Thank you for the clarification. Well. At least there _are_ cartridge pistol disciplines being shot on main British (Scottish) soil again; which in and by itself is good. The more the merrier.
The list of all Section 5 Authorities by "The Scottish Ministers" (that's how the issuing authority is called up there) is online (heavily anonymized though). Cut-off-date is 2010 or 2011.
What I found interesting, is that there were absolutely no licences for the purpose of sport shooting visible, not one. Maybe that will change in view of the Commonwealth Games. I always thought that Kristian Callaghan (e.g.) were a Scotsman?
Ah. Thank you for helping me with that. It was my impression that he is the best British pistol shooter presently.
(Of course he has attracted less media attention than the three ladies.)
Alexander wrote:Ah. Thank you for helping me with that. It was my impression that he is the best British pistol shooter presently.
(Of course he has attracted less media attention than the three ladies.)
He's certainly the best junior pistol shooter, and is up amongst the best male pistol shooters. Shooting air and rapid fire make for a slightly unusual combination, but it works well for him (and some others). Given the problems with cartridge pistol shooting in the UK, his acheivments in RF are very impressive !
1. Thank you for helping me with a more balanced relative assessment; I have duly noted your careful formulation.
2. His ISSF results (in the shooters' database) must be seen in context with his national results (as e.g. can be gleaned from the lists of the British Pistol Club - the other competitions are simply too hidden and inaccessible in the dysfunctional and fractionalised mess that British shooting organisations and their websites are). I understand that NSRA would nominally be the governing body for the smallbore pistole disciplines. The strange competing role of ESSU / TENS etc. in this field is too silly for me to even _try_ to understand.
3. Section 5 authorities have been one (very tedious, slow and toilsome) way of re-introducing cartridge pistol shooting for a selected few. I wonder whether juniors can also benefit from this option; e.g. Anna Rehfisch.
Another way is the admission of a few civilian ranges for cartridge pistol training (and not just MOD ranges), as e.g. the "Tunnel" now apparently is?
And lastly, there is the on-going e-petition that strives to re-classify .22 sport pistols as Section 1 firearms, which is very sensible.
4. Did the defunct National Pistol Association commit voluntary suicide immediately after Dunblane (as I recall, the captain of that ship jumped into the lifeboat as the very first, and quickly rowed away, leaving the others where they were), or did it cling to life for a bit longer? Just curious...