Hi Gene,
Glad to hear that you want to give our sport a try.
Check out the match calendar at nbrsa.org for some dates of matches that within a reasonable (for BR shooting) distance...
La Grand OR
Tacoma WA
Sacramento, CA
The NorthWest Regional Director Dan Zacanti might have a few more details about contacts.
The advice about going to a match first has been the standard answer for years... if you let someone know that you're coming, they will round up plenty of gear and let (make!) you compete. Unlike some other shooting sports, having just an equipment list doesn't really help to understand the BR approach to gear. Seeing it in action will take out a bunch of the mysteries, and doing so before you start purchasing stuff could save you a bundle. I know 3 shooters here in my area that bought rifles to 'try it out' and never had that first rifle to a match before they were looking to upgrade. A moderate investment becomes a significant investment if you buy 'good enough', and then buy 'top shelf'. Formal BR is really about 'top shelf' accuracy and a visit to a match will quickly show you that even the most casual players usually sport very competitive equipment.
I've got some other posts on this site with newbie advice too. But, with all that said, here is my short list of gear, sort of a minimal check list of what most guys bring.
At the bench...
Light Varmint/Sporter class rifle (10.5# weight limit) in 6PPC caliber, probably built on a custom action (Bat,Kelbly,Stiller,Borden,Marsh,Farley,Hart,...) and the most popular configuration is a dual port design (loads from the left, ejects to the right).
Front Rest with a 3" wide bag to fit the rifle. Most popular are joystick versions like the Seb Neo, Seb Co-ax, and Farley front rests.
Rear Rest -- common versions are the Edgewood Original and Minigator bags and the Protektor Rabbit (not bunny) ear bags... filled with heavy sand.
Flags -- lots of options, see the many discussions of such on this forum. I build my own.
Miscellaneous: ear muffs, a timer, bolt grease, an ammo block, a thick towel or two for padding the concrete.
Other gear...
Most of us clean and reload between targets, so...
Loading Block
Case prep items: neck brush, small towel, 4-O steel wool, primer pocket tool
Calipers,
Resizing press & dies,
Powder measure,
Bullet seating press (usually a small arbor press with Wilson-style micrometer die),
Primer seater,
Die wax/lube
Components: Brass, bullets, primers, powder <== there be dragons here!
Cleaning gear:
Cleaning cradle -- something to hold the rifle
2 rods (1 with a .22 jag, 1 with a 6mm brush),
1-3/4 patches (fits a 6mm barrel with the .22 jag),
good BORE GUIDE(!),
Chemicals... (I use WipeOut and Accelerator now, but have gone through phases of Eliminator and Butch's BoreShine too. I also carry some iso-alcohol, Kroil, Rem-Oil, Brake Cleaner, and lighter fluid)
Chamber Mop (short cleaning rod with 45cal/.410 Mop fits a PPC chamber)
Some guys can carry all they need in a shoe box, while others (most!) need a 3/4T truck and trailer. There is no need to be able to chamber a barrel between targets, but you'd think that is what we do given the crap we haul.
Rod