jackie schmidt
New member
Relax? Why? So we can all sit around and talk about the old days, and whine about the sport dying, and how we all have more important things to do? Give me a break. It is attitudes like this that will kill the sport in short order. It becomes a self fulfilling prophecy to go on the internet and tell the whole world BR is dying. I see it every day on this board. We are all fighting an uphill battle here on many levels, no need to pile on evertime someone says the sport is dying. I happen to be singling you out, partly because I know you, which isn’t fair, so you are getting the brunt of this, but your comments are similar to so many inside and outside BR.
We are having a great year. I am enjoying all that we have accomplished as a group out here. Personally I can always shoot better.
Let’s see some action, not just words. I have put forth numerous examples of what has worked around here. I have invited anyone to contact me to discuss increasing their club attendance, although nobody has. We will have 10 people from our club at Holton this year. That is a 60 hr round trip drive for us. Imagine if every BR Club had this level of interest?
You asked what has changed? What has changed is people have numerous choices as to how they spend their free time. BR not only has to compete with all other shooting disciplines that didn’t exist 50 years ago, but it also has to compete with the incredibly short attention span people have these days. This is why you have to promote more than the old days, and promote in ways that didn’t exist 50 years ago. This is inescapable. Modern life is all about competition, in everything including how people spend their free time.
Of course this is a hot button topic! I want to be shooting BR well in to retirement but there seems to be a real defeatist attitude out in BR land that this sport is dead, and some people who seem determined to make sure it dies. I will never understand this.
Weird thing is the interest from some countries seems strong. Go figure. There is something to this I haven’t quite figured out.
Everyone is entitled to their opinions, but it would be nice to look at options to attract newcomers that have worked at other clubs, instead of rewriting the course of fire for the national tournament as the opening salvo.
Probably more than anyone cares to read, but none the less that is what I see happening out there with our beloved sport of BR.
Rick
Rick, you make some very good points. It does take a certain amount of enthusiasm among the participants to make it all work. The problem arises when that enthusiasm is manifested in an effort to put on a first class Match, and nobody shows up.
Benchrest is competing against a miriad of shooting disciplines that simply did not exist in years past. The truth is, unless you are participating, it's boring. It lacks the glamor and military aspect of many of the shooting sports we are competing with for competitors.
At my local club, which is limited to 300 members, you can count the BR shooters on two hands. But, every weekend there will be quite a few members with some type of civilian version of a military weapon, AR's, SK's, AK's, etc. They bang away and are content.
These shooters will look at my Benchrest Rifles and the extreme accuracy we achieve and be amazed, but then take a look at my entire truck load of equipment and say, (to themselves), "you gotta be kidding".
No easy answers. We at Tomball for years have tried to promote the Sport, and give Benchrest Shooters a place to compete.
But then only a handful show up.