NRA Adventure Camp

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4v50 Gary

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Adventure Camp is like Appleseed on Steroids. We have 56 kids per group the camp lasts eleven full days. For the most part they sleep in cabins and have youth counselors who are assisted by grads of the program who are themselves counselors in training.

Students are divided into four groups and there are over four shooting disciplines (rifle, shotgun, pistol and muzzle loader) besides archery, knot tying, tent raising, fire starting, outdoor cooking, etc. taught at Adventure Camp. Other activities include swimming, outdoor survival, hunter education, hunting ethics, tracking (blood trail), wildlife management and compass reading. The attendees IMO represent some of the finest youth in America. They are attentive, eager to learn, are not glued to their smart phones or music devices, respectful, behaved and wear their pants up and hats straight.

There are instructors for each and I and another are the ML instructors. Last night We had two Savage .308 rifles (one Leupold scope and the other Nightforce) sighted in at 1100 yards. We divided our group into two and I had seven on one rifle. While six students watched, I coached and a student counselor (graduate of Adventure Camp) played spotter. We got each of our kid to hit this huge white metallic buffalo at over 1k yards. The students are offered to keep their cartridge case (no one turns that down). It is so rewarding to see the smiles on their faces when they are told they hit it.

With respects to muzzle loading, they are given a very brief history of muzzle loading, the various projectiles and the types of powders or propellants. Everything is shot off hand. The first ten are at 25 yards against paper. The next five are 25 yards against metallic chicken silhouettes, then five at prairie dog silhouettes at 50 yards and finally five a steel buffaloes at 100 yards. Their ML are loaded with 50 grains of some black powder substitute and it is upped to 70 grains for the buffaloes. Kids are taught the saying, "Powder, patch and ball or it won't shoot at all." During lag times, I question the kids on simple things like who wrote the Declaration of Independence (and not, it's not George Washington), the expected rate of fire for a Revolutionary War soldier, safety rules, etc. The ones who answer right are given an empty percussion cap tin and told to use it to make char cloth. When their course of fire is over, they are instructed on how to clean their muzzle loaders.

The program and Whittington has many sponsors (We're staying in the Leupold Cabin) and many of our firearms have been donated by the industry. The muzzle loaders are from Thompson Center (Hawkens) and Lyman (Great Plains). Bench Mark knives are given to the instructors, counselors, counselors-in-training AND the students who are encouraged to carry them during their stay here.

Some of the things we try to instill is an appreciation of our heritage. These kids are the future of this country and the lessons they learn here at Whittington should serve them through their lives.




Some of the classes the kiddies attend sound fun and I'd like to attend myself. However, they keep the instructors busy too and our classes are often concurrent with each others. Darn. I wish I had gone when I was a kid.
 
That sounds great! And ya I would've like to go to something like that as a kid as well.

Not to get political but imagine how naive an anti-gunner will look to these young adults entering college that have grown up around shooting and attended these camps.

Awesome job!
 
What ages?

How much?

Will it be offered next summer?

Do the kids get NRA certification in each field?

Co-ed?

Electronics free ? No internet access for students?

Talk to us.

-kBob
 
Wow if I ever get a chance to have a second childhood, I would definitely plan on going there!
 
The NRA Whittington Center is truly a wondrous place. Anybody who shoots (or even if you don't) should visit sometime. We spend every Memorial Day weekend there with family, shooting, eating and doing family stuff.

The family membership is about $50 per year, with no waiting list, or you can pay a $15 per day range fee. And it's open to the public, no NRA membership required. Housing is very nice and very affordable (IIRC, $22 per person per night, double occupancy).

www.nrawc.org
 
Yesterday we had our third group of kids at the range shooting at the White Buffalo. Before they shot, I told them that everyone we had this week were able to hit it and none of them will disappoint us or ruin our record of success. One had problems and I could see he was growing frustrated (poor cheek weld) and he was coached onto the target. On his tenth and final bullet, he hit it. Big grin (and a lot of relief). None of our kids disappointed us yesterday and they all hit the buffalo. So did I. Afterward, we assembled the kids beneath the plywood sign that is cut out like the steel buffalo. The sign tells the distance and dimensions of the buffalo.

Today we have our last group of kids (there are four groups). It will be all day with them (8 am to 9 pm). The one bad thing about these evening events is the skeeters are out. It's amazing that none of the kids have been abducted by them.

Ages: 12 to 17.
How much: I'm told $1100 (it's worth it for the quality of instruction they receive. Instructors are paid pennies and we'd make more money flipping burgers at McDonalds).
co-ed: yes (but they sleep in separate cabins and when camping (3 days) they sleep in separate tents).
Electronics: cell phone works good and in the cafeteria (Gunslingers or what I derisively call Mudslingers) has internet. Internet does not reach the cabin or campground areas.

BTW, I'd love to spend some time with other instructors to see what they can teach me. The rifle, archery, handgun and we muzzle loader instructors feel everything we teach is undone by the shotgun class.
 
Your last comment hits home. I spent my early youth with only a shotgun. As I became accustomed to rifles, my shotgunning skills deteriorated to nil. They are indeed very different skill sets.

Anyway, the camp sounds like it would be the highlight of a kids summer!
 
We have one kid with a big ego. He had all these NRA rockers for shooting and told us he shot expert this and that. It didn't show at the range and I jokingly threatened to strip him of his rockers.

During lunch, a Whittington Van drives up and delivers bag lunches and water to us. Often times it contains a meat sandwich and a pre-packaged peanut butter and jelly sandwich. Since I don't care for factory made sandwiches, I announce, "The prize is a peanut butter sandwich." The sandwich is held aloft for all to see. "Show of hands, who can tell me what the purpose of the Second Amendment is?" Most kids know what it is, but don't know why. I then enter a dialogue explaining how it is there to reserve in The People the power to overthrow a tyranny. The kids are stunned by this revelation. The sandwich is then given to the winner and we discuss it some more. Later, I'll announce, "The prize is an apple. Who can tell me the loading procedure of a muzzle loader?" It's a good way to tell if the kids listened to what we had to tell them (it's powder, patch and ball or it won't shoot at all).

BTW, I once asked, "What is the velocity of an unladen swallow?" The only person who knew (and wasn't qualified to win) was a counselor-in-training.
 
No kids were eaten last night by the bears or mountain lions.

Accompanied a small group of kids on a trail walk. They carry one scoped bolt action rifle (Ruger M77 in .223) and must practice hunter safety (crossing a fence alone and with someone else), various carrying positions, various shooting stances. It's a two mile hike in which they are to spot game (wood backed pictures of various critters); some of which they can shoot (coyote, antelope, stag deers but not does, javelinas, bear and some that they can't shoot but must spot like doves, squirrels, rabbits, turkeys, donkey and elephant, sasquatch and rattlesnake). It's a two mile hike up the hills and down. It was fun and takes about 1 hr and 20 minutes. Their instructors stood by with .308 rifles to protect the kids if a bear or cat showed up (and wouldn't run away).

Other kids got to shoot archery (flying disks), steel challenge (five plates and a turkey) with handguns and tomahawk throwing. They must cook their own breakfast, lunch and dinner.

At night they have story telling by a campfire.
 
By the way, are you asking about an African or European swallow?

Yeah, I'm a sucker for anything with John Cleese. Or Monty Python in general.

And I might consider lying about my age to get into this summer camp. Don't let the beard and wrinkles fool you, I'm only 14. LOL
 
By the way, are you asking about an African or European swallow?

I don't know.

More details on the walk. The purpose of the walk is to test the camper on what they have learned during the week. Each has a "hunting license" which tells them what "game" they may harvest. Anything not on the license may not be shot at and this includes the sasquatch (drawing based on the famous image of the walking sasquatch). The camper will receive demerits for shooting anything not on their license. Along the walk they are rated on the various carry methods they were shown (shoulder carry, elbow, cradle, two handed and trail) and the various shooting positions (sitting, prone, off hand).

As the muzzle loading instructor, I only accompanied the campers as an observer. Their counselor is keeping track of their score. I did comment to them that they were too noisy (didn't pick up their feet when they walked, kicked rocks and stepped on sticks that snapped) and didn't scan the area as they walked (some were very good).
 
Got the OK from Whittington to set up an Adventure Camp kiddie trail walk with their smokepoles. Logistics are a nightmare. I don't want the kids to be loading with their ramrods (we have steel rods with brass muzzle protectors) and don't want them traipsing through the woods with an extra rod and no possibles bag. Additionally, when we taught them, they loaded from a bench that had a notch so they didn't have muzzles pointed at their heads. We don't want them to load in the field without some safety built in. So, methinks we'll have shooting stations and a couple of tables from which they could load from. For a notch on a folding table, I'll get some wood and cut a v-notch into it. It can be c-clamped onto the table. We'll leave their accoutrements (flask, loading rod, patches, balls, cleaning stuff) on the tables and make them load from it, walk up to the firing spot and cap from there.

BTW, I found out that it costs about $3k for a kid to attend a camp. A lot of it is underwritten by the contributors (CCI, Hornady, Barrett, Savage, TC, Lyman, Ruger, Benchmark, Otis, Leupold, Brownells, etc). When the kids finished camp, there was a big dinner to recognize the best camper, best rifle shooter, pistol shooter, shotgunner, muzzle loader, archer, cook, etc. Many parents were there and I got to meet them and the siblings of the kids. Some siblings (18 and above) were too old to attend and are envious of their younger siblings. Some of we instructors also feel the same way.
 
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