Where can i shoot this in Christchurch? Can i turn up to a club day/practice shoot with my stock standard 300wsm with a capable scope to get to 1000m, harris bipod and rear bag and shoot to see if i like it?
Where can i shoot this in Christchurch? Can i turn up to a club day/practice shoot with my stock standard 300wsm with a capable scope to get to 1000m, harris bipod and rear bag and shoot to see if i like it?
Perazzi, pretty much yes. Most of the clubs take a break over winter, and the serious season starts around Sept.
Welcome to the NRA NZ | National Rifle Association of New Zealand has all the club contact details, @Cyclops and his son shoot in CHC, have a chat to him
FTR is 308 or 223 only, so 300wsm will put you in F-Open.
We generally shoot yards not meters, from 300yds to 1000yds.
The only issue I can think of is if you have a loundner/brake on the rifle. It causes problems for other folk on the line, so not allowed, but check with the local club to be sure. Suppressors are fine.
Viva la Howa ! R.I.P. Toby | Black rifles matter... | #illegitimate_ute
Na don't have a break or suppressor. Ok will look into it thanks
"I do not wish to be a pawn or canon fodder on the whims of MY Government"
@ebf, i started f class in 2008 i think and it had been going a few years already then. i would guess 2004 or even earlier.
Perazzi the fullbore outdoor season is pretty much over. It will resume again from August.
There are three clubs that shoot in the greater Christchurch area, Malvern Rifle Club, Christchurch Rifle Club and Ashburton District Rifle Club.
They accept new shooters with firearms licences. All have club rifles that can be used.
A club member supervised my son while he shot until I got my licence.
Ashburton and Malvern have active FB pages.
Last edited by Cyclops; 31-05-2015 at 11:27 PM.
didn't mean it like that, more of a personal thing I guess especially when these are people you don't know and are all dealing with firearms! l.. I don't doubt that clubs are helpful for new shooters and stuff, its just stink that there is little publicity or more of an effort to get people into the sport. if they ran a hunter class????
at the mo I have occasional access to a farm which we can scrape 950 metres on a bit of steel, but if worst comes to worst then I would probably try trentham!
#BallisticFists
Cheltenham runs a hunters class on occasion and also invites the local DeerStalkers to stretch their legs from time to time.
Remember that the majority of the club members (from my experience) are over 50 and have not heard of or use Facetube or Youbook. Modern forms of publicity will catch up when modern people make it accessible. The old school way of finding info is to talk to someone. That would work spectacularly in this situation.
gutted bro!! one morning we went to check if there were any boats in the red zone, there was one further out which was a bit nervy but ok. thought we should head closer to the cliff and check nobody was in close to shore....... there was a boat right in the red zone, dead straight in line with the targets. a chap had to head home to call up the boaties with on his radio.
Quite a bit earlier in fact. The person largely responsible for getting things going was Andre Doyle who was an Army ? sniper instructor at the time. I remember him shooting a suppressed .260 at Trentham. Tracy Short had a good go at one point- threw a few resources at the problem but sure got the results
Andre is still around, dropped off some stuff with him this morning He is also the driving force behind electronic targets...
He is now shooting TR with an outrigger sight system. Part of the Palma team off to the States next month.
Viva la Howa ! R.I.P. Toby | Black rifles matter... | #illegitimate_ute
Andre Doyle is currently the President of Petone Rifle club at Trentham (my club), I think he has 'retired" from the NRA side of things and yes we run 5 electronic targets.
"I do not wish to be a pawn or canon fodder on the whims of MY Government"
The late Tony Loughnan (google to see his engineering achievements) was probably one of the main proponents of electronic targets within the NRA. Somewhere I saw a report of his including his opinion that for the ongoing future of the organisation it was essential that electronic targets became widely introduced. From memory he also put forward things like the analysis of the accuracy of electronics systems versus manual marking. The electronic system, in his opinion was the most accurate - something I would agree with considering the some of the dodgy marking I have experienced in the past.
Electronic targets are the way to go, I lost quite a few points shooting full bore with a .223 even the .308's can be hard to find had them slip down the spotter's dowel pin with out leaving a trace, electronic's stop all that.
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