A Different Take

Bitter talks about the handgun numbers, and notes that 37,665 of 55,000, or about 66% of NRA certified instructors are certified in handgun disciplines.  I would also add a thought to this mix.  One of the top reasons cited in this study for people leaving the shooting sports, and becoming inactive, was a lack of places to shoot.  Why on earth would you recommend setting aside handguns for rifle disciplines when rifle shooting typically involves an outdoor range, with a lot of land, and ranges typically measured in the hundreds of yards?  Few urban and suburban areas are supporting outdoor ranges and clubs, and the few that do exist are usually private, and not easily available to novice shooters.  I can name at least 5 ranges within 30 miles of me that are indoor pistol ranges, and all of them are public, and offer gun safety instruction to new shooters.

My shooting club, which is lucky enough to have one of the few 200 yard ranges in a suburban area, does handgun silhouette because we don’t have the room to do rifle silhouette.  IHMSA big bore goes out to 200 yards, and the smallbore shooters only out to 100.  Airgun disciplines only out to 18 yards.  NRA rifle silhouette goes out to 600 yards.  NRA High-Power also goes out to 600, and even to 1000 for certain matches.  How many places have room for that?

If the fundamental problem in the shooting sports is that populations are becoming increasingly urbanized, then the handguns sports are exactly what we should be emphasizing.  There’s room to do that kind of shooting even in a heavily urbanized environment.  The City of Philadelphia, for instance, has several active pistol ranges.  There are perhaps a dozen of them in the suburbs.  I can count on my fingers the number of ranges that can handle rifle and shotgun sports, and most of those are private clubs, which are more difficult for newbs to get into.  Bitter is right.  The times are a changing, and some people need to get over it.

Michael Bane on NSSF Kerfuffle

Michael Bane talks about the happenings at the NSSF Summit, and I couldn’t agree more:

We have achieved these victories not by “staying the course,” but by taking the battle to our enemies. We have gotten here not by “playing nice,” but by doing what Americans do — standing up for our beliefs and speaking our minds and hearts. We are succeeding because we have stopped watering down our message and trying to pander to the very people who would strip us of our rights.

Go read the whole thing.  Michael has more experts from the issued reports, and comments on them thusly:

I don’t have to tell my regular readers how wrong-headed and profoundly incorrect these “action items” are. They are old school the worst way, a distillation of policies that have not only failed us in the past but are in fact the very policies that are responsible for nearly destroying us. “Hide, hide!” “Play nice!” Be something that you’re not, and maybe everyone will love you!

The definition of insanity is doing the same thing over and over again and expecting different results. Action items like these are a proven path to failure…and in our case, oblivion.

Yep.  That’s why it’s important to squash these ideas like bugs, because if they start infecting the movement, we’ll end up like Britain and Australia, whos sportsmen went down the very road these action items are advocating.  We cannot feed the misconception that handguns, or any other guns that are the demons du-jure of the anti-gun movement, have no legitimate sporting purpose, and downplay their role in lawful self-defense.

More on the NSSF Thing

I have a copy of the study that I’ve been going through.  It makes numerous references to “non-lethal firearms” in the context of getting new shooters, who might be intimidated by firearms, to become comfortable:

Shooting sports programs utilizing non-lethal guns as a means of introducing newcomers are likely to be well-received by non-shooters and even anti-shooters.  By making non-lethal guns available, such programs will reinforce safety and the importance of learning to handle firearms and becoming comfortable with them.

This terminology needs to be banished from even having the chance to enter the shooting vernacular, and I don’t know of any sport shooter or instructor who would use it.  Here I’m thinking they are referring to airguns, but airguns are not “non-lethal” and are, in fact, potentially dangerous instruments that should be treated as such.  I do agree with starting new shooters, who are interested in the shooting sports, but might be afraid of firearms, off with air guns.  It’s a good recommendation.

But if we want to emphasize safety, we should never, ever, under any circumstances, imply a firearm or air gun does not have the potential for lethality.  If you’re teaching new shooters that air guns are non-lethal, you’re shirking your responsibility as an instructor.  This language should never have made its way into an industry publication.

What Am I? Chopped Liver?

As a sport shooter in International Handgun Metallic Silhouette (IHMSA for short), I will we watching the developments happening at the NSSF summit very carefully.  Bitter has some details which indicate NSSF may be considering recommendations that would marginalize handgun shooters.  I will have more to say about this later, but suffice it to say, I think this would be a significantly stupid move on the industry’s part.

I don’t think there’s anything illegitimate about the handgun shooting sports.  To the extent that there’s a poor public perception of handguns out there, that’s something that our sports can help overcome.  IHMSA, Bullseye, NRA Handgun Silhouette shooters, IPSC, and IDPA shooters are all engaging in legitimate recreational activities with handguns.  Let’s dispell the myths.  Sweeping handgun shooters under the rug and hoping no one notices seems to be to be the exact opposite of what we should be doing.

Update on Blue Trail Range

Apparently the safety improvements are underway at the Blue Trail Range in Connecticut, that we mentioned last week.  Berms and baffles should solve the problem effective.  Again, there’s no need to close shooting ranges to deal with problems like this.  They can be made to peacefully coexist with neighbors.

PGC Looking to Reopen Ranges

According to the Times-Leader, the public range at State Game Lands 91 will be rebuilt and reopened in October.  My county’s range was closed in 2005 as well, and I do hope it can reopen at some point.  The closure of that range was my primary impitus for joining a club.  Even if they reopen the range, I probably won’t shoot there much, but public ranges are important for hunters, casual shooters, and new shooters.

Looks like PGC is going all out on this one, with a covered firing line, baffles, an improved back stop, and a management program to prevent lead contamination.

Positive Coverage of Shooting Sports in New Jersey

It’s good to see there are clubs in New Jersey who are running Steel Challenge matches.  It’s even better that the media are willing to cover it without any pant shitting hysterics.  Hopefully coverage like this might help people realize their state doesn’t need to make their gun laws worse than they already are.

Iowa State Troopers Agree

The only blogger that you should be voting for to send to Blackwater for some training with Todd Jarrett is me!  Enter your e-mail address and enter for a chance to go yourself.

Vote Sebastian

So if you haven’t voted yet, get to it, or Iowa’s finest will be cracking some skulls!

Blue Trail Range

There’s a range in Connecticut that’s under threat of being closed.  Reports like this sound a bit fishy, and, being the skeptical guy I am, I decided to take a look at the range area.

Mr. DiNatale is one of several Durham residents who have complained that their homes are getting hit by stray bullets from the Blue Trail Range & Gun Store a mile away in Wallingford.

Tri-Mountain State Park straddles a 500-foot-high ridge that lies between Blue Trail and the homes. Mr. DiNatale says the bullets are also landing in the park, a violation of state law and a clear threat to a popular hiking trail that winds through it.

Though it now looks like they are fighting back, and asking for donations to fight the legal battle, to make improvements, and to remain open.  It’s not going to be cheap to make the needed improvements to that range.

Take a look at the range yourself.  The positions in question are on the 200 yard range, which is here.  You can see a topographical map of the area here.  Running some numbers through the ballistics computer, based on a typical .308 round, it is possible for a bullet to be fired over the mountain and land in the residential area about 2600 yards away at a velocity of 650 ft/sec and an energy of 157ft/lbs.  The elevation needed was less than 20 degrees.  That’s a problem.  The state park is not directly in the line of fire, and runs behind the mountain, which is safe, in the portion which is in the line of fire.

I’m not a range expert, but based on what I do know, it seems they will need to construct a high berm and baffles, along the 200 yard shooting line to prevent errant shots from leaving the range and heading over the mountain.  Our club protects against errant shots with a wood construction wall filled with crushed stone on the side boundaries of the range, and a series of baffles that go out for about 30 yards directly above the line of fire, and two giant berms, so the only thing you can see on the range is baffle and berm.  We’re located in a suburban area, so these things are a must.

There’s no reason Blue Trail range has to close.  A range can be made safe even for areas which have in recent years become densely populated.  Hopefully Blue Trail will win its fight to stay open, will become a safer range, and everyone can go away happy.  Encroachment of development is a serious problem for ranges, but it’s a manageable problem.