Centerfire
Member
Casey
Do you find the Wind probes helpful?
Centerfire
Do you find the Wind probes helpful?
Centerfire
... when one invests several thousand dollars in five sets of flags and offers to have them shot over (and very often shot at), there is an expectation that those will be the flags used on that rotation. That's the convention that has developed at the Super Shoot over the past thirty-plus years.
The other shooters who ask specifically to shoot on that person's flags are expecting to use that specific type of flag. Those shooters number between twenty to thirty at the Super Shoot. When one other guy decides to set another type of flag over those of the flag sponsor on the same bench rotation, it affects quite a few other shooters; not just one. Most of the other shooters who are placed on that flag rotation get very upset when someone else unilaterally decides to put their flags on that rotation, too. It usually gets a little ugly.
I offer to use (and unfortunately have abused) a flag rotation to shoot over not only for myself, but also for the other twenty-plus shooters who ask Jim Kelbly to place them on my rotation so they can shoot over this specific type of flag. (I get several shot every year and they are not cheap to replace.)
I will be using Smiley flags with pin wheels on the rotation that I am sponsoring. If you don't wish to shoot over that type of flag, please ask Jim to place you on a bench rotation that has the type of flags that you like to use. It's only common courtesy.
The post was mostly Tongue-In-Cheek Hovis.
There’s a new or revised IBS flag rule that only allows someone to place flags in their shooting lane (singular).
Your Flags must be placed in your shooting lane which is defined as the center of the area between your bench and the neighboring bench downrange to the center of the area between your target and the neighboring target.
After a bit of discussion someone verified it was added to keep people courteous, so they can not put a flag in someone else’s lane interfering with the other competitors view of their flags. I’ve never run across that at a match so I didn’t get it (the rule) at first.
Looking at the sea of intermingled flags someone posted in this thread, and realizing the rule didn’t make an exception for multiple relays or rotations. A vision of flag “carpeting” popped into my head and I couldn’t resist making a funny.
It may not hurt to add an “s” to “lane” in that rule.
Pete,
Have you shot a Nationals over a trotline that was broke and had dead fish on it the next day? Well I have! I was part of an Aussie flag rotation and provided 6 of the flags and stands. The powers that be put me on the trotlines while folks with no flags or interest shot over the Aussie flags.
Butch