2013 Shooting Season recap

2013 was an interesting shooting season for me. While on the one hand, I spent it with one of the best guns I’ve ever had the privilege to shoot, in many ways it was a frustrating year for me as a shooter as my performance fluctuated wildly through the year. It was however, a very good year for my business, which had the interesting side effect of limiting my practice time. It is somewhat ironic, that the company I founded to support my shooting habit has become successful to the point where managing it impedes my shooting habit. However, all that aside let’s take a look at the major matches and milestones from my 2013 shooting season.

March 2013: 10-8 Performance Armorer’s Class
I started my 2013 season with a class, and a good one at that. Spending the year shooting 1911s meant I needed to be up to speed on how to keep those guns running during a season, and the 10-8 class did just that. I strongly recommend this class to anyone who wants to run a 1911 hard.

April 2013: Ben Stoeger USPSA Class
This was the first major shooting I did all season, and it was very helpful in getting me acclimated to the new platform I was running. I did struggle with reloads, something that would plague me in major matches all season, but it did help me increase my speed when shooting and really tune my vision up to the next level.

May 2013: USPSA Single Stack Nationals
This was where the frustration began for me; I went into Single Stack Nationals and did not have the performance I was looking for. I finished 7th in my class (B-class) and 63rd overall. Overall I was happy with my shooting at the match, but frustrated with my stage planning and execution.

May 2013: Bianchi Cup
This was the real disappointment for me. I had actually spent a decent amount of time training up for the Cup, I had my gun and gear all dialed in…and I choked. That was really my most frustrating match. I didn’t shoot well, plain and simple. The Cup is all about shooting, and I shot like crap.

July 2013: Great Plains Sectional Championship
Hey, a match that I sort of did okay at! Honestly, I wasn’t happy with my shooting at this match either, but I somehow managed to win Single Stack. A win is a win even if it’s ugly.

July 2013: ProAm
It’s hard to have feelings about this match one way or the other. I had some good stages, some bad stages, and spent most of the time just wetter than a drowned rat. I wish I could have won my class, but if wishes were fishes something something we’d have a lot of fish.

July 2013: Steel Challenge
I was actually reasonably happy with my performance at Steel Challenge. For the third straight year, I improved my score even if it was just by a second or so. I know that this is a match I need to train hard for, and each year I’ve neglected my training in the run up for the match.

August 2013: Area 3
I finished 4th at this match. I shot well enough to finish fourth, 76% of the GM who won the match and 2nd B-class Single Stack. This was the last USPSA match I shot this season, and also marked the end of the Colt Challenge.

August 2013: Crimson Trace M3GI
This was the most fun match I’ve had all season. I got to shoot machine guns in the dark! I think that I could have shot better, and I also could have prepared my gear better as some of the guns I had weren’t optimal, but honestly this was just a great, fun match.

September 2013: IDPA Nationals
Another year, another 4th Master finish at an IDPA Nationals. Starting in 2012, I finished 4th in CDP at the Indoor Nats, than 4th in SSR at the regular Nats, then 4th in 2013 at the outdoor Nationals again. Switching to SSR right before the match might not have been the smartest idea, but after shooting 10,000 rounds through my Colt I was pretty burnt out on 1911s. I had fun, and more importantly I came back with a renewed sense of purpose.

Nov 2013: IDPA BUG Nationals
It’s hard to analyze my performance objectively. I had some good stages, some bad stages, but shot well enough to grab 2nd Master. More importantly, I had more fun shooting this match than you should be allowed to have with a j-frame, and it made me want to shoot more IDPA and support IDPA next year.

So that’s it for 2013. 11 major events or matches, not counting trade shows like SHOT, NRA, or NASGW. This was in summary probably my frustrating season as a shooter, because I spent most of it trying to get off the plateau as a high B-class/low A-class shooter. I saw some great gains by sticking to one gun for most of the season, but ultimately got burned out shooting that gun. In 2014, I’d like to stick to similar guns, for example all revolvers, but not necessarily just one gun to rule them all.

Filed under: Thinking too far outside the box

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Post World War 2, every major pistol manufacturer was trying to create the new hotness in lightweight sidearms to replace the Colt 1911. Yesterday, we featured a 1911 cast from brass and zinc, proving that nothing is new under the sun. Today, we’re looking at the Colt T4, another attempt to shave weight and create the next fighting gun.

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The lower of the pistol is made from aluminum, and apparently was designed without a trigger guard to save manufacturing costs. The top is a cast piece of steel, and who knows what wonders lurk inside the action. The title card at the Springfield Museum is laconic in its final statement that “none met the Army’s expectations”.

One of the neatest things about touring the Springfield Armory in Massachusetts is you realize just how mature firearms technology is. If you handed an M1 Garand to an infantryman from the Union Army, he’d probably be able to suss out how it works pretty quickly. Similarly, we have been experimenting with lightweight alloys and polymers since we discovered “plastic” was a thing you could use for stuff.

Next week, we’ll feature a rare prototype that was intended to “increase firepower” on the battlefield. Never been done before!

A very unlikely day

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Imagine the setting, you’re a private in the Union Army at the Battle of Invadersburg, preparing to fire on the rebellious Army of Virginia. During the ripple of gunfire, your weapon is suddenly torn from your hands as if by God Himself, and you’re pretty sure that you’re going to die. Looking down, you see the barrel of your trusty Springfield rifle-musket, bent into an impossible shape, with a Confederate musket ball embedded in the barrel.

Three weeks later you die of dysentary.

Stupidity is a luxury

The average generally law abiding citizen of the United States goes through life with a considerably different experience of the world than most human beings through history. Technological innovation, incredible advances in science and engineering, and unprecedented economic prosperity have fundamentally altered the day-to-day existence of the “average” American to such a degree that even the elite of many societies of the past would marvel at the lifestyle we enjoy. We take it for granted that a $300.00 smart phone-linked watch from Samsung bought today is going to come with a higher resolution screen than you could get on the infotainment system of a $200,000.00 Bentley circa 2008 and will have more on-board computing power than the Apollo missions. The medical community is on the verge of being able to implant organs they create with highly advanced 3D printing technology and in the society that has been to the moon and sent satellites that allow us to gaze at the far reaches of space it doesn’t draw much notice. Just another day filled with technological wonders that even a hundred years ago were thought to be the exclusive privilege of God himself.

The advances of our society are magnificent, although sometimes I don’t think we fully understand the consequences these things bring to our lives. The smart phone is a brilliant thing with enormous benefit, but it’s only now several years after they’ve hit the scene that we’re starting to understand the potential downside to walking around with an electronic device that’s capable of tracking our movement, recording audio and video, and streaming our important data all over the place. The most significant unintended consequence of our civilization’s advancement in the long term might be allowing segments of it to completely disconnect from reality. We were provided with an excellent example of this in the furor surrounding Melissa Bachman’s* hunt of a lion in South Africa.

People who eat meat at every meal, wear leather products as fashion, and even upholster their cars and furniture in animal skins are losing their mind that a woman legally visited South Africa, obeyed all of their laws, and successfully hunted an animal that seems to have been bred specifically for hunting. People who celebrate the work of a pop star who seems to have amassed quite a record of sexually abusing children are foaming at the mouth about the supposed moral turpitude of hunting an animal. As I’ve stated before in this column, I’ve actually had the experience of watching someone blathering ridiculously about what sort of psychopathic monsters hunters are because they enjoy killing in between stuffing big hunks of beef into their mouth.

This is only possible in a society where most are completely insulated from the realities of the world. Only in a place where protein is cheap and abundant and presented in a sterile fashion completely devoid of blood will you see someone attempting to lecture others about the morality of hunting. That person didn’t exist in past societies because they’d either die of starvation or because the rest of the village would have beaten them to death just for being annoying. The real world looks like this:

Much of daily life for most of human history has been a struggle for protein. To survive, human beings require certain amino acids that our bodies do not produce on their own. A cow can eat grass and drink water and thanks to their anatomy they can generate all the nutrients they need to sustain life, including those amino acids we can’t produce. We cannot replicate this feat by eating grass…so we kill and eat the cow. Simple, really. Circle of life. You have to need protein pretty darn bad if you’re willing to try and bluff a pride of lions off of a kill long enough to steal some of it for yourself when you’re armed with some pointed sticks. Most who are bloviating about the immorality of hunting can do so only because they’ll never actually experience the kind of life-or-death need the guys taking meat from lions live with day to day.

The whiners also don’t seem to realize that legal, controlled hunting provides real benefit to the hunted species. In the United States a number of animals have been saved from extinction by the conservation work of hunters. Ducks Unlimited was founded by a bunch of duck hunters to help protect waterfowl populations which were decimated during the Dust Bowl. They worked to preserve and improve habitat, typically recruiting the assistance of local farmers in the effort rather than just attempting the big inefficient stick of government regulation. The National Wild Turkey Federation was founded for similar reasons, and their work with wildlife officials at the state level and land owners has helped preserve and increase wild turkey populations.

In fact, most wild life conservation that happens in the United States and much of the world is funded by hunting. Not just in the license fees paid by hunters, but also excise taxes levied on firearms, ammunition, and similar gear. In the Bachman controversy, even people who have professed hatred and loathing for the killing of big cats have been forced to admit that hunting and the revenue it brings in is necessary to fund habitat conservation, manage lion populations, and prevent poaching.

Meanwhile if you look at how most self-labeled animal “rights” or protection groups spend their money, you’ll see that the vast majority of it goes into lobbying and lawsuits, trying to pass laws and enact policies from the comfort of K street rather than being out in the field working with farmers to make practical, inexpensive modifications to their equipment to help keep ducks from being injured or killed when they are foraging. Nevertheless, people who say that Ms. Bachman should be killed (are you KIDDING ME?) for legally taking a lion bred specifically for hunting (which is totally different than the cow they ate which was bred specifically for food because…well…shutup.) will give money to organizations that accomplish nothing of value beyond paying lobbyists and euthanizing a whole bunch of animals.

You know that, right? That PETA kills more cute fuzzy animals than just about anyone else on earth? True story, bro.

…but, of course, all of that is reality. Actual fact. As such it’s not going to really enter the conversation with the latte-sipping crowd who has never gotten their hands dirty in the effort to sustain their own life.

That, really, is the downside of modern society. We have so much more than our ancestors that it’s entirely possible for people to unplug from the sometimes unpleasant realities of the world. They can get the necessities of life without actually having to work for them. They can enjoy fruit and vegetables without actually having to shovel any manure to fertilize crops. They can enjoy steak or bacon without ever having to lift a blade to gut and skin an animal they killed. They can obtain warmth without ever having had to swing an axe, drill a well, or push a coal cart. They can live in relative peace and safety without ever having had to shoulder a weapon to provide that security.

Instead of realizing this and being thankful like a normal well adjusted person would, some among us turn into entitled little ***CENSORED*** who spend all their time lecturing others about a world they’ve never actually experienced in any meaningful way. They’re reveling in the greatest luxury provided by modern society…stupidity. A chunk of the population has the luxury of being stupid on these matters because there are enough smart, dedicated people around doing necessary and important things to keep Darwin at bay.

You can’t be stupid and survive in a society where taking food from lions is necessary to eat…but, as this Bachman controversy shows, you can be dumber than a bag of hammers in western society without suffering any real penalty for it. At least in the short term.

The long term consequences of a sizeable chunk of the population disconnecting from reality and luxuriating in stupidity to levels of Corinthian excess probably aren’t favorable for preserving a society which can tolerate stupidity. Those posting pictures of lion cubs and calling someone a murderer for shooting a farmed lion might want to engage their brains for once and ponder the significance of that.

* Credit to Tam for the correction. And despite what some may say, no, she is not my long lost twin sister.

 

Competition Revolver line-up

Here’s a look at the revolvers I’ll be shooting in 2014 for competition. I have different guns for different games, because each gun is set up for a different purpose.

Bianchi Cup
For Bianchi Cup, I’ll be running a Ruger Security Six that’s been worked over by Clark Custom Guns. The Six has a target action job, a bobbed hammer, and has had the single action notch removed from the gun as well. It’s currently wearing a set of Pachy grips, but those will likely get changed out for Hogue wood stocks that are “custom enhanced” with skateboard tape for that extra classy effect.

Clark Custom Security Six (800x600)

The Clark Security Six has also been cut for moonclips for ease of ammo management during the Cup, and also slightly more reliable ignition. The trigger is heavier than I’d probably like, but I did request that it be left heavy to guarantee reliable ignition. I have nightmares about getting a light hammer strike on the Barricades and I don’t want that to happen with a six shooter.

IDPA
For IDPA, I’m going to keep using my trusty Ruger GP100. It probably needs a spring change, and I recently swapped out the lasergrips for some excellent checkered Altamont stocks. The Altamonts use the classic GP100 grip profile, which gives me more clearance for speedloaders. However, the Altamont grips are checkered both on the rubber and on the wood inserts, making the gun a lot grippier than the factory Ruger panels. I like this combo quite a bit. The GP100 is built like a tank and will hold up to another season of training pretty well. It’s running around 10,000 rounds to date, so it might be time for some small parts to come and go in this gun.

USPSA
??????????????????????????????? In all seriousness, I have no idea what I’m going to shoot in USPSA, or if I’m going to shoot much USPSA this year. My schedule is pretty packed already, and it’s not even December yet. Already on the calendar for next year are the IDPA Indoor Nationals, IDPA Nationals, NRA Action Pistol World Shoot, and Bianchi Cup. I’m going to try and pop down to Cali and shoot the West Coast Steel Championships, so I think for that I’d want a 7 or 8 shot gun, and Ruger doesn’t make one. I could shoot it with my GP100 or one of the Security Sixes if I was feeling especially brave. Truth is, I’ve not thought much about USPSA in 2014. I suppose I could get a Redhawk for USPSA and have it cut for moonclips and shoot .44 Special like a sir.

ICORE
I have however thought about ICORE. I want to shoot Classic division, and I want to shoot it with my other Security Six which I’m in the process of tuning up right now.

2014 is going to be an excellent season. Later this week I’ll also have a match recap of my 2013 season and look back on what I shot, how I shot, and how I’m going to train up for next season.

Gun Discrimination is Hiding All Around Us

20131120-102655.jpgI often receive emails from gun people who feel alone in their experiences and want advice or reassurance. Having put myself out there as a consummate beginner for the last two-plus years, I usually hear about classes gone wrong or issues females have had, but every now and then I hear something different. A few months ago I wrote about my experience with Google Ads and how they refused to place ads on my site because ArmedCandy advocated the ownership of firearms.

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