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Guns, Bows, Shooting Sports, and Hunting What a season!

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We ended our High School Trapshooting season with the SCTP State Championship and the Iowa High School State Championship last weekend. Two days of wind & weather extremes and shooting all day. Our little team alone fired at 4,480 targets in those two days. We spent last season, our first, as a part of a larger school's team. This season, we were completely on our own and completely unfunded except by the few sponsors I had time to drum up and by my own personal credit card (ouch!).



For a small upstart team (there are 125 high schools and 1325 shooters represented on 92 teams in the sport in Iowa), many of which have been established for up to 26 years, we did fantastic. When the smoke cleared after the final competition rounds and eighty-plus teams had gone home empty-handed, our team was still in it, and in a head-to-head tie breaking shoot-off with a perennial powerhouse and multi-time champion team. It was very exciting, and our best squad really stepped up and met the challenge, winning the showdown 117 to 113 against a very admirable team.



We did not win the State Championship, all 3 of our state awards were for 5th place, but 5th place All-State as a team sure felt like the championship to us. Even if we outshot the other top teams in the Championship, and we did in many cases, there is simply no mathematical way we could beat the cumulative season scores of the most powerful established teams, many of whom rolled up in multiple school buses per team. We don't even have a shooting range to host events and rack up official score after score like they do all season long. We train in a borrowed corner of a cornfield over a portable machine I bought and have to search for and travel to all competitions with room for us to compete.



We did, however, crown the Individual State Champion, named "Captain of the 2011 Iowa All-State Team" as the overall season and tournament 'best-of-the-best' shooter. He also placed 2nd in the state for regular season scoring just one point behind his best friend from a different school but the same hometown.



The SCTP (the national sanctioning body) state championship on the first day saw competitive classes from high school all the way down to grade school. I personally scored a squad of 2 girls and three boys who were in 4th and 5th grade. Let me assure you, they are very good and racked up some impressive scores with their little 20 gauges! One little guy nailed 40 out of 50! Imagine how good he will be once in high school!



My 71 year old mother worked long into the the nights for weeks to make all of our team vests by herself. The print shop finished printing our shirts just hours before we left for state. For the first time, my little band of homeless redheadedstepchildren looked like a real team. And boy did the kids all step up to a whole new level just when it mattered most.



The first and only girl on our team, who had never even fired a gun three months ago, and who finished her very first competition of the season 0 for 50 while fighting back tears of frustration and humiliation (she had only had two practices and I'm not allowed to coach while they are competing) was only outshot by 3 girls in the entire state, setting all new high scores for herself, including one near-perfect round of 24/25, that proved she has earned her rightful place standing shoulder to shoulder with the boys on any squad.



One of our best shooters was out all season, battling for his life in the hospital undergoing months of chemotherapy and bone marrow transplants. He's a graduating senior and fought hard to regain enough strength to get medical clearance to rejoin his teammates for one last time. He's the brutally emaciated 6'6" young man in the photos and he borrowed my son's old 1100 outfitted with a hydraulic recoil-reduction stock and knocked down 89/100 for the day, including a nearly perfect 24, with only that last doggone clay refusing to break. He's the kind of kid that when he got to go home from the hospital for a week between all his chemo and his transplant, and while the weather here was very cold and nasty still, he immediately slipped out the back door, germ mask, hairless head, shotgun and all, and disappeared into the woods and bagged a huge spring season gobbler. Nothing keeps him down.



Every single team member shot new personal bests. When you are among the top 6 trophy-level teams in the state, there are very few points separating the winners from the losers. The 1st place team at the tournament only outshot our 5th place team by 10 broken targets out of 500. That's only 1/2 clay per round of 25 per shooter.



These kids will finally get some recognition from the local paper after being ignored all season in favor of little league scores and Aunt Sadie's gardening tips. I took our trophies straight to the few businessmen that even knew we existed and who supported our team and showed them what these kids had done with that support (it personally cost each team member over $150 in ammo & entry fees just to compete in the state tournaments). Then came an invite from the American Legion to speak at their board meeting. A couple of those community leaders apparently then took a very direct approach and asked the newspaper owner/editor why he had not published a word about our team and if he wanted their advertising dollars how that had better change. I had already stopped in to see him myself and found him to be a nice enough guy who seems quite supportive; just too busy. He showed me an article they had written over a month ago about our team after doing an extensive interview & photo session, but he had never published it. It was a very good article and I sure wish he had. He promises to make up for it with 'a big front page splash' in the next issue.



I'm very proud of these young people. It is much harder to start a brand-new sport at your school and pay for it all yourself than it is to join an established and funded sports team or activity. I'm also exhausted; I have made myself and the trap machine available 5 to 6 days per week so every team member, busy in many other activities and jobs, could try to make at least two practices per week. I was able to coach smaller groups and work around all their busy schedules that way. It paid off, but it is time to get back to my own life, and even back here to TDR.



My phone is already ringing with parents wanting to sign their kids up next season. After doubling in size this season, it looks like we will at least double again next season, and I have no idea how I will be able to handle 30 to 40 kids without even a facility and with no coaching help. I do have some great volunteer parents, and I will need to convince a few to get certified. Youth shooting sports are booming here in the cornpatch. Now we just need the facilities and support for them.
 
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This is great. It would never happen in Cali . I would like to see what a trapshooter mom drives. GOOD JOB TEAM
 
Thanks, p-Bar! As the police chief at a nearby town told me while watching our two teams compete "These are the kids I never have to worry about. They are disciplined and involved. " Half that town seemed to be there watching their team compete with us, just like a major football game. They had enough local support to start their season with $10,000 in the bank and a nicely refurbished old Izaak Walton League Range for the team. That's where I want our team to be by the start of next season. You can get much better deals on ammo and targets when you can buy in bulk.



I wonder where many of the big city troubled kids would be if they had such an activity available to them? It's a far cry from "bustacap" gangbanging. Yet it is still "teenagers with guns". Many of the very old high schools in Iowa still have the remnants of indoor rifle ranges in their basements. Those were our greatest generations who passed through those doors, and nobody got shot.
 
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Thanks, p-Bar! As the police chief at a nearby town told me while watching our two teams compete "These are the kids I never have to worry about. They are disciplined and involved. " Half that town seemed to be there watching their team compete with us, just like a major football game. They had enough local support to start their season with $10,000 in the bank and a nicely refurbished old Izaak Walton League Range for the team. That's where I want our team to be by the start of next season. You can get much better deals on ammo and targets when you can buy in bulk.



You are doing a great job, sounds like to me!! I love to get the kids involved, and really love to see how their skills advance over time!! I just wanted to say Congratulations on "hangin' with the big dogs!!"



Now, let me offer some advice (unsolicited, I know, but you may need to hear it next year), I encourage you to not lose patience next year when you don't get that $10k in the bank to get started..... not saying it can't happen, it can happen, but it takes a lot of time and effort. I've seen it many times over the years, but it only happens with dedication and hard work, as I'm sure you know. All too often I see groups get started, only to die out a few years later with the death or burnout of the organizer, the heart of the club. Naturally, the kids are your best resource, but they'll move on, most likely, to college, away from home, and you'll be facing a new team and retraining, experience, etc. Find some like-minded help, and don't use 'em up!! I've been there, done that, and lost it all, both in hobbies and in businesses. It's taught me that I DO have to sleep every few days!!:cool: (almost cost me my marriage, once!!:eek:) Don't forget, it's serious, but it's also supposed to be fun!!



I wonder where many of the big city troubled kids would be if they had such an activity available to them? It's a far cry from "bustacap" gangbanging. Yet it is still "teenagers with guns". Many of the very old high schools in Iowa still have the remnants of indoor rifle ranges in their basements. Those were our greatest generations who passed through those doors, and nobody got shot.

I know a few, well, two actually, that got shot... but it didn't kill them, and made them superb gunsmiths and shots in later years, albiet they were much more careful about firearm safety than most... . and maybe missing part of a thumb... . ;)



Congratulations, keep up the good work!!
 
Good to see young people into the shooting sports. Im not much into the shotgun. I went Dove hunting with some of the guy's at work and to put it mildly I was VERY embarrassed 6 boxes of ammo and 1 dove to show for it. I do ok at the range with the shotgun , I think those damn doves can see the shot coming and move out of the way BTJMO or that's the story that im using anyway
 
Another Outstanding Example of Maturity and Responsibility!

Scott, Your Team is a shining example! Keep up the good work!

I know what HHhuntitall says about a team losing its heart. We had an outstanding youth leader in our gun club. His kids were grown and he "adopted" many teens and headed the BCGC Juniors program for many years. They were well placed, numerous times at Camp Perry. When he retired, the juniors team became only a shadow of its former self. There are still former juniors, now adults, that are still involved in BCGC, but the program has suffered from loss of leadership.

PS is that you in the team picture, back row, on the right? GregH
 
I sure appreciate the kind words and advice, guys. And good advice is something to heed when treading new ground.



Since I first posted this at the exciting end of our season, I have discovered my work had only just begun. Now my time is spent attending meetings with community organizations and helping with fundraisers and events. This is all very good, and we are getting a tremendously warm reception from the community while my networking ability grows leaps and bounds.



Sadly, one of the fundraisers I have been involved with is for the young man who battled leukemia all spring and was released by his doctors just in time to rejoin his team at the State Tournament. Everything was going great with his platelet count increasing rapidly. By the time Beef Days (the annual local community celebration) rolled around, he was feeling great and had grown most of his hair back. Our team rode on a huge military 6x6 with a big bad cummins in it in the parade. Two days later at a routine checkup, his leaulemia was back with a vengeance. Good as it is, the U of I Hospital just couldn't do any more for him and he was flown to Houston, TX. I've never seen that young man's spirit so low... just when he and everyone else thought he had beaten this cancer, it hits again harder than ever.



Some town leaders quickly put together another community fundraiser for his family and asked our team to help. They gave us 70 flyers to distribute; we printed up and distributed 700 more in a single morning. I put the word out to other teams and coaches and some of our sponsors and soon we had overwhelmed the allotted time for the auction being held. There was a golf tournament by the Optimist Club followed by a big auction at the country club.



The turnout was fantastic given that half the town was in Des Moines watching our high school baseball team win its second-in-a-row State Championship that same day. The generosity of donors and bidders was impressive. Toward the end, the same case of Coors Light was "auctioned" 14 or 15 times for $100 a pop. People had come to spend money and anyone who had been outbid all night made sure they "bought" a case or two.



So much of what was donated was from the sporting goods stores I solicit support from, as well as from other high school shooting teams, that the "overflow" was set aside and I am now organizing what I hope to be a large shooting fundraiser at a sporting clays range about 30 miles from here. nothing that was donated will fail to go to its intended purpose.



I had planned to do this as a team fundraiser, but this first one is going to be for Brett and his family instead. One hundred sporting clay targets just a couple weeks before pheasant season on what will hopefully be a beautiful Indian Summer Iowa October day should draw a lot of area sportsmen and women.



So the fundraising and networking is a non-stop job but I really enjoy telling people about our team, town, kids, and the sport. Some donors probably pony up just to shut me up. :D



I have to plead guilty to that being me in the team photo, Greg. The top photo in the first post is of of our top squad at State. We didnt even know it, since the State only awards to 3rd place, but our little band of upstarts also placed 4th in the Iowa Cup that weekend. Found that out later. My oldest son, Skyler, was the state champ "Captain of the Iowa All-State Team" and recently competed at the adult state championship, too, where he placed 2nd in his class after missing one target in the final shootoff between the top two shooters in the 18 year old class (he's 17). That's him on the left in the top photo holding the trophy. The other bookend in that photo is his younger brother, Wyatt, only a freshman, and he had never hunted or shot before this season but ended up one of the best in the state, too. Very different boys, but they've certainly found a mutual respect for each other in this sport.



A few more shots below: Awards ceremony at the 2-day State Tournament; a tuckered out team camping at State (the tent one boy brought was so huge they pitched a smaller dome tent inside it for Riley, our only female. She's never slept more safely in her life; surrounded by an small army of armed and highly protective teammates!!); next photo is our humble "shooting range" in the corner of a team member's cornfield; then some of the boys collecting their first medals early in the season; and finally, tough little Riley showing her first "Top Female Shooter" medal I promised her she'd earn if if she stuck with it after going 0 for 50 in her first competition. Believe it or not, she won this medal only 3 weeks later with a 42 of 50 after I modified an 1100 I own to fit her!!
 
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