Girls and guns

   / Girls and guns #91  
Here was my inspiration for the aerial target practice.

A method of point shooting with a rifle was developed by Lucky McDaniel and taught by the US Army beginning in 1967. It was called "Quick Kill", and it was taught using an air rifle. The Quick Kill method was fully detailed in-step-by-step fashion in Principles of Quick Kill.[34] It was taught starting with a special Daisy BB gun that had no sights. The slow moving steel BB was visible in flight on sunny days, making it an inexpensive tracer round. The students began by firing at 3.5-inch (89 mm) diameter metal disks thrown in the air slightly in front of the student and 2 to 4 meters (6 ft 7 in to 13 ft 1 in) above the student's head. After an 80% hit rate is attained firing at these disks, the student is then presented with 2.5-inch (64 mm) diameter disks. Once proficiency is attained with the aerial targets, it shows the student has mastered the fundamentals, and training moves on to stationary targets on the ground, first with the BB gun and then with a service rifle having its front and rear sights taped over.
The reason the quick kill method works is that the shooter learns to sight above the barrel, rather than along the barrel. While focusing on the target, the muzzle is placed about 2 inches (51 mm) below the target (the distance being measured at the muzzle), which places the barrel nearly parallel to the line of sight of the shooter. To hit the aerial targets, or other targets above eye level, the shooter focuses on the top edge of the target. When shooting at targets on the ground or below eye level, the shooter focuses on the bottom of the target. One of the points emphasized in quick kill is that it is essential to focus on a single spot on the target, such as the top edge of a thrown disc, or the bottom edge of a can on the ground.
A key to hitting the target is to track the target by moving your head with the rifle seated against it. Do not just track it with your eyes.
The Daisy company commercially sold sightless BB guns and target throwers for a number of years under the name Quick Skill, along with an instruction book that was a demilitarized version of the aerial target portion of the "quick kill" course.
 
   / Girls and guns #92  
I read about and did the sightless BB gun, then 22LR, in the mid 1950's. I think it was called "point shooting" then.

It came in handy in night firing exercises in basic training in the 1960's. I could get hand-sized groups on the silhouette targets without seeing the sights. (about 50yds? 100ft?)

Bruce
 
   / Girls and guns #93  
Don't know if it still is but draw and shoot used to be part of the LE qualification test. There were a couple in my class that couldn't hit the silhouette at three yards. Fortunately for them, it was scored on an aggregate and not by position. It was a long running joke after that. Whenever they unholstered their weapon for safety check, everybody stepped back. :) They did finally pick it up though.
 
   / Girls and guns #94  
   / Girls and guns #95  
Dang spell checker. :ashamed:
 
   / Girls and guns #96  
My youngest daughter took her second deer a couple weeks ago. I was so proud of her. She is 21 years old, and has been hunting with me since she was about 5. But, this was her first deer where she was in the stand by herself. I went meet her to track it, because I figured it was gut shot. She found the first blood, and trailed it and actually found the deer.

She has a Browning A Bolt II in a 25-06.

When we got back to camp, I got her started, but she did 90% of the skinning by herself. I'm one proud papa....


Sorry, I have a picture but can't upload it for some reason.
 
   / Girls and guns #97  
Mmmm. Field dressing a gut-shot ruminate. My favorate. I'd a let her do it too.
(hope you can tell im kidding)
 
   / Girls and guns #98  
My 3 older daughters had lots of practice shooting pests (mostly ground squirrels) on the farm. They all have their CCW permits now.

My youngest 14 year old daughter got her first mule deer last year. She used a Browning 243 WSSM.

Samsung pics 02-22-15 011.jpeg
 
   / Girls and guns
  • Thread Starter
#99  
Did you set up your own high house/low house? Would love to see pictures! I wish I had started shooting skeet years ago; it is so much fun! I shoot at local range; I do not have room for high/low house and the layout for all 8 shoot stations.

No, I just have a spring loaded, manual cocking thrower. I adjust angle and move the shooters around, it isn't really "skeet" per the rules, mostly just shooting clays. It's a lot of fun though.
 
   / Girls and guns
  • Thread Starter
#100  
I am guessing you are a patient loving husband.

LOL, I don't know about all that, I'm just good at letting things run off like water off a duck's back. I mostly just give instruction and then shut-up and let the wife or daughter make mistakes that won't result in an injury. If they ask for help or what they're doing is going to get someone or something hurt, I speak up but otherwise, I let them learn through experience. And if they yell at me because they're frustrated, I take it and move on.
 

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