Osage Orange Sharpshooters

April 2008 Newsletter

2008 Schedule

Saturday Activites at Dalton Range (Bois d’Arc MO) and Aim-Rite Range (Miller MO)

Date Time Range Activity
Feb. 16 8:00 am Dalton Range Fun Shoot
Mar. 1 9:00 am Aim-Rite Range Work Day
Mar. 8 8:00 am Dalton Range Beginners Clinic
Mar. 9 1:00 pm Aim-Rite Range 30 Round Match
Mar. 15 8:00 am Dalton Range Beginners 30 Round Match
Apr. 12 8:00 am Dalton Range Any Rifle Match
Apr. 19 1:00 pm Aim-Rite Range 30 Round Match
May. 10 8:00 am Dalton Range JCG Match $$$
May. 24 8:00 am Dalton Range Springfield Match $$$
Jun. 7 8:00 am Dalton Range Vintage Springfield Match $$$
Jun. 28 10:00 am Aim-Rite Range 30 Round Match and Club Picnic
Jul. 19 8:00 am Dalton Range Carbine Match $$$
Aug. 16 8:00 am Dalton Range Rimfire Sporter Match
Sep. 13 8:00 am Dalton Range Any Rifle Match
Oct. 18 8:00 am Dalton Range JCG Match $$$

Notes for Schedule (Some changes from January)

  1. All activities except for the March 9 date are Saturdays.
  2. The symbols ‘$$’ indicate an entry fee will be charged and ammunition will be issued to all competitors.
  3. All matches at the Dalton Range shoot the CMP Garand-Springfield-Military Bolt Rifle (G-S-M) ‘B’ course of fire (5 sighters and 50 rounds for record), except March 15, July 19, and August 16.
  4. All matches at the Aim Rite range are 30 rd. matches, plus 5 sighters. The Aim Rite matches are not registered with the CMP. Please note that the time varies somewhat on these dates, and one of them is a Sunday. Entry fee will be $5.
  5. The JCG matches in May and October may fill to capacity. Pre-registration is advised (see web page for form). All other matches are same-day registration.
  6. The activities on March 8 are classroom activities only.
  7. Ammunition available at cost to all members for personal use at the matches. GI .30-06 ($0.25 per round), .22 Aguila Super Extra ($2.00/50; $17/500). A limited supply of .223 Black Hills/68gr. Hornaday ($0.35 per round) is also available.
  8. Juniors (aged 19 or under) may shoot for free, including ammunition

Scheduling Problems - PLEASE NOTE

Last month’s newsletter had the wrong date for the May 10 John C. Garand match. It is, in fact, on May 10, 2008.

Also, the Dalton Range sends out a newsletter that many of you get, and they list our matches in it by name. But apparently when I talked to them in January, our schedule was not firm, because the names of the matches in the Dalton Range newsletter are incorrect. So, to be more specific than the above short description, here is a listing of our Dalton Range matches:

April 12th Any Rifle Match being run by John C. Garand “B” rules. We will run a JCG match of 55 rounds. You may shoot any other rifle you want, but ONLY JCG-legal rifles (M1, Carbine, M1917, 1903/A3, Johnson, Krag) qualify for prizes, which will be medals given according to CMP achievement values. If enough “other” rifles are shot (more than 4 in a particular type such as AR-15 or Vintage Military Bolt Rifles (Mausers, Enfields, or even a Remington Model 700 for that matter, and I’ll even let in an SKS or AK) then we’ll give a cash prize in that category, but you won’t have your score submitted to the CMP. Everybody brings their own ammunition.

May 10th JCG entry fee, ammo issued. Loaner rifles available.

May 24th Springfield match entry fee, ammo issued. Only Springfield 03 or 03A3 allowed. Medals given. LOANER RIFLES AVAILABLE. Do not stay home because you don’t own one of these, this is your chance to test-drive a loaner.

June 7th Vintage Bolt Rifle/Springfield match, entry fee, ammo issued for .30-06 rifles only. Loaner rifles available. Vintage bolt rifles such as the Mausers and Enfields compete in one category, Springfields in another. Medals.

July 19th Carbine Match entry fee, ammo issued. LOANER RIFLES AVAILABLE. Do not stay home etc.

Aug 16 Rimfire Sporter match. .22 caliber rifles only. Scopes are legal for this match, and of course iron sights are also. Bring your own ammo.

Sept. 13th same as April 12.

Oct. 18th same as May 10.

Other Matches of Interest

April 5, Saturday, at 8:30AM the Joplin club and Les Welch will hold a smallbore prone match. This consists of 160 shots, slow fire, from the prone position at 50 yards, 50 meters, and 100 yards, with unlimited numbers of sighting shots. Les has a nice group of junior shooters, and a bunch of us old guys will shoot too. Bring your normal shooting gear, a .22, and 300 rounds of ammo. Iron sights only.

April 6, Sunday, is the first match at the Springfield Benchrest Club in Billings, run by our own Steve Milholland. The format is exactly the same as we run on a typical Saturday morning (55 shot John Garand match rules), but you may shoot any rifle you wish. Be there by 12:30 or 12:45 to register.

April 12, Saturday, is our normal match (see previous description).

April 19, Saturday, at 1pm we have another 30 shot match at the Aim Rite range in Miller. Any rifle is allowed. Cash prizes.

April 20, Sunday, 8:30am is the monthly 88 shot highpower match in Joplin.

April 26, Sunday, the Joplin club and Les Welch are running a 30 shot John Garand match.

April is full. Real full.

Joplin Smallbore

Internationally, smallbore prone is a separate shooting discipline full of the most exacting, precise, equipment-conscious people in the world. But that doesn’t describe most of the group of folks who will line up April 5, Saturday morning in Joplin. I hope you will be one of these folks. This match is the very best practice you can find for prone shooting. You shoot a lot of shots, the targets are very challenging, and at 100 yards the wind is a factor that you have to watch for. The Joplin smallbore range is an excellent facility, the people running and attending the match are all nice people, and it is one of the best places I can recommend to learn about belly shooting. Be there! Do you want to borrow a .22? I have 2 that will work (one’s a Remington 40x), and the club has 3 Mossberg 44 rifles. That’s 5 .22 rifles I can loan out for this match. And the club has ammunition (good ammunition!) that I can sell you for $20 a brick of 500. As I said, there’s no excuse. If you want to polish your prone shooting skills (and everybody needs to), here’s a 160 shot match to do it. Call me for a ride, to reserve a rifle, or to buy ammo: My phone is 862-8618

Missouri Regional Marshall MO, Bucksnort Rifle Club, May 3rd and 4th

Most of you have heard me talk-up the team match at the Bucksnort range on Sunday, the 4th of May. If you want to shoot with your fellow Osage Orange Sharpshooters in a real across the course match, this is the best place to start. Nobody will ride your rear end, nobody will complain, and everybody will be happy to see you. Really. What more can you ask for? ). Remember the old saying: “If you think you want to try something, don’t wait another year to get more experience; you’ll only be another year older when you finally do try it.”

The entry fee is $7.50, payable on Sunday morning. We’ll have 4 man teams shooting a 50 shot match (10 standing at 200 yards, 10 rapid sitting at 200 yards, 10 rapid prone at 300 yards, and 20 slow prone at 600 yards).

Don’t have confidence in your rifle and ammunition? We’ll loan you a match-ready AR-15 and sell you the ammo at cost (about 25 cents per round. We will coach you through every shot in the match and you can’t get a better offer.

One thing I can highly recommend is to come to the Bucksnort range on Friday to practice. They generally run one practice match in the morning and one in the afternoon, plus there is time to simply go to one of the yardlines and zero in your rifle. There is no cost for any of this. I usually drive up in the morning getting to Sedalia about 11am, and I hit the Sierra plant and buy some bullets. Then I get in on the afternoon practice match as well as some additional 600 yard or 300 yard shooting if I feel like it. If you’ve got the time, Friday is a great day to be on the range, and I’d be happy to coach you through some zeroing sessions. Please call or email if you plan on attending Friday for an introduction to the Bucksnort range (you don’t even have to be registered for the match if you just want to come shoot on Friday).

If you want to shoot on Satuday, you will have to send $36 to Dale Strannigan, C-33, Lake Lotawana, MO 64086. Sunday, just show up and pay me. Firing commences at 7:30 both days, so be there by 6:45 or so, no matter whether it’s Saturday or Sunday

OOS Web Page

Kent Ward has established a new web page for us: http://www.osageorangesharpshooters.com/. Right now we have the schedule up, and there’s more to come. Be sure to let Kent know about your ideas as well as how much you like the page.

Additional Comments on Air Rifles and Practice

You may know that I’ve become addicted to air rifles now. It’s a good thing that I didn’t discover these things before I discovered highpower, or I’d never have made it to this game.

But air rifles are something else. They and their ammunition are relatively cheap, you can shoot them in your house or garage, and you can shoot hundreds of rounds a day or week with little noticeable impact on your wallet, shoulder, or marriage.

For the past two years I have been using a Daisy 853 to practice my standing position in the basement using the 5 Meter BB Gun Target at about 43 feet (the maximum distance in my basement, corner to corner). At that distance, the BB gun target looks just like our targets do at 100 yards. I put on my coat and do everything as if I am shooting in a match. It has helped me quite a bit. I also bought a Daisy 888 CO2 rifle and a Walther LGR (the first single stroke pneumatic rifle to win the Olympic gold). Some of you saw at the clinic how I converted a Daisy 888 to a virtual AR-15 air rifle�man is that thing fun to shoot.

This winter a few of us have started a different game. We shoot at animal silhouettes at 10 yards, without a shooting coat. Shooting without a coat takes away the main crutch that we lean on in the standing position. For a while you feel absolutely naked, and the gun muzzle seems to wobble from New York to San Francisco. But ever so gradually you start to learn how to keep the muzzle steady, how to squeeze the trigger, and how to make both coincide with the correct sight picture. It is the best learning experience I have ever seen for offhand shooting.

The advantages are twofold, first, as I said, you learn to shoot without any aids such as a coat. When you finally do put on the coat, it feels like you rested the rifle on a bench! This has got to help. Also, shooting at a silhouette takes some of the fussiness out of the game. If you just barely graze the animal, it’s a hit (in our game). We don’t worry about scoring rings, just whether or not we hit it. This is so much easier on your mind that you can’t believe it. The basic thought process is: just hit the black. That same thought process transfers easily into our highpower game if you can hit black every time, you will have a good score.

Frankly folks, I thought I had topped out as a shooter last year. As I age, it is unlikely that my rapid fire or 600 yard scores will go anyplace but lower, and my standing scores have never been very good no matter how much I work on them. As I said, 2 years of work with the air rifle helped some, but I still make very stupid mistakes shooting offhand in the big matches, and with age creeping up, it’s hard to be too hopeful about the future. Mental mistakes will kill you, and you are starting to decline physically, it looks grim. Until now.

To begin with, shooting without the coat was sheer terror. My mind was screaming either don’t shoot now or yank the trigger hurry, hurry, hurry. There wasn’t much in between. The muzzle wobble is so fast and so extreme you wonder how anyone ever hit anything standing up (and I still can’t shoot using a scope standing for these same reasons). The only solution to your howling anxiety is to return to the basics: establish a good position, acquire the sight picture, accept your wobble area, focus on the front sight, and squeeze the trigger without disturbing the sights. Each one of these steps took me weeks to refine this winter. I didn’t work on them scientifically or in the order I write about them here. Rather, as I became more and more agitated with myself for missing targets, I kept trying to figure out what to do better. Sometimes I’d try this, sometimes that, sometimes another thing. But one by one I discovered the things I needed to do to make things work out. Of course, the things I discovered are the simple basics of offhand shooting.

The very first thing you learn is to accept your wobble area. The only other alternative is to shoot skeet, which is to say to yank the trigger as the animal goes wobbling by. This doesn’t work, and I’ve proven that hundreds of times this winter. Accepting your wobble area does not mean to just put the rifle up and pull the trigger. Rather it means trying your best to hold the sight picture on target while you pull the trigger, knowing that there will be some oscillation, and if the wobble is too great you hold up your trigger pull. It’s easy to write and hard to do. Many, many times the trigger breaks just as you decide to hold up, and the shot goes way off. Tough. You learn to hold tighter and you learn trigger control. Les Welch has learned to shoot quickly. I have learned to shoot slowly. Different strokes for different folks.

Establishing a good position took weeks. Without a coat I couldn’t anchor the rifle in the nice rubber pads, and it kept slipping. My head kept finding different places on the stock, and it was a mess. Little by little I discovered ways to make myself more comfortable with less tension on my body so that I could hold the rifle on target for longer periods of time, thus allowing refinement of sight picture and wobble as well as a better, smoother trigger pull.

Trigger pull quickly showed itself to be a problem. I zeroed my rifle from the bench and then noticed in the offhand that a lot of shots I called good were off to one side or the other. This can only be trigger pull. I’m pretty good at calling my shot from the impression I get of the sight picture just as the shot breaks. When a shot is off my call it means either that it’s a malfunctioning gun or ammo (extremely rare) or I have executed something incorrectly. Usually it is the trigger pull disturbing the sights. In a couple of nights I changed my trigger finger orientation, and now I have a much smoother pull with fewer off-call shots. For this alone I am grateful to the air rifle. I would never have discovered my new trigger pull without it.

Finally, something we all struggle with but never admit is that we cheat on our sight picture. By that I mean that we look at the target rather than the front sight. We don’t intend to, but it happens. Well, once you can shoot 40-50 shots a night, 7 nights a week, you start to see all these little mistakes, and it became clear to me that many of my bad shots were because I was focusing on the target, not the front sight post. You simply cannot believe how much better I shoot when I make a concerted effort to focus on the front sight. We all say it, we teach it, and we believe it to be true. But it amazed me how much my eyes and brain wanted to cheat.

In a nutshell, shooting a lot of air rifle without a coat develops a certain calmness in your mind, and that calmness is necessary for you to execute all the steps necessary to a good offhand shot. Anxiety and pressure lead to bad shots, whereas relaxation and focus lead to good shots. Many experienced shooters refer to the standing position as awfulhand rather than offhand. More-experienced shooters caution never to refer to your shooting in a negative fashion because it can become a self-fulfilling prophecy in your head. The standing position is about 90 percent mental concentration, and the air rifle allows you to develop and practice that concentration. With thousands or rounds of practice you learn to put all that self-doubt and indecisiveness aside, because with a few months you can shoot as many rounds as in 10 years of center-fire shooting. That builds tremendous confidence; practice makes perfect.

This winter I’ve shot over 5,000 pellets. It’s all been fun (much more fun than dry firing), and it’s all been an education. For the first time ever I am just champing at the bit to get to a big match and shoot offhand.

What a difference an air rifle can make. If you want to improve, get an air rifle and shoot it.

Any questions?? Contact… Bill Corcoran (417) 862-861 or send me an email