December Pickering Results

Besotted by an oversupply of classic brandy infused eggnog and bloated by consuming innumerable trays of Christmas cookies, the beloved Grand Panjandrum has at long last awakened from his calorically induced Christmas coma to collate the December match results-all of which arrived on time.

Stripped off his eggnog stained T shirt, freshly bathed and anointed, and now wearing a vintage Fall Foliage vestment, he has brushed his unruly locks into some semblance of order and combed cookie crumbs from his luxuriant mustache.  With lap top perched on, what else, his lap and ensconced in front of a roaring fireplace he has completed this most important of statistical tasks.

Download the results here: 2010-timothy-pickering-dec (PDF, 49KB)

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NJ: Upcoming Sectionals

New Jersey has several upcoming sectionals. You can download the match programs below:

2011-nj-international-air-rifle-sectional Jan 29-30

2011-nj-sectional Feb 19-20

2011-nj-international-sectional Mar 5-6

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New ISSF Rifle Clothing Rules

New Rifle Clothing rule enforcement for 2011 and 2012

ISSF Rifle Clothing Commission Announces New Rifle Clothing Rule Enforcement Measures for 2011/2012

The ISSF Special Commission on Rifle Shooter Clothing met in Munich, Germany on the 8-9 December 2010, where it developed a series of rule interpretations regarding rifle shooter clothing that will be enforced in 2011 and 2012. The Commission, which was established by the ISSF Administrative Council in 2004 to guide the development and interpretation of ISSF rules regarding rifle clothing issues, is a diverse 14-member body that includes athlete, coach and industry representatives as well as members of the ISSF Executive Committee, Administrative Council and Rifle Committee. ISSF Vice President Gary Anderson, who is a former Olympic and World rifle champion, chairs the Commission.

Anderson said, “our meetings in Munich were extraordinarily successful in developing a series of rule interpretations where athletes, coaches and ISSF officials were all in agreement. With these agreements, we now have a plan of action that will allow the ISSF to enforce existing rifle clothing rules more strictly and uniformly without having to press forward with rule changes that mandate increased clothing restrictions.”

The meeting concluded with all members of the Commission agreeing on a list of “Rule Interpretation and Enforcement Measures for 2011/2012.” This list subsequently received full approval from the ISSF Rifle Committee when it met in Munich on 12 December. With the established authority of the Rifle Clothing Commission and Rifle Committee to issue rule interpretations and enforcement procedures for existing rules, the ISSF announces that the following rule interpretations will be enforced in all 2011 competitions that are governed by ISSF Rules, including all 2011 ISSF World Cups and 2011 Continental Championships. During the IWK International Air Weapons Competition in Munich in January, testing will be done according to these standards and athletes whose jackets or trousers will not meet the new requirements will be informed.

1. During Equipment Control jacket and trouser stiffness testing, both before competitions and in post-competition checks, all clothing panels must measure 3.0mm or higher in flexibility within 60 seconds. No measurements below 3.0mm will be accepted.

2. During Equipment Control jacket and trouser thickness testing, both before competitions and in post-competition checks, all clothing panels must measure 2.5mm or less in thickness. No measurements above 2.5mm will be accepted.

3. It is the responsibility of the competitor to use clothing that has sufficient tolerance in its stiffness and thickness measurements so that it will not fail even if it changes slightly during the competition. Shooters who try to use jackets and trousers that measure at or near the maximum stiffness of 3.0mm need to make sure their clothing is somewhat more flexible since no stiffness measurement or tolerance below 3.0mm is acceptable.

4. In Equipment Control stiffness testing, every part (panel) of the jacket or trousers must be capable of being measured with the 60mm measuring cylinder. If a part of the jacket or trousers is too small for normal testing (if there is no flat area 60mm or larger), testing must be done over the seams.

5. The ISSF considers the placement of names, national flags or symbols and sponsor signs on shooting clothing as positive and desirable. However, these markings cannot be used to increase the clothing stiffness or to prevent the measurement of clothing panels. Stiffness and thickness tests will ordinarily not be done over these markings, but if the panel where the letters or markings are located does not provide a flat 60mm or larger area to measure, stiffness testing will be done over the letters or markings.

6. The top of trousers seat pads must be at least 150mm below the top of the trousers waistband. Stiffness may be measured over the seat pad if necessary. This requirement replaces the test that was used in 2010 where the height of the seat pad was measured while shooters were seated with their trousers closed.

7. All rifle shooters must walk normally while wearing their shooting shoes and trousers anywhere on the range. Normal walking means heel down first—then heel up (the heel lift off of the floor must be visible) before lifting the toe. Normal walking also means bending the legs at the knees while walking. ISSF Juries will enforce this test for the flexibility of the shooting shoes and trousers by giving a warning for the first offence, a 2-point penalty for the second offence and disqualification for the third offence on any competition day.

8. Shooting trousers may have a maximum of 7 belt loops, but there must be at least 80mm of space between all belt loops.

9. Kinesio and medical taping are contrary to ISSF rules (Rule 6.4.2.1.1) and are not permitted. Post competition testing will now require selected shooters to undress to confirm that they are not using banned taping.

10. Shooters’ underclothing will also be checked for compliance with the 2.5mm thickness restriction as part of the post-competition testing.

11. Post-competition testing will require escorts to ensure that selected shooters have no opportunity to change or remove clothing. Judges who are women will be available to do the post-competition checks on women athletes for taping and underclothing.

The ISSF urges all National Federations to study these rule interpretations carefully to ensure that their athletes and coaches who will compete in the 2011 World Cups are prepared for them. For rifle shooters whose shooting jackets, trousers and boots were in full compliance with ISSF Rules during 2010 competitions, these rule interpretations should not require them to make any significant changes.

For shooters who try to use jackets and trousers that measure at or near the maximum stiffness of 3.0mm, they will need to make sure their clothing is somewhat more flexible since stiffness measurements below 3.0mm and thickness measurements greater than 2.5mm are not acceptable. The tolerance must now be in the shooters’ clothing, not in the measurements. The small percentage of rifle shooters who have persisted in walking stiff legged and flatfooted must learn to walk normally when they wear their trousers and boots. Competitors with any clothing item that has small panels or large pads that make it impossible to find a 60mm area to measure stiffness must be aware that measurements of those panels will now be made over the pads, seams or letters if necessary. Any athletes who may have tried taping techniques need to know that this is illegal and will be checked.

The Commission is concerned that shooting boot soles and shooting gloves are becoming stiffer and less flexible and that some of these clothing items are not in compliance with ISSF Rules (7.4.6.2 and 7.4.6.3.2) that require them to be “flexible.” The walking test will be enforced in 2011 as one means of ensuring that boot soles are more flexible, but the Commission is also seeking new methods of measuring these items to more accurately check their flexibility.

Several other rule change proposals were discussed during the meeting and the Commission agreed on some rule change proposals that could go into effect starting in 2013. These were forwarded to the ISSF Rifle Committee for their consideration. The Commission emphasized that the major emphasis in 2011 and 2012 must be on stricter enforcement of existing rules. The ISSF will release additional information in a continuing effort to educate all athletes, trainers and judges regarding these stricter rule enforcement measures that will be applied starting with the first World Cups in 2011.

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CT: 80th Gallery Match, Match 11-20

Blue Trail Range in Connecticut will host the 80th Gallery Match on March 11-12-13 & 18-19-20, 2011. You can download the match program here: 2011-ct-gallery-match-program (PDF, 249KB)

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USA Shooting to Support NRA Indoor National Champs

USA Shooting To Support The NRA Indoor National Championships

The largest competitive shooting tournament that the NRA conducts is the NRA National Indoor Championship. The Indoor Championship is made up of two parts, the Open Indoor National Championship (open to all competitors), and the Junior Indoor National Championship (open to juniors ages 20 and below). During 2010, the NRA Competitive Shooting Division processed 556 Sectionals (225 Pistol and 331 Rifle) that reported 6,543 entries (1,920 Pistol and 4,623 Rifle) for the 2010 Rifle and Pistol Indoor Championships.

In rifle, there are separate Championships that make up each Open and Junior Indoor Championship.

  • The Open Championship is comprised of the NRA Indoor Conventional Position Championship, the NRA Metric Indoor Championship, the NRA Sporter Air Rifle Championship, the NRA Precision Air Gun Championship, the NRA Indoor International Rifle Championship, and the International Air Rifle Championship.
  • The Junior Indoor Championship is comprised of the NRA Indoor Conventional Championship, the NRA Metric Indoor Championship, the NRA Sporter Air Rifle Championship, the NRA Precision Air Gun Championship, the NRA Indoor Sporter Standing Championship, and the International Air Rifle Championship.

NRA also conducts the Indoor National Pistol Championships. The Indoor National Pistol Championships are the NRA Conventional Pistol Championship, the NRA International Free-Pistol Championship, the International Standard Pistol Championship, and the International Air Pistol Championship.

The Indoor Collegiate Championships are organized into Rifle and Pistol Championships. Both NCAA and College Club Teams compete in the College Rifle Championships that are made up of International rifle and air rifle. The College Indoor Pistol Championships include Free Pistol, Standard Pistol Air Pistol, and Sport Pistol. All events are open to men and women who have full-time college status.

The 2011 indoor season starts January 1 and runs through mid April. USA Shooting has agreed to support the NRA Indoor Rifle and Pistol National Championships by awarding each individual who places in the top 10% of the overall results in each of the International Indoor Championships, with one free entry to the USA Shooting National Championships that are shot in July at Ft. Benning, GA. Competitors may earn only one free entry per year. The NRA will provide the scores from the top 10% of each NRA International Indoor Championship to USA Shooting at the conclusion of the Championship. USA Shooting will send a congratulatory letter, entry fee certificate and a USA Shooting Championship Competition Program to all qualifiers.

Any competitor firing in an NRA Indoor International Rifle or International Pistol Sectional is eligible to compete for this award. The NRA will compile all of the Sectional scores and publish the National winners.

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2011 NRA National Metric Championship

2011 NRA National Metric Championship

The dates for the Second Metric National Championship have just been released. Championship dates for the Metric Prone Championship were moved up one day to provide more time to travel to Camp Perry for those competitors who wish to compete in the NRA National Conventional Smallbore Rifle Championships.

The dates are as follows:

Position – July 15-17 (Jul 15th is a practice day)

Prone – July 17-19 (The afternoon of Jul 17th is a practice day)

Registration for the NRA National Metric Championship will start April 1st. Smallbore rifle position and prone competitors can register by calling 703-267-1475. The Championship is limited to only 200 Position and 200 Position entries due to range capacity. Competitors will receive their squadding immediately upon registration and payment of entry fee; a confirmation will be sent confirming registration and squadding.

The Jameson Inn, 3010 Brittany Court, Elkhart, IN 46514 (574-265-7222), is the host hotel with the same special rates for competitors who identify themselves as part of the National Metric Championship.

The NRA National Metric Championship program should be available on line and in print in March 2011. Please contact the HQ Moody, NRA National Rifle Manager (703-267-1475 or email: HMoody@NRAHQ.ORG), should you have additional questions or comments.

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NH: 4P Sectional, Feb 2+5

submitted by Keith Jylkka

The Conventional 4P Open Sectional will be held on Wednesday night, 2/02 and Saturday, 2/05 in the afternoon.  Juniors are not only allowed to shoot both the Junior and the Open 4P Sectionals, but are encouraged to shoot both matches!  Same is true for the 3P Air Rifle Sectionals in March.  Here’s a recap of all the Sectionals being held at the Hudson F&G Club this season:

  • 2/02 to 2/05 – 4P Open
  • 2/04 to 2/05 – 4P Junior
  • 2/16 to 2/19 – 3P Junior
  • 3/04 to 3/05 – 3P Air Rifle Junior
  • 3/04 to 3/05 – 3P Air Rifle Open
  • 3/18 to 2/19 – Int’l Air Rifle Junior

The program can be downloaded here: 2011-nh-4p-sectional-program (PDF, 29KB)

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Photo of the Week

From 1930. Big shots of the shooting game defend their titles. America’s three most deadly marksmen display the trophies they will defend here next week in the National Rifle and Pistol matches. The sharpshooters are, left to right” Sergeant J.B. Jensen, US Cavalry National Individual Rifle Champion and winner of the Daniel Boone Trophy; Eric Johnson, New Haven, Connecticut, national smallbore champion and member of the 1929 International Rifle Team; and Detective C.P. Shaylor, Portland Oregon, national pistol Champion.

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January 2011 Issue of Shooting Sports USA

The latest issue of Shooting Sports USA is available here.

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Vote for Competitive Shooting

Click to enlarge.

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Camp Perry in History

I came across this video of Camp Perry via the Black Hawk Update. I love the narration style that is typical for the era. pronematch.com historian Hap Rocketto tells us Corporal Edward Grimes won the Daniel Boone Trophy in 1954 which pretty much dates the video.

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CT: International Sectional, February 19-20

CT: The Bridgeport Rifle Club will be hosting the CT International al Rifle Sectional on February 19th and 20th. You can download the match program here: 2011-ct-int-sectional-program (PDF, 49KB)

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VA: Ken Quandahl Memorial Match, April 16-17

The Ken Quandahl Memorial Match and Spring Fling will be held at the NRA range in Virginaia on April 16th and 17th. You can download the match program here: 2011-quandahl-match-program (PDF, 86KB)

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CT: Middlebury Junior Rifle Match Results

The 2011 Middlebury Junior Rifle match was held January 9th in the basement of St Georges Church! Complete results can be downloaded here: 2011_ct_middlebury-match (PDF, 78KB)

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Shooter Spotlight: Charlie Adams

The purpose of the “Shooter Spotlight” is to help shooters get to know their fellow competitors a little bit better. We cover a wide range of shooters from “Marksman to Master.” This is the 70th interview in the series.

Adams accepts his Randle Doubles Medal while Patti Clark, NRA Smallbore Committee, looks on.

Where do you call home?
East Haddam, Ct

How long have you been shooting?
All my life

How did you get involved in shooting competitively?
I was drafted as the Norwich Free Academy Rifle Coach and shot to lean more about the sport.

What is a little known fact about yourself that your fellow competitors might not know?
I am an avid fan of Sherlock Holmes and am a charter member of my local Holmes society, The Winter Assizes at Norwich, and the national society, The Baker Street Irregulars

What do you consider your finest shooting achievement?
Shooting my first match at camp Perry, The Randle Doubles/Mentor Match and winning a place medal.

What is your favorite pre-match meal?
Pulled pork sandwich

What is your favorite post match drink?
The first cold beer that I come across

Do you have a favorite shooting range?
Yes, my home turf-the Quaker Hill Rod and gun Club both indoors and out. And, now that I have at last shot at Perry I like it a lot.

Do you have any short term and/or long term goals?
To keep improving

What shooting skills are currently focusing your energy on?
I shoot with a scope and am working at controlling my hold and trigger squeeze so that the crosshairs moved into the ten ring the same time my trigger finger convulses.

Thanks Charlie for sharing a little bit about yourself with the pronematch.com community!

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MA: Maspenock Junior Rifle League Results

submitted by Rich Girvin

Left to Right: Caleb Mahoney, Alli Rosati, Katie Savage. Photo by Peter Rosati.

A Maspenock Junior Rifle League 3 position 300 match was fired on Friday evening January 7, 2011. The match was scheduled as a shoulder to shoulder match to be held at the Holliston Sportsmen’s Association range.  With the threat of snow in the forecast coaches Rick Johnson of Harvard, and Rich Girvin of Holliston opted to shoot the match in postal format with each team firing on their home ranges.  With outstanding performances from Eric Johnson (268), and Mark Vicik (224) the Harvard Sportsmen’s Club team posted their second consecutive league victory.  Jonathan Hotyckey (212) posted the top score for Holliston in a losing effort.  Holliston falls to 0 and 2 in league competition.

The Maspenock Junior Smallbore Rifle League was set-up several years ago.  The purpose is to provide an instructional shoulder to shoulder competition event for new shooters in the suburbs of Boston, MA.  Currently the League includes teams from Harvard, Holliston, Marlborough, Maspenock, and Southborough. Home and away matches are scheduled from December to March.  An awards banquet is held in April to recognize the accomplishments of the junior shooters.  There are about forty youngsters participating in the League this season.

Complete results can be viewed here: 2011-ma-maspenock-01-07-11 (PDF, 102KB)

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NH: Smallbore JORC Results

submitted by Keith Jylkka

New Hampshire held its Junior Olympic Smallbore State Championship on Friday, 1/07 & Saturday, 1/08. Eighteen competitors came to the Hudson, NH Fish and Game Club to shoot the 3×20 course of fire. Four of those are first time JO shooters.

The Prone stage was ended with the top three men separated by five points. Brad Driscoll ruled with a 99 and a clean 100 for 199. Brian Jylkka was 2nd with a 195 and Joe Bogar following closely with 194. The high woman in Prone was Megan Polonsky with a 189, followed by Carley Bogar with 187 and Bailey Urbach with 185.

In Standing, again Driscoll stood tall with a 186, Jylkka right behind with a 182 and Bogar with 180. With 2/3 of the match complete, Brad holds the lead with 385, Brian 2nd with 376 and Joey B 3rd with 375.

Megan Polonsky led all shooters in standing with a very strong 187. Carley Bogar and Lacey Hamelin were 2nd and 3rd women with 175 & 137 respectively. The women’s match to this point is led by Megan with 379, Carley holds 2nd with 362 and Lacey 3rd with 318.

With the match leaders stretching their leads, kneeling remains. Brian Jylkka fires a strong 190 in kneeling. But it’s not enough to close the gap between him and Brad. With Brad firing a 188, Brad cinches the Junior Olympic Gold. Alex Martin stepped up with a fine 184 in kneeling.

Megan struggled with her first 10 shot string in kneeling but came back strong with a 95 in her 2nd 10 shot string ending with a 181 kneeling total. Carley actually fired the women’s best kneeling with a 182. Bailey Urbach steps up again with a 173 in kneeling.

With all three stages done, Brad Driscoll earns the New Hampshire Men’s Junior Olympic Gold medal with 573 total. Brian Jylkka wins the silver medal with 566 and Joe Bogar gets Bronze with 557.

Winning the New Hampshire Women’s Junior Olympic Gold is Megan Polonsky with 557 total. Carley Bogar earns the Silver medal with 544. Lacey Hamelin earns her first ever Junior Olympic medal with a 478 for Bronze.

Congratulations to all those earning Junior Olympic honors.

Complete results can be downloaded here: 2011_nh_jorc_smallbore (PDF, 12KB)

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RI: International Sectional Results

Massasoit Gun Club hosted the the Rhode Island International Sectional on January 9th, 2011. Complete results can be downloaded here: 2011-ri-international-sectional (PDF, 66KB)

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CT: USCGA Junior Tournament Results

A photo of the picturesque campus. Nice Georgian style architecture.

The United States Coast Academy Rifle Team hosted a smallbore rifle tournament at its Chase Hall range complex in New London, Connecticut on the 7th and 8th of January. The threat of a heavy snow storm did not deter junior teams from Stratford, Connecticut to Newport Rhode Island, with the bulk of the competitors coming from local high school teams, from participating in the match at the picturesque waterfront campus.

Teams shot a half course three position match on electronic targets representing the NRA/USA Shooting 50 foot target. The real time action was displayed on monitors to an enthusiastic crowd of parents located outside of the range. The visitor gallery concept was new to the spectators and they responded appropriately as they observed their athletes punch holes at varying distances from the center.

The Coast Guard motto is Semper Paratus, Latin for Always Ready and the cadets who conducted the event were both ready and accommodating to the young shooters. They provided them with mats and shooting stands, if needed, as well as friendly advice on how to deal with the unfamiliar electronic system.

Teams were also given a tour of the Coast Guard Museum which displays artifacts from the 200 year history of the U.S. Coast Guard and its predecessors: the Life Saving Service, the Steamboat Inspection Service, the Lighthouse Establishment, and the Revenue Cutter Service. A presentation about the Academy’s mission and goals followed and each participant received a commemorative T shirt.

On display were plans for the Academy’s new range complex which is scheduled to be built in the near future. Complete with rifle, pistol, and air gun ranges it also contains team locker rooms, classrooms, gunsmith shop, office, and storage space. When complete it will rival West Point’s Tronsrue Marksmanship Center as the premier collegiate shooting facility in the northeast.

Under the direction of Coach James Pruett, Coast Guard Academy Rifle Team has begun to aggressively recruit talented shooters who wish to take advantage of a free prestigious higher education leading to a commission as a Coast Guard officer. The Coast Guard competes in the Middle Atlantic Conference, which consists of 23 schools from Vermont to Virginia.

Complete results can be downloaded here: 2011_ct_coast_guard_invite (Excel, 37KB)

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Photo of the Week

Arthur C. Jackson, winner of the 1951 Presidents Hundred, is a veteran of a half century of shooting that encompasses three Olympics, several Pan American Games and World Championships, three Palma Teams, and numerous Dewar Teams. He, along with Art Cook, and Richard Hanson, formed the first United States Air Force Rifle Team. Art was is an important transitional figure in United States international shooting development as he bridged the gap between the great teams of the 1930s and those of the modern era. He is a member of USA Shooting’s International Shooters Hall of fame.

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If You March Your Winter Journeys

by Hap Rocketto

I am in awe of the great adventurers who explored the high latitudes during the early years of the 1900s, the so called Heroic Age of Antarctic Exploration. These were hearty men who were as tough as woodpecker lips, inured to the freezing cold, capable of enduring incredible deprivations, and capable of writing about their adventures in both an erudite and dramatic style.

In the north it was men of the high caliber such as the Norwegian Fridtjof Nansen, who was more than just a polar explorer; he was also scientist, diplomat, humanitarian and Nobel laureate. On the other side of the coin were the two great polar antagonists, Robert Peary and Frederick Cook, who both questionably claimed primacy at the North Pole, yet were still positive contributors to the exploration of the far north land. Even Richard Byrd, whose claim to have reached the North Pole by air is in doubt-even though he most certainly did fly to the South Pole, is worthy of merit.

Ernest Shackleton, the luckiest of all Antarctic Explorers, was wildly popular because of his panache, daring, and charismatic public speaking.

Roald Amundsen, of Norway, would be the first to transit the Northwest Passage and also the first to reach the South Pole. With good cause many believe that, because of the reasonable doubt concerning Peary, Cook, and Byrd, when Amundsen and Umberto Nobile made the first crossing of the Arctic in the airship Norge, Amundsen and Oscar Wisting, who was part of Amundsen’s South Pole party, were the first persons to reach both geographical poles. There is even enough wiggle room to claim that Amundsen was also the first to the North Pole-presuming he was the furthest forward in the Norge when it crossed the top of the world.

Because of the circumstances of his death, and the beauty of his Victorian writing style, by far the most well known of the Antarctic explorers was Robert Falcon Scott. “Con” Scott lead two expeditions south. On the second he marched on foot with four companions 1500 of the 1600 mile round trip from his base to the South Pole. After arriving at the pole a few weeks after Amundsen, the discouraged party turned back toward home but eventfully succumbed to the privations of cold, thirst, hunger, scurvy, and exhaustion. Scott’s journals were recovered when a search party discovered the party’s remains the following spring. They became an instant publishing sensation and reserved for him a place in the pantheon of polar explorers. His heroism and writings were such that generations of British school children thought him first at the South Pole.

However this story revolves around Apsley George Benet Cherry-Garrard, a member of Scott’s second expedition, who, along with Dr, Edward Wilson and Lieutenant Henry Bowers, made what Garrard called in his account The Worst Journey in the World. It was a trip from the expedition’s base camp at Ross Island to Cape Crozier during the austral winter of 1911 in order to secure samples of Emperor penguin eggs. In nearly total darkness, with temperatures plunging to nearly −80 °F they walked 60 miles dragging nearly 800 pounds of supplies on two sledges. Upon reaching their goal they were trapped by a blizzard so strong it tore away their tent leaving them only their sleeping bags for shelter. They fortunately found the tent when the storm subsided after which they collected three eggs and trudged back to Cape Ross at a pace that was, at times, only a mile and a half a day.

In the end Cherry-Garrard philosophically summed up the whole terrible six week ordeal by simply saying that, “If you march your Winter Journeys you will have your reward, so long as all you want is a penguin’s egg.”

All this came to mind on New Year’s Day when a message arrived from Dan Holmes that stated, “We’re going for it. Come to Hopkinton tomorrow for 40 shots at 100 yards! There is a fair amount of snow but with the warm weather, the snow is soft which should make it easy to get the target frames in. We’ll be hanging one target and shooting 20 shots per bull. … Afterwards, we’ll get a few pizzas in the clubhouse.”

My brother Steve and I had been shooting in the gallery at least two times a week since the summer outdoor season closed with the Great Pumpkin Match in mid October when the message arrived. Most of our rounds down range have gone toward attempts to win the three winter leagues in which we participate. There is the Wednesday night shoulder to shoulder 40 shot four position Mohegan League, the weekly Friday 30 shot international Southwestern League, and the monthly English Match on the NRA/USA Shooting target Pickering Postal match.

The thought of escaping the bleak basement confines of the club for an outdoor match was overpowering. We weighed the four hours on the road, shooting in the January cold, sweeping away snow from the firing point, mucking through the snow drifts to place the frame and to hang the target, and locating all of our prone gear against getting to shoot 40 shots at 100 yards outside, being with a good number of our summer shooting cronies whom we had not seen in months, and getting to scarf down some pizza.

I told Steve I might have to think about it. To him the answer was clear as crystal, or, as he said paraphrasing Cherry-Garrard, “What is there to think about? If you march your Winter Journeys you will have your reward, so long as all you want is a rifle match.”

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