The results are in, and Billl showed us all the way. Great shootin' Bill!
NAME | CLASS | GUN | Cal. | SCORE |
Billl | 1 | Ruger Mk. I | .22LR | 11 |
Mr. Completely | 1 | High Standard/OKO Dot | .22LR | 10 |
Mrs True Blue Sam | 1 | Ruger 22/45 Lite | .22LR | 8 |
Merle | 1 | SSS | .22LR | 6 |
True Blue Sam | 1 | Ruger Mk. III Target | .22LR | 4 |
True Blue Sam | 1 | Bearcat Shopkeeper | .22LR | 3 |
True Blue Sam | 1 | Ruger Single 10 | .22LR | 2 |
True Blue Sam | 1 | Ruger 22/45 Hunter | .22LR | 1 |
Merle | 2 | TC .22LR | .22LR | 4 |
Merle | 3 | CZ-82 | 9mm MAK | 3 |
Merle | 4 | TC 9mm. | 9mm. | 7 |
Merle | 5 | Enfield | .38/200 | 7 |
Merle | 5 | M625 | .45ACP | 5 |
How about a little nostalgia with what was possibly the most frustrating e-postal match we ever ran, "Flyswatter" ? This was our very first Mr. Completely e-postal match, back in July, 2005. I have updated the rules a bit and added more classes, but it's still just as hard as it was back in 2005! Don't be disappointed if you don't hit as many as you thought you could, as this one is a difficult challenge.
Below is the edited version of the original Mr. Completely e-postal match from 2005:
Just got back from the check presentation at the HAVA booth here at the shot show, and we took some pictures while we were there. This year the Gun Blogger Rendezvous was able to give them a check for over $2700. Good job, gun bloggers! hopefully next year we will do even better. Oh wait, it already is next year! What I meant to say is that we will hopefully raise lots of money for them in September in Reno at this year's gun blogger rendezvous.
well, today is the third and last day, at least for me, of the shot show for this year. It was less expensive to skip the last day and fly home one day earlier, so that's the way I set it up.
today will be an interesting day, as today is the day that the gun blogger rendezvous will be publicly awarding a check to HAVA, the Honored American Veterans Afield charity. Anthony from lucky gunner and I will be making the presentation.the presentation will be made at 3:30 PM at the HAVA booth. If you are here at the shot show it is on the ground floor, I guess they call that level I, and the booth number is 2517.
I am going to wrap this up for now, as I am going to meet this morning with the head of the NSSF first shots program. If you are not familiar with the NSSF first shots program, it is an excellent way to get new shooters involved in shooting at your local club and range. If you go to the NSSF website, you can find much more information on the program.
That's it for now..........
Eric Grauffel and some old guy who wandered into the picture..... |
well, I made it to be shot show, and all things considered, the trip was fairly on eventful. The traffic in Las Vegas was very heavy, and it took over an hour and a half for the bus to get from the airport to the hotel. This year I am staying at the circus circus hotel, and considering that it was the least expensive of the available hotels during the shot show I was not expecting too much as to the condition of the hotel. I must admit, I was pleasantly surprised!
I am dictating this from the press room on Tuesday morning using my netbook and Dragon naturally speaking. Even though it sometimes does not capitalize some words, it really does do a fairly amazing job allowing terrible typists to get their words onto paper.
In approximately one hour I will be meeting with the nice folks from Lucky Gunner to work on the initial planning work on the initial planning for next September's gun blogger rendezvous. I will be having more information this year's probably in a later post.
It is now time to put the computer away and get the day underway.
......... More later.
Is there a blogger in Louisville who is familiar with and regularly using Blogger who would be willing to give another Louisville (Soon-to-be) gun blogger a hand with the basics of how to use Blogger to post stuff?As you know, it's pretty easy to use, but if you are not familiar with it, you can have a bit of trouble in the beginning.
I am a member of the High Standard Collectors' Association, and I am in the process of setting up a public Blogger blog primarily for HSCA members, but available for reading by anyone interested in High Standards. Jon, our President, could use a hand getting started. Anyone in the area that can help?
Last Wednesday KeeWee and I caught a pair of "Red-Eye" flights out of Seattle, stopping in LA for a plane change, and then on to Indianapolis. We got into Indy at 5:47am. It was a long night!
We picked up our rental car and met fellow high Standard Pistol collector Tom at a local restaurant for breakfast. We hung out at Tom's place for a couple of hours, then headed North and East for Kokomo, about two hours drive from Tom's place.
Once we got to Kokomo, we checked in to the Motel 6, and took a nap! After the nap we got something to eat, and conked out again! Friday morning we slept in, and tried to get as "Un-Tired" as possible.
Friday afternoon we headed to the Atlanta Conservation Club's range and helped Eric and the guys get the match set up. We stopped by the Kokomo Texas Roadhouse restaurant for ribs (MMMMM!) and then back to the motel for more sleep.
Saturday morning we were at the range bright and early for biscuits and gravy with the other RO's and match staff. After breakfast we broke up into squads and shot the match. After shooting the match we headed back to the clubhouse for pulled pork sandwiches. Then we were all assigned a stage to run. We ran all the squads (six squads?) through, and wrapped up the match. KeeWee scored, and Jeff and I ran the timer and kept it all safe! After all the rest of the shooters had finished the match, we broke down the stages and put everything back into storage.
Once it was all put away, we headed back to the clubhouse for the results. I don't think either of us shot as well as we could have, had we been a bit more rested and not so jet-lagged, but we still did OK.
KeeWee
3rd Super Senior
4th Lady
11th overall in Rimfire Open
Me:
1st Super Senior
5th Rimfire Open overall
2nd Centerfire Open
After the awards, we headed out for some food, then back to the motel for sleep. We were totally exhausted.
We had a leisurely breakfast on Sunday, then checked out a local mansion, a small museum and mansion, and finally we went to the Kokomo Automobile Museum. All were interesting, but the Kokomo Automobile Museum is worth going well out of your way to visit. It was awesome! I took a lot of pictures, and will try to get them posted so you can see what I mean!
Monday morning we drove back South and West to Indianapolis, and checked in to the Days Inn near the airport. Monday afternoon we drove back out to Tom's place and hung out with Tom until his wife got home from work, then we all headed out for dinner. After dinner we turned in for the night, as our flights home left on Tuesday. Our first leg, to Minneapolis, was late departing, so we only had about 12 minutes to get from the arrival gate to the gate for our flight back to Seattle, and the gates were a long ways apart. We commandeered a Delta "Golf Cart" and driver, and she rushed us across the airport to our gate. We scurried on to the airplane, and they closed the door a couple of minutes after that! The flight back to Seattle was boring, but that's OK, I much prefer boring to exciting! Once in Seattle we had an hour and a half layover ,then a two hour shuttle ride back to Whidbey Island. Finally got back to the house around 11pm. Totally worn out, but we definitely had a lot of fun getting ourselves into that condition!!
Just got back from the High Standard Collectors Associations annul convention that was held in conjunction with the Great Falls Gun Show, which is a pretty good sized show of approximately 600 tables. The local TV stations were there, and I ended up in some of their video, since I had a display table showing how High Standards make good competition guns in speed events as well as accuracy contests. I only show up for a few seconds, but what the heck! Great Falls TV today, the cover of Rolling Stone tomorrow!!
It was a fun show!
Here's a link to the video:
http://www.kpax.com/story/30127243/high-standard-collectors-association-new-vendor-featured-at-great-falls-gun-show
It was barely a week ago when I found out that there was going to be a Montana state steel championships held in Boulder Montana this last weekend. Boulder is located in the Boulder River Valley half way between Helena and Butte Montana. I checked Google maps and from Whidbey Island to Boulder Montana was only about 11 1/2 hours each way. That is, if traffic isn't too bad! Fortunately, my beat up old Honda civic is in pretty good shape and I had just put new front tires on it, and it gets an honest 33 to 35 miles per gallon. I made a few phone calls to some of the guys in Montana to get more details about the upcoming match. I located an economical motel in Boulder that was very basic but clean and had everything I needed, including a bed that is what that was much better than what I had expected at that price.
I got my entry forms entered through practicscore, loaded some 9 mm ammunition for myTanfoglio, and got set to hit the road early last Thursday morning. I caught the 4:40 AM ferry and was on the road bright and early and before most of the heavy traffic plugged everything up. Through Eastern Washington, northern Idaho, and across Montana it was miserably hot driving, since the air-conditioning no longer works on my Honda. All that it really needs is to be recharged, but the refrigerant that it uses is no longer permitted so to get the air-conditioning to work again it costs 3 or $400 dollars. God save that ozone you know!
I arrived without incident in Boulder about 5:30 Thursday afternoon and got checked in to the motel. Fortunately, the air-conditioning in the motel room worked just fine so I cranked it up and crashed! Friday morning I went out to the range and helped the gang with match set up. After set up, I headed back to the motel, grabbed a hamburger at the burger joint next door, and hit the sack early, as I was still pretty worn out!
Friday evening the temperature dropped a bunch, and it even clouded up and rained. Saturday morning it was partly cloudy and much cooler.
Looking towards the freeway from downtown Boulder Montana. |
The O-Z Motel in Boulder Montana. that's my little Honda Civic parked in front of my room. |
Looking the other way in downtown Boulder. |
1st Place in rimfire! |
Centerfire, 7th place overall. |
Those guys at Yakima Rifle & Pistol Assn. get an A+ for creativity on the trophy plaques! |
Justin Burnett, the editor of our local newspaper, the South Whidbey Record, did a very nice article about me, and you might enjoy it too.
Well, it was a hectic trip spanning just barely 7 days, but it was certainly well worth it! of the 7 days I spent 2 1/2 days traveling by planes, shuttle buses, hotel airporter buses, trains, and cars. 3 days were spent at the match in Winterswijk, Holland, and a day and a half spent in De Lutte, Holland hanging out and visiting with Hans and Jolanda Wigger, the owners of Dutch Firearms Trading.
the European Steel Challenge Championships are unusual in that the entire match is shot at an indoor shooting range which happens to be under the clubhouse, bar, offices, and lounge. this stage is resemble the traditional steel challenge stages but are narrower and in some cases farther out to the plates. With the exception of outer limits, all of the stages are very very fast.
On Friday morning I shot my Tanfoglio 9mm. Open Division gun, but unfortunately I had to use the ammunition that I was able to purchase in Holland due to the limitations on the amount of ammunition that you can carry on the airplane. We sighted in the Tanfoglio the afternoon before the match with ammunition that we thought was identical to what I would be using in the match. It turns out it wasn't even close and the gun wasn't shooting groups, it was shooting patterns! It was almost 16 inches high compared to what it had been cited in with. On the close in stages I could keep them on the plates and ran some very acceptable times, but on the 35 meter stages it was nearly impossible to hit anything! Even so, I did well enough on the close stages that I was still at least in the middle of the pack at the end. Nonetheless, it was pretty much a disaster!
Later that afternoon I shot my Taurus 8 shot open division revolver for the 1st time in a big match. I had only been shooting revolver for a few weeks prior to the match, so I wasn't expecting any great scores, as I was shooting the revolver primarily as a learning experience. Of course, it was fun too! My main goal with the revolver was to not embarrass myself or the dead last, and I manage to accomplish just that.
The next morning at 8:30 AM I was scheduled to shoot my new High Standard Victor .22 pistol. I had only received the new High Standard a few weeks before the match, and I had been very busy incorporating all of the little changes and tweaks that I have developed over the years to make a very good pistol even better for speed shooting competition. The High Standard ran beautifully for the entire match.
On a steel match that is only 6 stages long, one bad stage can damage your score so badly that the remaining 5 stages cannot make up for the damage. For that reason you need to shoot every stage slightly on the conservative side but not too much, or your overall time will end up to slow. That was my game plan, and I stuck to it through the entire match, and it went exactly as I had planned. I had no missed plate penalties all day.
after I had finished shooting open rimfire, I was through shooting for the day and for the match. I could then spend the rest of Saturday and all day Sunday watching the other shooters show me how it should be done! At this match we had approximately 250 entries and shooters from 13 different countries entered. There were a lot of very good shooters there to watch!
On Sunday afternoon all the shooting was completed, the scores were added up, and the trophy ceremony began.
At the start of the ceremony I was invited up to the stage and was given a special award that was a custom-made wooden shoe that was in appreciation for the help and support that I have given to the match over the years. It was very cool!
I won't go through all of the results except to mention that KC Eusebio was the top guy overall, and Tori Nonaka was the top lady. I was surprised to find that I was the top Rimfire Senior for the match! in the rimfire team event team "The Other Guys", comprised of me, Andre Hartelman of Holland, and Hubert Scheper from Germany has managed to come in third for a bronze medal. What makes that especially cool is that we are all 3 seniors!
All of the results can be found here:
http://www.ipscmatch.de/index.pl?match=2015_European_Steel_Challenge
The gold and the bronze medals |
Receiving the Wooden Shoe Trophy |
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Hans Wigger, me, and Andre Hartelman, 2nd, 1st., and 3rd. rimfire senior division. |
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Think we're having fun? Darn right! |
Being awarded a medal. |
The Rimfire Teams. Yes, that's KC Eusebio in the front. |
After dinner several of us went to a steakhouse for dinner. I If you like Dutch apple pie, you should try 'Dutch' Dutch apple pie! Yummm! |
As many of you know, I have been competing with High Standard pistols for many years, and with good results. High Standard has now decided to help out a few shooters using their products, and I get to be one of them! My new Techwearusa jerseys have now arrived, and I am really happy with how great they look.
A hypothetical question:
If registration for the Gun Blogger Rendezvous costs $35, and if you are a blogger you get $150 worth of free ammo delivered to Reno for your use in the shooting activities at the Rendezvous, would the free ammo make you more likely to attend?
Just askin.........
Note: I missed entering one email's scores, but this time I've got everything in there, I think!
As just about every e-Postal match turns out, this one was way harder than it looks, since you could actually score negative scores by hitting a line. Kind of like hunting. You want either a well placed shot for a clean kill, or you would rather miss completely. This match punished you for only wounding a circle, and not getting a clean kill!
According to Billl, this target is "One of the evilest pieces of
paper I've seen that didn't have a lawyers signature on the bottom of it.
" !!
To be fair, most matches with scoring for accuracy start with a score of zero, and each good hit increases your score from there. In this match, the worst score you could get is minus 140, so even a bit below zero isn't too bad at all.
NAME | CLASS | GUN | Cal. | SCORE |
Billl | 1 | Ruger Mk. I | .22LR | 25 |
Mike B | 1 | S&W 617 | .22LR | 25 |
True Blue Sam | 1 | Ruger MK. III | .22LR | 15 |
Pat B | 1 | S&W 617 | .22LR | 10 |
Mr. Completely | 2 | High Standard | .22LR | 90 |
True Blue Sam | 2 | Ruger 22/45 | .22LR | 35 |
Mrs True Blue Sam | 2 | Ruger 22/45 | .22LR | -15 |
Pattie Ann | 2 | Ruger 22/45 | .22LR | -20 |
Pat B | 5 | Colt Det. Spl | .38SPL | 10 |
Billl | 5 | Rossi 971 | .357Mag | 10 |
Billl | 7 | Marlin 795 Rifle/scope | .22LR | 60 |
(for some unknown reason Blogger dropped the video from the post. Here it is again.)
Mondays are always tough to get going, so here's a little help. Lots of bands have covered this song, but here's the guy who wrote it, Rufus Thomas.
Fun!
As many of you know, I have been working for several years to bring the International Steel Shooting Association to the world. The new association was officially announced two years ago at the Gun Blogger Rendezvous. Since I don't have tons of money to spend on publicizing the new association, the growth has been slow but steady, but not earth shaking. We have now had championship matches in Idaho, Washington, and a Falling Plate Championship in Langenau, Germany. We have now also had a club match in France. This is just the start, though, and as people catch on it's going to grow all over the world.
Tilmann Keith, our ISSA Representative, along with Michael Kluge, the Match Director, put on a well-received Falling Plate "Shoot-Off" championship match a few weeks ago in Germany. It was covered by local German television, and posted to YouTube. (I even get mentioned around 2:30!)
Tilmann and the gang in Langenau did an excellent job, and I hope I can be there in person next year! Next year's match planning is already underway!
(yeah, I know, they are all speaking German, but watch and listen anyway, you'll get the drift......)
(Don't know if Steven Wright came up with all of these, but there's a lot of "True" in here!)
If you're not familiar with the work of Steven Wright, he's the famous Erudite (comic) scientist who once said: "I woke up one morning, and all of my stuff had been stolen and replaced by exact duplicates."
His mind sees things differently than most of us do. Here are some of his gems.
1 - I'd kill for a Nobel Peace Prize.
2 - Borrow money from pessimists – they don't expect it back.
3 - Half the people you know are below average.
4 - 99% of lawyers give the rest a bad name.
5 - 82.7% of all statistics are made up on the spot.
6 - A conscience is what hurts when all your other parts feel so good.
7 - A clear conscience is usually the sign of a bad memory.
8 - If you want the rainbow, you have got to put up with the rain.
9 - All those who believe in psycho kinesis, raise my hand.
10 - The early bird may get the worm, but the second mouse gets the cheese.
11 - I almost had a psychic girlfriend ... but she left me before we met.
12 - OK, so what's the speed of dark?
13 - How do you tell when you're out of invisible ink?
14 - If everything seems to be going well, you have obviously overlooked something.
15 - Depression is merely anger without enthusiasm.
16 - When everything is coming your way, you're in the wrong lane.
17 - Ambition is a poor excuse for not having enough sense to be lazy.
18 - Hard work pays off in the future; laziness pays off now.
19 - I intend to live forever. So far, so good.
20 - If Barbie is so popular, why do you have to buy her friends?
21 - Eagles may soar, but weasels don't get sucked into jet engines.
22 - What happens if you get scared half to death twice?
23 - My mechanic told me, "I couldn't repair your brakes, so I made your horn louder."
24 - Why do psychics have to ask you for your name?
25 - If at first you don't succeed, destroy all evidence that you tried.
26 - A conclusion is the place where you got tired of thinking.
27 - Experience is something you don't get until just after you need it.
28 - The hardness of the butter is proportional to the softness of the bread.
29 - To steal ideas from one person is plagiarism; to steal from many is research.
30 - The problem with the gene pool is that there is no lifeguard.
31 - The sooner you fall behind, the more time you'll have to catch up.
32 - The colder the x-ray table, the more of your body is required to be on it.
33 - Everyone has a photographic memory; some just don't have film.
34 - If at first you don't succeed, skydiving is not for you.
And the all-time favorite:
35 - If your car could travel at the speed of light, would your headlights work?
I remember when there was talk about "Global Cooling" of the climate and the doom and gloom was plentiful. We were about to enter a new ice age, and it was going to be really bad. Automobile and factory emissions and cans of spray paint were the cause, we were told. Neither of the Bushs had been elected president yet, so it wasn't blamed on them. I don't remember exactly who it was blamed on, probably fat cat rich industrialists, or something like that.
Much to some folks dismay, the climate wasn't cooling, and instead, it might even have been warming a bit. The same folks changed their tune and got all spun up over "Global Warming" of the climate. The ice was going to melt, it was never going to snow on the East Coast, and the oceans would rise, flooding the lower areas of the continents. Again, Automobile and factory emissions, and cans of spray paint were the cause, we were told. This time it was blamed on the Bushs.
Unfortunately for those folks, the ice didn't melt, although it melted in some places, and increased in other places. None of the lower elevation places flooded. Some parts of the world were warmer, and some were colder.
Again those folks re-grouped, and re-labeled it as "Global Climate Change", since it didn't seem to be really getting warmer everywhere or colder everywhere either. They couldn't prove it was going either way, so they just called it change, and then they were covered either way. Once again, Automobile and factory emissions, and cans of spray paint were the cause, and it was still Bush's fault somehow.
The reality seems to be that it isn't really changing much at all, although it seems to vary from year to year, one way or the other, and one location or another. Actually, that's what weather and the climate seems to do all the time anyway. Probably always have, I'll bet.
So, where are these folks going next? "Global Climate Stagnation" ! Yep, you heard it here first!
I think it's safe to assume that Automobile and factory emissions, and cans of spray paint are the cause, and somehow it's still Bush's fault.