiastic participant — in everything.
Now 34, Bachman lives in South Dakota, with her game-warden husband, Ben Bearshield, their 6-month-old son and three older children. But thanks to her undying infatuation for all things outdoors, her name and reputation extend far beyond the windswept plains that surround their home.
Bachman, who produces and stars in the television program "Winchester Deadly Passion," now in its ninth season on Sportsman Channel, has forged an international reputation in the traditionally male-dominated field of outdoors television.
She'll be in the Twin Cities beginning Friday as a seminar speaker during the three-day run of the Outdoor News Deer & Turkey Classic, held at the State Fairgrounds' Warner Coliseum.
"Even when I was too young to accompany my parents while they hunted, I was always brought along to recover a deer that my mom or dad shot and to help in the processing," Bachman said. "One of my jobs would be to write 'venison' on the packages."
A National Honor Society member and standout athlete who set high school and section pole-vault records, Bachman as a girl did pushups in advance of her 12th birthday so she could pull back the 40-pound bow her parents bought her.