Parents recall the son they loved and lost
By Gwendolynne Larson (Contact)
Originally published 01:25 p.m., December 18, 2007
Updated 01:25 p.m., December 18, 2007
A polite young man who loved to hunt and made friends everywhere he went.
It shouldn’t be so easy to sum up 18 years of life in a few simple words, but talk to enough people who knew Beau Arndt, and that’s the picture you’ll get. What’s harder for those who love him is realizing it’s time to sum up just 18 short years of life.
Arndt, who would have turned 19 today, was killed Saturday morning doing what he loved most, his family said — hunting with friends.
“No one in our family is interested in hunting,” said Chris Arndt, Beau’s mother. “He had to get it on his own.”
Arndt was 8 years old when he got a BB gun and camouflage clothing for his birthday.
“All the papers he wrote in college mentioned that birthday,” his mother said.
Arndt started hunting around his own property west of Americus. Originally, he started with a slingshot, his mother recalled. A bluejay was his first successful shot. Chris remembers her husband, Bob, telling her about it.
“I asked, ‘Was he upset?’” Chris recalled. “Bob said he got this grief-stricken look on his face when it fell to the ground. But when Annabelle, Seth and I told him what a great shot that was, he changed his mind.’”
Chris also recalled her eldest son’s first squirrel. He’d shot it on their property, then used a book to show him how to skin it and dress it.
From there, Beau Arndt reached out to other hunters in the tight-knit community of Americus.
“He could just strike up a conversation with anybody,” Chris Arndt said.
They taught him how to hunt, and he returned the favor as he got older, teaching his friends and other youth how to hunt.
And he tried to get his family to hunt. One year, Chris Arndt recalled, everyone in the family was going to help Beau get a turkey.
“He had me dressed up in camouflage,” she recalled, and they tromped across a field. Chris was making too much noise.
“He said, ‘Quiet, Mother, quiet.’”
This year, the teen took his first deer with a bow. He’d killed deer with a rifle, but had never tried bowhunting. He donated the deer meat to charity.
But hunting waterfowl was Beau Arndt’s favorite sport.
“Duck hunting and goose hunting were his very favorite,” his mother remembered, “which doesn’t make sense to me because it’s a whole lot of work.
“They haul decoys, 100 to 150 of them, set them up in the field, set up the blind and use calls. He loved that. He’d call in 100, 200, 300 in a flock of geese.”
And Chris Arndt knows about those decoys. When Beau was in high school, he broke his leg. The next day, he wanted to go hunting, crutches and all.
“He said, ‘Can you drive me out?’” Chris said. “So I did. That’s when I helped him get the decoys out.”
On Saturday morning, Beau Arndt was back in the field hunting geese. He’d moved back home Friday when the dorms closed at Emporia State University, where he’d completed his first semester. He hadn’t declared a major yet, but everything he did was planned to push him closer to his goal.
“He wanted to move to Canada and be a hunting guide,” Bob Arndt, Beau’s father said.
On Saturday, Beau Arndt was supposed to unpack. Everything he’d brought home from the dorm was piled on the family’s back porch.
“As soon as he got home, he was going to put all that stuff away,” his mother said.
But hunting came first. And he was headed out with two friends, Derek Jackson and Tom Glass, one of the hunting mentors in Beau’s life. Chris wasn’t worried, because safety had always been such a large part of hunting for her son.
He’d taken his first hunter safety class as an elementary student. His parents insisted he repeat the course later when he was older. And Chris Arndt laid down her own rules.
“I used to not allow him to hunt with other people because of safety,” she said.
Eventually, she said, when Beau was 16, she let him hunt with one other person with a shared gun.
“They’d tease me,” she said. “They’d say, ‘There are three of us and we only have one gun.’ I said, ‘You’re safe like that.’”
To those who know and understand safe hunting, Beau Arndt’s death seems even more senseless. He was hunting with two friends in a farm field. They’d put out their decoys and Arndt and Jackson got ready to call in the geese. Glass was a little ways away following prairie chickens.
That’s when a pickup truck drove by and slowed down. A rifle shot rang out. It hit Beau Arndt in the chest.
“Beau screamed,” Chris said. “Derek jumped up and ran to him. Tom jumped up and ran to him.”
Beau Arndt, just three days shy of his 19th birthday, was dead.
His hunting friends want it made clear that he wasn’t killed in a hunting accident.
It’s illegal to shoot at game from a vehicle; it’s illegal to shoot into land without the landowner’s permission; and it’s illegal to shoot at gamebirds with rifles. That spells poaching, not hunting, Randy Smith, an Americus hunter and friend of Beau’s, wrote on The Gazette’s Web site.
Beau’s family hopes the shooter is found. His father, Bob, hopes it doesn’t turn out to be a young kid whose life could be ruined. Chris said she carries no hate.
“There’s no way he can pay a price,” she said. “No time spent behind bars is the same because my son is gone.”
Today, Beau Arndt’s family is living what his mother calls her “worst nightmare.” His younger brother, Seth, and sister, Annabelle, have put together posters of Beau’s life for the funeral service. His parents have met with funeral directors and florists.
Through it all, they said, they’ve been bolstered by those whose lives Beau Arndt touched.
“I can’t tell you how much that means,” Chris said. “Between 10 and 30 people have been in the house; it’s been a continuous revolving door.”
And they’ve started walking that long series of “last times.”
Chris Arndt on Monday remembered her son as the kind of man who lit up a room with his infectious mood.
“When he’s happy,” she said, then stopped.
“When he was happy, the whole room was happy.”
He was polite, she said, something she heard time after time from other parents.
And he was particular.
“I always ironed his T-shirts and clothes for school.”
She paused.
“I did that for the last time,” she said, with tears in her voice, as she remembered picking out Beau’s clothes for his funeral.
And her son will get a final birthday present. On the morning he left for his last hunting trip, he’d bundled up to spend a day laying in a snowy field. He’d borrowed long underwear from his mother because his was still packed. And he tried to wheedle the new hunting boots he knew his parents had bought for his birthday.
“I said, ‘No, those are your birthday boots.’ I made him wait.”
Beau Arndt’s funeral is at 11 a.m. Thursday.
“He’s going to get to wear his new boots,” his mother said softly.

Comments
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Posted by slipandslide (anonymous) on December 18, 2007 at 2:06 p.m. (Suggest removal)
Beau must have been a wonderful young man. God bless him and his family.
Posted by kaybkenz (anonymous) on December 18, 2007 at 2:52 p.m. (Suggest removal)
I had the privilege and pleasure of taking Beau's senior pictures - we had such a good time -- I will never ever forget that smile and how it could light up a room or how onery it looked. He will be deeply missed and my heart goes out to his family. They are definitely in our thoughts and prayers.
Posted by LilJHawkFan (anonymous) on December 18, 2007 at 4:38 p.m. (Suggest removal)
With tears in my eyes, I would just like to say May God Bless your family.
Posted by alfalfa (anonymous) on December 18, 2007 at 6:28 p.m. (Suggest removal)
This put tears in my eyes as well. I don't know the family, I just remember Bob shoeing horses in the area. It is simply a tragedy, there is no other way to put it. Sounds like a great young man. Hope everyone reading this who has ever taken a pot shot from a vehicle realizes what could be the ultimate result of your careless behavior. God Bless the Arndt family.
Posted by eiggohp (anonymous) on December 18, 2007 at 7:13 p.m. (Suggest removal)
How terribly sad this is... You can just tell by the picture of him that his eyes twinkle and his smile radiates.
May God be with his family and give them comfort and strength.
Posted by emporiahelper (anonymous) on December 18, 2007 at 10:01 p.m. (Suggest removal)
Beau was a great kid. I got the chance to play baseball with him. I was there when his leg was broke. i joked with him about it all the time. We just thought it was funny the way it happened. He will be missed by so many. I am so glad I had the chance to meet him and be his friend. I hadnt seen him in a about a month. I really wish I had the chance to see him again. One day I wil. He truly was one of those kids everyone liked and even parents were in love with him. I will miss him dearly. God Bless your whole family.
Posted by go_ask_alice (anonymous) on December 18, 2007 at 10:52 p.m. (Suggest removal)
I found out tonight when I got home from work, and I wanted to say that I am so very sorry for the loss of Beau. I knew him in high school, and no matter how cool his friends were or he was, he was never too cool to talk to me. He was a great guy, and I know words aren't enough, but I know he's in a better place where people like him belong.
Posted by koro (anonymous) on December 18, 2007 at 10:53 p.m. (Suggest removal)
Beau WAS a great kid...we all agree. The whole family was/is a great group. We spent many days at baseball games with the Arndts. Beau was a very good ball player and it was a joy to watch him play as he gave it his all. He was very smooth on the field. What we want to know is, did God really need a shortstop that badly? Hmmm...we'll not know till we get to ask Him. Tears come every time we think about Beau. Bob, Chris, Annabelle, and Seth...you were lucky to have him, and likewise, he was lucky to have you. Our thoughts and prayers are with you...
Posted by canchaser_412 (anonymous) on December 19, 2007 at 8:38 a.m. (Suggest removal)
Sending more prayers to the Arndt family!
Posted by kswaterfowler (anonymous) on December 19, 2007 at 10:15 a.m. (Suggest removal)
My heart and thoughts go out to this family. Being an avid waterfowl and turkey hunter myself I often worry about this very thing. I hope they catch the a--hole that did this and they get what is coming to them.
Posted by mattmcdiff23 (anonymous) on December 19, 2007 at 10:23 a.m. (Suggest removal)
I am very sorry to hear of the family's loss.There was a pro hunter that worked for avery that had the same thing happen in november. I think the fish and game should be more active trying to stop this stuff instead of patroling the frozen lakes. Our Prayers our out to the family.
Posted by emporian (anonymous) on December 19, 2007 at 10:38 a.m. (Suggest removal)
Fish and Game cant be everywhere. Everybody who sees this stuff go on should contact law enforcement. Check here for more information:
http://www.kdwp.state.ks.us/other_servic...
I hope whom ever did this will have a conscience and come forward.
Again, prayers for the family.
Posted by gmcness (anonymous) on December 19, 2007 at 12:45 p.m. (Suggest removal)
we all fill for you guys in our family and will see you at the funeral. your family's of CCS foster care
Posted by LMcLallen (anonymous) on December 19, 2007 at 12:53 p.m. (Suggest removal)
This tragedy has touched many people. We live in Missouri and our 14 year old son has hunted since he could follow his Dad through the woods. Both my husband and my son wish they lived close enough to be able to show their respect during this time. They suggested that all hunters gather and attend services in their camo. to show their respect for someone who sounds like such a fine young man. Although we don't live close, please know that so many surrounding you have you in our thoughts.
Posted by emporian (anonymous) on December 19, 2007 at 12:57 p.m. (Suggest removal)
According to KVOE they found the truck, and are interviewing the prime suspect in the shooting.
Posted by neighbor (anonymous) on December 19, 2007 at 9:28 p.m. (Suggest removal)
I am pleased to see so many good comments on this thread and others about my friend Beau and the incident that claimed his life.
It was a criminal act. Although I respect Beau's parents very much for their strength and compassion for the suspect(s), I cannot feel anything but the strong need for justice. A life was taken because someone knowingly violated about every regulation/law concerning waterfowl hunting currently on the books. This happens throughout the year day and night, daily during rifle deer season during legal shooting hours and after hours, during the migration periods of waterfowl, anytime turkeys are close to roadways, whenever it snows, the list could go on and on. Poaching and roadhunting is epidemic in Kansas. There are people who know no other way to go out and shoot wildlife, some even claim that it is an accepted practice citing "that's how we've always done it". It needs to be addressed at the KDWP and or the Kansas Legislature.
There arent enough NRO's(formerly called Game Wardens) in Kansas in the first place. The Sheriff's Department is spread thin most of the time too. It's up to all law abiding citizens to help get these activities stopped by reporting these road hunters to the law. Be sure to provide accurate useful information such as vehicle types and tag numbers, that's was helped in this case.
Posted by stormking (anonymous) on December 19, 2007 at 10:50 p.m. (Suggest removal)
I don't know whether they play ball up there, but as an avid waterfowler, I'm pretty sure Beau's in a duck blind on the Big Marsh now having the time of his eternity. All hunters and sportsmen have lost a kindred spirit. I hope he'll have room in his blind for me someday.
"ask not for whom the bell tolls....it tolls for thee"
Posted by slipandslide (anonymous) on December 20, 2007 at 10:18 p.m. (Suggest removal)
i saw on esu's web site, they were lowering the flags today for his funeral.
Posted by jlende5954 (anonymous) on January 17, 2008 at 7:35 a.m. (Suggest removal)
I live in SC but was raised around the Americus area and graduated from NHHS.
I was shocked to here of this tragedy. I did not know Beau, but I want the family to know how my heart aches for them.
Looking at Beau's picture, and what the family and friends had to say about him was amazing. You can see in his sparkly eyes and his contagious smile, he was precious. My thoughts and prayers go out to the family. I wish you all well. May God continue to give you strength, and may God give you peace and understanding . Remember John 3:16.
JL from SC
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