That would certainly be a nice thing to see in each region
The Powers to be are missing a great opportunity to share their opinions about this subject.
Glenn
That would certainly be a nice thing to see in each region
"The Powers to be..."
That's me and you..is it not?
Level the playing field? Jeeeze! I leave here 15 years ago,come back and this same topic? Poor dead horse!
Andy,
Everybody running matches experiences the problems you describe. We started running matches in Harrison in 1991 and have learned a lot in 26 years. Incidentally, our matches are where your's came from. Tawas guys came over and shot and said, "We can do that." I helped them with paperwork forms, etc to get started.
Our matches have now moved to the Isabella County Sportsmans Club near Mt. Pleasant. Send me your email and I will see that you get match schedules. Our first match is the last Saturday in April. Come over, shoot and we can talk. You know Matt Dardas... he's now running them.
The best way to get new shooters is to have a Factory Class. Guys with varmint rifles will shoot if they don't have to compete against Dwight Scott rifles.
I wrote long articles in Precision Shooting about this problem. There's too much on this subject to write and I am no longer getting paid to do so... Call me... 989-386-3932.
I'll try to get over and shoot with you this year as long as you have a Factory Class. My bench guns are gone and I have a Ruger No. 1 in .222 with an 8X Unertl that I will be shooting.
Dick
Stump!!
Aren't you supposed to be on the rimfire page?
Where have you been?
ANNOUNCEMENT:: I hereby nominate Stump Newsome for handicrapper-in-chief.
Sump can take his new M1A and shoot down the target frames. That'll solve it!!
.
In an effort to bring in new shooters how about we have a combo factory and modified class that along with the LV 100? Put them on a rotation after benchrest LV 100. Anymore we, with the lower turnout we finish the 100 yard dat bu about 2:30 pm. This would still finish us on 100 day by about 3:00 pm.
It would give us a chance to sell some of our surplus/older stuff to them especially reloading stuff. On a given shoot if no interest we skip that factory/modified relay. If more interest showed we add a relay to Hv 100.
.
I've probably spent as much time working on this one problem as anyone in the sport for the last 7 years. I've driven over 20,000 miles and attended an average of 18 registered matches for each of the last 10 years... talked with match directors, hundreds of shooters, and had numerous conversations with the leadership from both organizations.
I can't speak for the IBS, but the actual number of registered members in the NBRSA has been extremely stable for the last 3-4 years. It rose from a low around 1200 in 2011 up to its current level (around 1400) over about 2-1/2 years when we started publishing the magazine but growth (about half new shooters and half long-dormant renewals) has plateaued. With our aged demographic, about 20-25 members do pass on every year. So net that against the 200+ growth since 2011 and you have about 350-400 members who are either new or have returned to the sport from a long absence. While we are all entitled to our own opinions, we are not entitled to our own facts. The death of the sport is somewhat exaggerated.
That said, attendance at registered matches is down. I see it at most of the dozen or so ranges that I shoot at regularly. What is evident is that the same 10-16 guys show up at their local haunt all the time, and they travel in a small circuit to support their 'close-by' ranges. What we don't see is out-of-area shooters traveling much these days. The willingness to hit the road is waning.
I've never heard a complaint over the actual fees, be it $70 or the max of $100 for a weekend. I actually feel that the NBRSA ought to review the $50/day maximum allowed because some ranges (Raton in particular) have cost structures that make it very un-profitable to even hold a shoot. As far as fees, the only complaint I've ever heard about match fees was a short stint at Raton several years ago when the Cash Option wasn't optional... it was only $20 extra (not $60 like the Cactus or the East/West) but that match lost maybe a third of its traditional attendees in two years just over the policy of forcing it to be a money shoot. Making money would be the absolute last reason that anyone I know plays this game. If you want to shoot for dough, get a shotgun.
Classes. Handicaps. Divisions. The single best thing about Benchrest is going head-to-head with the world's best, even if it is your first day. You wouldn't be welcome at a pickup basketball game with the Celtics, nor would Michael Jordan be able to just play with a bunch of high-schoolers, but in Benchrest you can do exactly that. Biggest thrill of the career was following Tony at a shoot when I was brand new. One thing I would get behind is an "Out-Of-Class" class -- simply let anyone sit down at any event with whatever they bring (match director approved for safety and facility protection of course) and let them shoot beside the regular competitors. Not ranked against any other shooters, but their targets would get an official score that they could be proud of without being compared to full-on competitive rigs or having their egos bruised by being near the bottom of results page.
The number of ranges is shrinking. A few get shut down, but the biggest culprit is the number of people who are willing to work to keep a range open or put on a shoot. The single biggest enemy of Benchrest is the complacency of the shooters. Look around a match and see how many guys are willing to get off their butts for 5 minutes to go help move the target frames, and you'll see why we have a problem. The same can be said for participation at nearly every level needed to run a national organization. There is a lot of talk, but its damned hard to get someone to take decent pictures or submit an article, or -- heaven-forbid -- show up to the range on work-day just to do some wiring or plumbing or painting or even sweeping.
That said, ...
Six years ago a few guys started a brand new range in Grand Junction. A existing shooting facility, but all new range, new benches, new target frames, a new loading shed. They went from zero to now running 30-40 shooters at nearly every match with new guys joining the fun all the time. At the core of the success are a handful of guys who work hard, not just one guy begging for a little help. The whole sport could learn a lesson from Dan, Tom, Mark, and their gang.
Similarly, in the last 3 years the Yellowstone range in Billings Montana has taken off with a half dozen new local shooters, growing attendance, and a lot of local interest. Ryan is a 30/40-ish guy with fantastic support from his family. Guys his age find the sport because they have a passion for the technicalities of it and for the competition. He runs the matches and puts up with the headaches because he had to be willing to serve if he wanted events to shoot. He is a rare gem, but he shouldn't be. We each need to take it on ourselves to help out.
I'll issue a challenge to everyone involved in the sport. This season stop whining about fees or target crews or attendance or a wobbly bench and crappy loading table. Start pitching in to make you're Match Director's job a little easier. Grab a broom or a hammer or keyboard or a phone or whatever you can to do your part make the events you attend run smoother. Bring the cookies or the iced tea. Show up early, and don't leave until everything is done instead of trying to be the first guy making dust after the last shot is fired.
Having been near the center of the NBRSA for the last several years, I've got a list of tolerable ideas that might actually help grow the sport, but none of them are more important than taking care of our match directors and taking responsibility for our own events.
Rod
Maybe healthcare will cover us benchresters ?
I agree
Maybe healthcare will cover us benchresters ?