Posted: Thu Aug 28, 2008 2:29 am
Brooks: I shall be glad to respond to your inquiry, but I feel I owe a fair answer to jhmartin's question first :-).
Alexander
Alexander
A forum to talk about Olympic style shooting, rifle or pistol, 10 meters to 50 meters, and whatever is in between. Hosted by Pilkguns.com
https://targettalk.org/
Rapid fire pistol is almost dead here (in spite or because of Ralf Schumann ;->), though *every* 25 metres pistol stand has the moving targets (used for 94-98% sport pistol .22 lr and centrefire, 5-2% standard pistol, and not more than 0,5% rapidfire). People are sceptical whether the recent rule changes will revive it; personally I doubt it.Spencer wrote:Despite the availability of ranges, Rapid Fire Pistol is not what anyone would call popular. (...)
Unfortunately, these days most club shooters perceive RFP as being too hard. The need for specialised (.22 Short) pistols with wrap around grips has gone - so it ain't the equipment...
Mike,Mike M. wrote:I'll add that the current rules make RF a pain in the neck to score...shoot a series, go down and score. You spend more time scoring than shooting, unless you have the Suis-Ascor targets. I'd like to see the rules modified to have a full half-course shot before each scoring session, just to speed things up a bit.
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Yes. And I have to apologize for not answering as swiftly as I should have - sorry!jhmartin wrote:Hmmmm ... I'll ask you to elaborate ... I'll add a bit too.attitude adjustment
I think we totally agree here. I use a lot of the "trinkets & trash" technique ... well mostly the trinkets.0. Training for children and juveniles must be *very* different from adult competitive shooters. Not only in quantity, but also in quality.
Wow, I sure do. It may be a cultural thing, but kids here in the USA have so many options and many try to do it all. If they are in 4-H (as all of mine are) the list is darn near endless... Dog School, Horse School, meat goats, dairy goats, steers, dairy cows, pigs, welding, shooting (Archery, rifle, pistol, shotgun, muzzleloading), sewing, (that's just some of 4-H), then.... baseball, football, track, cross country, soccer (you know ... the other football), tae-kwon-do, spelling bees .... (Mike Schroeder is laughing here).1. .... I see over-focussing in young age as the bane of pedagogics, you may see it just reversely.
I share your sentiment. I'll ask a parent to wait in a car if I see this. No excuse for this. I know I have had some shooters in the past showing up to our practices as an escape from this type of family discipline, and it breaks my heart. Sorry if I gave this impression. (BTW, the Hornblower novels are some of my FAVORITES! ... The made for TV movies were pretty good too)1a. "Beatings will continue until morale improves"
While Charlie and I don't interact much, I consider him one of my mentors. He helps run a great program at the OTC that we go up and shoot his matches if we can. I'm not really a pistol guy, but I know that the IZH-46 is way too heavy for my younger (<15 years) shooters. We have some of the Tau-7 Jr's and even then, my youngest shooters do the supported thing.2. One or two aspects of what I feel are indirectly addressed quite lucidly by Charles Reed in his explanation of Progressive Position Pistol ...
Dear Joel, thanks for your long and fruitful reply. I think that a continuation of this discussion (in good spitit, while pointing out the now well visible possible agreements, and the possibly remaining differences of opinions, could be quite fruitful, though our perspectives will be slightly different. Different not only due to the background (Old Europe vs. New Bush USA, maybe different types of youth), but also due to the individual perspective.jhmartin wrote:Thanks Alexander ..... this is actually turning into a good discussion
Yes, it is a good concept to start with "real" shooting right at the beginning (because that's why they come), and it is also good to set a small "token of visible success" right at the beginning, as you do -- provided that you can be reasonably sure that everybody will attain it :-).jhmartin wrote::
I think we totally agree here. I use a lot of the "trinkets & trash" technique ... well mostly the trinkets.0. Training for children and juveniles must be *very* different from adult competitive shooters. Not only in quantity, but also in quality.
I start kids off on their first day to the range with an NSSF program, just to get the feel of shooting a competition rifle ("Hey cool sights"). This program rewards shooters with a patch if they achieve 35 points in 5 shots. http://www.nssf.org/JrUSA/
I've never had a kid not make the score. They take that patch home with the target. (Thanks NSSF!)
Such pins or badges exist here too and are universally shunned and despised among sportive shooters. They only enjoy some moderate popularity with those guilds who mostly exist as traditional societies (founded 1294 AD e.g.), parading shooters' uniforms in processions and beer-fuelled feasts a couple of times in the year, with lots of bling-bling that would make any rapper swoon green with envy.Next, USA Shooting has a great great program that my 4-H shooters use. It is called the "Passport" program that is pins that the shooters receive as they make their way thru the progression of skills and shooting (self-)discipline. This program keeps the kids going , really until they reach the level (500-520) when they begin to really understand (even if they don't know the word) intrinsic motivation.
Very good idea! This is an excellent way to overcome the "rift of separation" between youth group and other shooters, which is often simply due to different training times.I'm also lucky that I'm fairly close to the OTC in Colo Springs. I always go to the gift shop and grab a bunch of their $3-$5 tee shirts and we use those in handicap matches (usually a 3x10 where they take their last month average, subtract from 300, and they add that on to their score .... They young-uns like it when they beat the precision shooters.
Full agreement. Intrinsic motivation in most shooters (especially youngsters) is hardly strong enough to make up for a lack of fun. This is all the more important when at some days, a training session did not really run, and everybody (the coach most of all) is duly frustrated.So here we agree .... it must be fun and they must be rewarded .. things and words.
That is a good thing. They should try out a large number of things, parallel as well (and stay with one try for a few times), regardless of gender, class and race boundaries, until they feel they know what they like and where they will possibly concentrate. Over-ambitious parents can be a problem here when they overload kids, as I agree, and especially if such overburdening is coupled with an aggressive "competitiveness" attitude as the one presented before.Wow, I sure do. It may be a cultural thing, but kids here in the USA have so many options and many try to do it all. If they are in 4-H (as all of mine are) the list is darn near endless... Dog School, Horse School, meat goats, dairy goats, steers, dairy cows, pigs, welding, shooting (Archery, rifle, pistol, shotgun, muzzleloading), sewing, (that's just some of 4-H), then.... baseball, football, track, cross country, soccer (you know ... the other football), tae-kwon-do, spelling bees .... (Mike Schroeder is laughing here).1. .... I see over-focussing in young age as the bane of pedagogics, you may see it just reversely.
Yep. I like this your wording and presentation now a lot better than your previous comment on the preceding page, Joel, at which I took (and still take) offence.I don't force them into shooting, but I do let them know that in order to shoot those scores that get you medals in the tournaments, one practice a month won't cut it. I have no problem if they are the plinkers, they are as welcome as the rest (our pellets and ammo are paid for by our FNRA grants). They can even fill out the teams at our competitions.
Agreed. While a coach most times is not trained as a social worker / developmental psychologist and should not try to play one on one's own (at least not without supervision), sports can be a precious resort and potential "way away, and way out" from a distressing family situation, or from ghetto conditions.I share your sentiment. I'll ask a parent to wait in a car if I see this. No excuse for this. I know I have had some shooters in the past showing up to our practices as an escape from this type of family discipline, and it breaks my heart.1a. "Beatings will continue until morale improves"
Oh, no disagreement with Charles' basic position, which is fully correct. I only felt he had exaggerated his "the sky is falling!"health warnings a bit :-). I started with a normal FWB 65 (no barrel weights) at about 14 years, being of slim built and had no problems. I then shot an old Walther GSP, a FN 150 and a Hämmerli 208 S as sport pistols in junior class. But I agree that lighter youth pistols in general are a good thing.While Charlie and I don't interact much, I consider him one of my mentors. He helps run a great program at the OTC that we go up and shoot his matches if we can. I'm not really a pistol guy, but I know that the IZH-46 is way too heavy for my younger (<15 years) shooters. We have some of the Tau-7 Jr's and even then, my youngest shooters do the supported thing.2. One or two aspects of what I feel are indirectly addressed quite lucidly by Charles Reed in his explanation of Progressive Position Pistol ...
Well, I would certainly hope so. :-) And thanks for *your* reply, too.So ... all in all, if you were to visit my program and practices, you would feel very comfortable I think. Thx for the reply ... Joel
I have looked up the 4-H Shooting Sports website, so learn a bit. Just FYI, I found a webpage like the following http://www.4-hshootingsports.org/Name_this_sport.php very underwhelming. Ahem. :-)Check out:
http://www.VC4HSS.com
We also hold "special" practices .... this is a photo from a Halloween shoot where they had to dress up & shoot:
http://www.vc4hss.com/Air_Rifle/2007_Re ... ostume.jpg
ABSOLUTELY NOT due to racism on our part.(look at the many young shooters on the nice "Pilk-uns" picture website, and count the absence of black faces e.g.). Why not? Implicit subliminal racism?
From reading all these posts, there is only one solution that comes to mind and that's the fact that clubs will have to invest in electronic targets in order to improve the situation.Mike M. wrote: I'll add that the current rules make RF a pain in the neck to score...shoot a series, go down and score. You spend more time scoring than shooting, unless you have the Suis-Ascor targets. I'd like to see the rules modified to have a full half-course shot before each scoring session, just to speed things up a bit.
But here in the US, it's nearly impossible to train. Target bays are few and far between...I think the nearest to my home is about 400 miles away. And unless you own a personal range, you don't dare buy something and leave it up...the duffers will shoot it to shreds in a weekend or two.
I wish I had an answer. I love RF, but it seems to be in a slow decline.
you have NO IDEA how STINGY american shooters are!$200 a man for a 100 man club
Hi, When you say "shoot a match in 2-3 hours rather than spending all day at the range." are you discussing the match times, or practice times. I know I shoot a Bullseye match in about 5-6 hours (including 30 minutes for lunch). Does an ISSF match take that much longer? Because of the lack of shooting positions available? Most of us mere mortals don't have more than 10 hours a week to reload ammuniiton, dry-fire, and shoot.PaulB wrote: ...
The most popular disciplines at our club are IDPA, Cowboy Action and Conventional High Power Rifle. I think people like them because they don't necessarily take a lot of training and you can come out and shoot a match in 2-3 hours rather than spending all day at the range. If one is going to get moderately good at RF you have got to put a lot of bullets downrange. Plus, for some reason here in the US people seem to want to shoot guns with a bigger bang than .22, even though there is a significant greater cost.