Josh and I arrived on time at 9am Mountain this morning to do some shooting. We had no idea what to expect, and I was hoping that more people would be showing up.
Alas, nobody new showed up.
Oh well. It was still a blast, no pun intended.
I got a little more back-story on why Gary Marbut was there. The original guy that was to run the rifle class backed out after the ATF raid so Gary stepped in and still held the class when only one student signed up.
He’s an interesting guy, and I don’t mean that in the kinda crazy way. On his webpage you’ll find his story and the things that he’s done. He’s been around and done some things, that’s for sure.
Anyway.
We arrive and Gary is getting things set for some rifle shooting. He put 6″x6″ painted steel plates on stands at 125 yards, 150 yards, 175 yards, and one out at 200 yards. The final one was the “option target.” I’ll get to that in a bit.
This was part of the class that Josh and I didn’t sign up for. We knew we wouldn’t make it out there in time and honestly I was more interested in meeting people than doing any serious shooting.
Gary let us run the course too. Didn’t have to. I was surprised — rifle shots at steel targets puts some wear on them. If anything broke he’d be spending time making new ones.
So, here’s how the course works. You take your unloaded rifle and magazine(s) to the starting point. The Range Officer (Gary in this case) verifies that you’re unloaded, commands you to load and make safe the rifle, and asks if you’re ready. When you say yes, he hits a button on a timer a few seconds later and you’re off.
You head to the shooting position and take your spot. Kneeling, sitting, bipod, walking sticks, off-hand, whatever. You pick whatever works best for you and your equipment. You then engage one set of targets. I forget how to score it exactly, but your time and number of plates you knock own goes into an equation that determines your score.
We kept track, but didn’t work it all out. It was a learning exercise, not a competition.
After you engage 3 targets you record your stats, reload, and then take on another set of targets.
The “option target” may be engaged on any one of the three sets. If you hit it you take 30 seconds off your time.
I shot the course twice, to some degree. I don’t have many scoped rifles, in fact I only have two right now and the last one was bought just last week. Hence, I don’t mesh well with scopes yet. They’re foreign. I shot the course with iron sights. One with my AR-15 Bushmaster Dissipator and one with Josh’s AK-47 done up like a Russian RPK. It’s a bit better suited to the task than my AK-47 clone.
Neither are precision rifles and neither has any glass on top of it.
With the AR -15 I had no problem with the first 3 125 yard targets once I got into the groove. I then went to the 150 yard targets which were colored pink. I’m wondering if I’m color-blind to some degree now. With all the light brown and light green out there I really had trouble finding the pink targets. The white targets out at 175 yards were far easier to pick out. I nailed two. It took 27 shots. Not cool.
When I ran the course again with the AK-47 clone I pegged the 3 125 yard targets pretty quick. This isn’t my gun, and it shoots a bit high, but once I got my position I cleared them fairly quick. For me.
I reloaded and went after the pink targets at 150 yards and by damn I couldn’t see them. The sun had really come up and it changed things. I would pick my head up off the gun and could guess where they were. I’d lob a round downrange and not have a clue if I was shooting at the right thing. A few dust clouds later I had a trick: If I shot behind the target the target would make a shadow in the dust cloud. Aim at the shadow and then I could hit it. I smacked two this way but I couldn’t get a good read on the final target. By then the barrel was heated up quite a bit and was walking all over. I couldn’t hit the last one. Again.
I definitely need some better equipment for this stuff.
And training.
Gary was running the course using a high-end DPMS AR-10 in .308 and a Weatherby variable power 24x scope. I managed to miss a 8.5″x11″ piece of paper at 100 yards with his equipment on Day 1. Good equipment is necessary for this kind of shooting, but without the skill it won’t work.
On one run Gary engaged the 3 targets at 175 yards and went for the optional target which he nailed in one shot and took 30 seconds off his time for that run.
His final time (including time to setup his bipod) was -0.35 seconds after the 30 second reduction.
Damn!
He then proceeded to working on the same 6″x6″ steel plates at 400 yards. Yes, he can hit that kind of stuff, in field conditions. This guy knows his stuff. I’m glad I’ve met him. Reminds me how much I need to work on my rifle skills.
We all packed up, cleared out the shooting field, and went to lunch in Dillon, MT.
Good times. We’re done with the KT event now and Josh and I will be heading back, taking our time and doing the return trip in 3 days instead of the 1.5 we used to get out here.