Yesterday's Adventure: Rangemaster to 66 Cub Scouts

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Dave R

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Sigh. The things we do for love, and our love of the sport.

Yesterday I played rangemaster to 66 Cub Scouts shooting BB guns. Fortunately, not all at the same time. 9 groups of about 7-8 each.

This is the first time I have done something like this. My wife is in the Stake Primary Presidency (Mormon-speak for a district leader over young kids from 13 congregations). One of her assignments is to put on a Cub Scout Day Camp for those 13 congregations, along with some help from the Boy Scouts of America. She needed a Range Master for the BB Gun venue. Guess who volunteered?

All outdoors. Eight to Five. High of 107 today. I was in the sun all but about one hour of that. Thank Heaven for miracle fabrics, water coolers, a good hat and high SPF. Still kicked my butt pretty good. I was on my feet all but about an hour, too. Hard work.

I kinda learned on the fly. As father of seven, youngest age 9, I’ve had some experience working with kids. Also did some church service with them. Still, first time shooting with so many people of different experience levels and mental levels at one time. I got better as the day went on.

Procedure evolved into the following:

1. Explain The Four Rules. They boys repeat them back after a brief explanation. We focus on 2 and 3, the ones we would have the most trouble with.
2. Explain the range rules.
3. Bring ‘em out on the range, and walk then through the operation of a pump BB gun. Started off demonstrating, but rapidly evolved into having them follow along with me on each step of pumping, charging, etc.
4. Let ‘em shoot. Troubleshoot with boys having trouble with the above. Man, its hard to focus on one kid having trouble while monitoring the other 5-6 for safety.
5. Follow the rules for working with young kids. Praise, praise, praise. Treat every question seriously. End the answer with an encouraging word. Follow up with kids having trouble, and praise them when they get it right on their own.

Repeat above with the next group.

Main thing was, no injuries, and no repeat offenders on minor infractions.

Things I learned:

* Neither the Crossman Powermaster 760 nor the Daisy Powerline 901 (? the cheap one) is a particularly accurate rifle. Though some individual rifles are better than others.

* Cross-dominance--where one eye is dominant, but the other hand is dominant--is much more common than I expected. I saw it maybe 8-10 times out of 66 boys. Tough to deal with in 40 minutes. (One of my daughters has it. I turned to good ‘ol TFL searches to learn options for dealing with it. Would up teacher he to shoot with the same hand as her dominant eye. She shoots great, now. )

* Most parents are really helpful. A few can really get in the way. A few times I just wanted to say “Gee, let the guy just try it himself a few times—he’ll learn by experience.” I have more sympathy for good teachers.

* Some 8-10 year old boys REALLY know how to shoot. A couple of times, some experienced kids helped the kids next to them in meaningful ways. Warmed my heart. There were some mighty fine groups shot.

* Lots of other 8-10 year old boys know nothing at all about shooting. But almost all of them like it when they try it.

I got some nice praise at the end of the day from the boys’ leaders. I hope I planted some seeds today. The boys sure seemed to have fun. 66 potential new shooters (some of whom were already accomplished) is a worthwhile day’s work.
 

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Way to go, Dave R! Those boys will be talking about their day on the range for a long time, and they've started off the right way.

I also work with Cub & Boy Scouts, and have spent many hours at camp with them. We always used Red Riders, looks like y'all have some nice bb guns.

When I go into the schools and recruit new boys (1-5th grade), all I have to say is 'who wants to shoot bb guns and bows & arrows?', and every hand in the room goes up, even the girls!
 
As a lefty shooter I am glad to hear that you know about cross dominance! Pat your self on the back. Good JOB!
 
Awesome. What you're doing will turn some of those kids into shooters in 5, 10, 15 years. It was the BB range at Cub Scout camp that got me stuck on firearms :)
 
It was Cub Scouts at day camp that ultimately made me fall in love with shooting. Way to go!
 
It sounds as if you did this all on your own, that is some feat!

If you did do it by yourself, I have one suggestion. Get some help next time. When instructing groups of shooters during any live fire, it is best to have one Range Safety Officer and then a couple of coaches. That way the RSO can go about his job of making sure the firing is conducted safely, while others can help individuals.

All in all though, I commend you for stepping up to help out in bringing firearms training to the next generation of shooters. :)
 
im glad you guys in the states teach them how to properly shoot a gun (i also hope you teach them the difference between left and right handed guns, and they cant always be interchangeable.)

went to the range here one time with my dad who brought his flintlock. (a right handed hawken) some idiot cadet wanted to shoot it. he picked it up. i turned around to get another clip for the AR filled, turned around jsut in time to see the guy with the flintlock on his left shoulder and pull the trigger. kid had blackpoweder imbedded in his forhead and singed eyebrows. wish i could say i didnt laugh, but the immage was just to good.
 
^I actaully never thought of that. But it makes sense that the flashpan or whatever it's called would be right infront of a lefty's face.
 
Thanks for stepping up! Having done it a few times I can feel you. But it really is a bit of fun and well worth it. Hope your son took top honors.

Also sent you a PM.
 
If you did do it by yourself, I have one suggestion. Get some help next time.
I figured that out after the second session. Boy Scout training said no one but trained rangemasters were allowed on the range. The boy's leaders were supposed to stay behind a line behind the range. After the 2nd session, I started inviting the leaders on the range with me to monitor safety. I bent the the rules, and I think it was better with the additional leaders on the range. Of course, a couple of those were the ones that wouldn't let their boys do anything on their own.

Hope your son took top honors.
No cubs in my family. My youngest two are girls. Both are decent shooters. One cross-dominant.
 
Thats very important. What got me hooked on rifles was boyscout camp we got sponsered by the NRA so basically we could shoot as many rounds as we wanted for free. Need less to say come the end of the week i have fired more than 200 rounds and that was with us only being allowed to shoot ten at a time!
 
I always run it with at least three boy scouts. Haven't seen any rules against it and been inspected several times with no problem. The boy scouts love doing it also.
 
Dave, I'm doing the same thing next week for Girls Camp. I may have up to 170 girls come over, but more likely 30 or so. I have 6 or 7 guns. Bought the daisy exploding targets, so I hope they work out ok.
 
Bought the daisy exploding targets, so I hope they work out ok.
Great idea! Wish I had thought of that. Reactive targets are much more fun than paper. I didn't know Daisy made exploding targets.

Give us an after-action report, TX1911fan.
 
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