Day at the range with my granddaughter...FUN!

fiasconva

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I took my 16 yr old granddaughter to the range today. She had never shot nor even held a handgun before and we have another convert. After the short teaching session on safety, muzzle control, how to hold, etc we took my new Victory and a couple others to the range. It took a while to get everything right because she does some things righty and some things lefty. After the trial and error experimenting she finally decided shooting left-handed with the left-dominate eye was the way to go. She did really well, shot the Victory, my old H&R 922, the my M&P9. Didn't like the 9mm but loved the Victory. Of course, we saved the targets so she could show them off to her friends and family. It was a great day and she is already planning our next session. This was one of the best days I've had in a long time. :D
 
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It's always a blast to bring a person new to shooting to the range the first time, but it is especially fun to do it with kids. I remember the first time my daughter went to the range. It was a class outing (private school) around the 4th grade or so and I brought my Uzi and a Beretta 92 and my 27-2 with some 38 Specials. There were a couple other parents that came that brought some 22 pistols and rifles and after going over safety procedures we started showing the kids how to shoot and everyone had a great time!
 
I took my 16 yr old granddaughter to the range today. She had never shot nor even held a handgun before and we have another convert. After the short teaching session on safety, muzzle control, how to hold, etc we took my new Victory and a couple others to the range. It took a while to get everything right because she does some things righty and some things lefty. After the trial and error experimenting she finally decided shooting left-handed with the left-dominate eye was the way to go. She did really well, shot the Victory, my old H&R 922, the my M&P9. Didn't like the 9mm but loved the Victory. Of course, we saved the targets so she could show them off to her friends and family. It was a great day and she is already planning our next session. This was one of the best days I've had in a long time. :D

And she has impeccable taste! Always good to hear about a new generation getting out there and burning powder.

I also try to bring a variety of different firearms when I'm introducing someone to the sport, sometimes I feel like Easy Andy The Traveling Salesman.

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Outstanding to bring another shooter into the fold.
She will enjoy it for life.


Chuck
 
Small world. We took my grandson and granddaughter, 15 and 13, to the range this afternoon, both new to shooting. They started with the 10-22, then moved on to the handguns, Model 18 .22, the Glock 19 in 9 mm., the old Model 64 in .38, and then he was too cold. She wasn't. After the first magazine of .45 ACP out of the Colt 1911, she kept going until it was almost dark, kept asking for one more magazine. When I asked her which was her favorite, she answered "The .45." Best part was that they both listened closely and obeyed all the safety rules and commands. A great day.
 
My daughter wasn't much into shooting, but knows how. She kept a .357 for protection as a teen when I had to be away at night.


Her brother got some instruction from me, but I think he was more impressed when Jo Anne Hall coached him in her back yard one afternoon, on using the Colt .45 auto.


If you can't place her, she was both a Dallas Cowboys cheerleader and the world champion in IPSC competition, ladies division.


Her then-husband was a friend of my pharmacist, and I had an assignment to write about her for the Colt Handgunning Annual.


If Jo Anne sees this, I want her to know that the skills she taught my young son helped him in battle in Iraq, years later.
I think she taught him more pistolcraft in one day than the Army did. And she was a lot easier on the male eye than are Army instructors.


My daughter came, too, but was more interested in playing with the Hall poodle than in learning to operate a .45 gracefully, with great speed.


My own parents didn't like my interest in guns, although my father took me hunting occasionally, I think to impress his business partners. He did buy me a few guns, but they came with no instruction, other than him being worried that I not shoot anyone accidentally.Gun-wise, I was "raised" by men like Jim Corbett, Dr. Roy Chapman Andrews, and a host of well known gun writers. Their books were good instruction, and as an adult, I met a number of those writers in person.
They were far better mentors than were the rock singers and athletes that most of my boyhood friends adored.


I've been very pleased by my son's continuing interest in firearms, knives, and binoculars. And he has a couple of swords, too, and knows quite a bit about ancient warfare, studying Roman and Viking tactics. He wrote an item on the Battle of Hastings that appeared on an arms and armour site.


He and his wife reproduced recently, a son, and I think this lad will grow up learning about both guns and history. I suspect that he'll shoot his first deer by age 10 or 12. And know how to cook it. His dad is also an accomplished amateur cook, who knows wine pretty well, too.
 
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She's already made plans for us to go again on Tuesday. She's even going to let her dad, who is another rookie, go along with us. Nice of her, isn't it?:)
 
Always good to make a convert.

My daughter and her husband aren't especially anti-gun, just have no interest in them. Their kids haven't learned to shoot.

My son's boys, almost eighteen, fifteen and twelve, are all proficient with handguns, rifles and shotguns. The older two are duck and goose hunters, and the eldest is hoping to get a deer this Monday. They eat venison much of the year as it is.
 

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