Begone with your new fangled ideas..... practical indeed sir



Moderator: dromia
Civilian Service Rifle is alive and kicking at Bisley and seems to be going from strength to strength. As it is based around courses of fire as laid down in PAM20 there is plenty of fire and movement. The clue is in the discipline name.Chuck wrote:What...shoot and MOVE...oh no, how uncivilised.........No, you MUST stay in your fixed position and do it the way we have always done it.
Begone with your new fangled ideas..... practical indeed sir![]()
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:lol: :lol:
Is that still going? I first shot Martini action .22 with them at the range on the adjacent school grounds in 1981.dave_303 wrote:Something I've notice over the years, particularly in the .22 world, .22TR is dying, my primary rifle club in Somerset is now predominately .22 Benchrest or Sporting/gallery rifle. The shooting society at the University of Kent is entirely Sport/Gallery rifle, with some clay shooting, and looking to some service rifle shooting at Bisley and Hythe
All those comps look like a lot of funTJC wrote:CSR is going from strength to strength because it is more dynamic than F-Class and that's what the kids want. However, i think it could even accelerate that growth by looking at how this discipline has progressed in the US. The movement in CSR is predictable, square range based and routine. Let's be honest, it isn't exactly testing and once you've done it a couple of times it actually gets fairly boring. It is the variety and lack of routine that keeps people interested and that is what CSR is missing (but it is all we have). I know there are some good people running CSR but it isn't their full-time occupation and I do think each area of the sport should have a full-time Director who has a budget and a target to grow that discipline.
The US will always offer more and better than we can enjoy but there are lessons to be learned and some of the competitions below are for the best in class. They need not be this sophisticated, this expensive, this hard-core because these are the pinnacle of this area of the sport but the prizes and sponsorship at stake reflects the massive appeal of this sport and the grass roots interest.
All I am saying is what we have is fine...as you point out with CSR...but the rest of the world is moving forwards and UK shooting needs to as well. We need to grow the sport and that means encouraging younger members. I hate to admit it but the Americans have got it right, that's why shooting is experiencing a massive boom at a time of economic harship.
These aren't for everyone but they are massive fun imho.
Gap Grind - http://kmprecisionrifletraining.com/com ... -grind-pg/
Black Hat - http://www.bhtcorps.com/wp/?page_id=59
Thunderbeast Challenge - http://competition-dynamics.com/thunder ... enge-2012/
Score Hi - http://www.scorehi.com/SHTRC2011/
Rocky Mountain 3 Gun - http://www.rm3g.com/
Ruger Rimfire - http://www.ruger.com/micros/rugerRimfire/index.html
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