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10/3/2006
Shooting program builds more than marksmanship
Skills and attitudes learned in 4-H shooting programs prepare
youngsters for life.
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Jacob Kessler, of Lawson, Mo., was one of more than 850
youths who took part in the Missouri 4-H Shooting Program competition at
Cedar Creek Rod and Gun Club Sept. 16. He learned some important lessons
at the event.(Missouri Dept. of Conservation photo) (Missouri Dept. of
Conservation photo) |
COLUMBIA-"Are you ready?" Roxana Kessler asked, watching her youngest
son, Jacob's, face as he uncased his shotgun. The youngster was about to
shoot a round of 25 clay targets at the state 4-H Shooting Sports Program
competition. He mumbled a brief reply, not meeting his mom's inquiring look.
A few days short of 13, Jacob didn't want his mother fussing over him. He
had done well in the .22 cal. rifle competition earlier that morning and was
confident in the shotgun skills he had learned on hunting trips with his dad
and friends. He walked casually onto the trap field, where he and four other
youths received instructions from the safety officer. After finding their
shooting stations, the first shooter called out "Pull!" and a 5-inch clay
disk rocketed away at 40 mph. The competition was underway.
When Jacob's first turn came, he missed. "Lost bird!" called the field
judge. Roxana groaned in sympathetic disappointment. Jacob turned to glance
at her, saw the concern in her eyes.
He had won the Ray County competition leading up to the state event, but now
he missed several targets in a row. Roxana was in full mom mode now,
wondering about his shooting form and offering pantomime pointers when he
looked to her for support.
"That's okay," she called out. Then she wondered aloud if she was allowed to
shout advice and encouragement from the sidelines. "He will come away from
this with something," she said philosophically. "He'll learn something."
All around the rear of the trap field, similar personal dramas were playing
out. Families in lawn chairs pulled for their respective shooters. Quite a
few targets were escaping unbroken. Jacob wasn't the only one feeling the
pressure of competition.
When the round was over, Jacob's disappointment was visible in his posture.
He didn't say much, only that he should have done better. It turned out he
did okay, placing second in his round. And he still had his good score in
the .22 competition to feel positive about.
Jacob was one of more than 850 shooters at the event Sept. 16. His shotgun
was a serviceable youth model. He wasn't a novice to shooting, but he was
not a veteran target shooter, either. Given a choice, he would rather hunt.
However, the 4-H Shooting Sports Program allowed him to pursue his passion
for shooting and hunting during the off-season.
Other competitors ranged from casual target shooters like Jacob to youths
who compete in Junior Olympics and NRA-sanctioned events. Their firearms
ranged from "little rabbit .22s," as Roxana called them, to expensive
competition-grade firearms.
The competition site, 220-acre Cedar Creek Rod & Gun Club east of Columbia,
echoed with gunshots all day. Youngsters aged 8 to 18 competed in shotgun,
.22 ca. rifle, air rifle, BB gun, small-bore pistol, air pistol,
muzzle-loading rifle, archery and hunting skills competitions. In all, they
fired more than 28,000 shots, an average of more than 2,000 per hour.
With more than 1,800 people in attendance, the event was a model of
efficiency. Youths strode purposefully between venues carrying cased
firearms. Local contingents established impromptu headquarters consisting of
dozens of lawn chairs clustered around motor homes and impressive
trailer-mounted barbecue grills. The atmosphere resembled a huge family
reunion.
"This program has seen huge growth in the past eight years," said Gerry
Snapp, a 4-H Youth Development Specialist with the University of Missouri
Cooperative Extension Service. He said the national 4-H Shooting Sports
Program began in 1981. Missouri organized its program in 1985, and it grew
rapidly. Now it has 5,500 youths enrolled in 94 county programs, making it
the state's second-largest 4-H program.
"Our state shoot began many years before there was a national 4-H
competition," said Snapp. "As a result, we take a slightly different
approach than the national event. For one thing, we have different events.
Also, instead of being a competition for the best of the best, where only
winners from county events compete at the state level, anyone who competes
in a county-level 4-H shooting competition can take part in the state
competition. There is no minimum score required. Our goal is to encourage
the highest level of participation. That has helped make this the largest
competitive event in Missouri 4-H."
Girls and boys compete on an equal footing. The 4-H Shooting Sports
Program's goals are to teach safe and responsible use of firearms, to teach
the fundamentals of shooting, to connect youths with caring adults, and to
teach life skills, such as goal setting, decision making, self-discipline,
responsibility, safety, concentration and the wise use of the environment.
Roxana Kessler said some of those goals seem to have been realized in
Jacob's case.
"Jacob did so well at the local trap competition. I think he thought he was
going to come in and wipe it out. He was really upset when he didn't shoot
as well as he thought he would. It was better for him to learn a tough
lesson like that now, at a young age, instead of a much harder lesson later
on.
"I really thought, 'Oh, boy, it's going to be a long ride home,' but I was
surprised at how quickly he recovered. He took maybe 10 minutes. You know,
he just had to mourn about it a little bit. Within an hour of leaving the
shoot he was talking about how he was going to prepare for next year, so I
think he learned his lesson pretty quickly."
She said the competition not only didn't discourage Jacob; it made him think
about long-range goals for his shooting. "He has talked about scholarships
quite a bit," said Roxana. "He knows that there are far more scholarships in
rifle than there are in shotgun. Quite a few colleges have shooting teams,
and he has even talked about the Olympics. I'm glad he has something that
really fires him up and he can work on - anything besides video games and
TV."
To learn about a 4-H Shooting Sports Program near you, contact your county
University of Missouri Cooperative Extension Service office.
Sponsors of the shooting event include the George Clark Missouri Chapter of
the National Wild Turkey Federation, the Big Game Hunters Foundation of St.
Louis, Cedar Creek Rod and Gun Club, the Missouri Department of
Conservation, the National Rifle Association Foundation and Brenda and Larry
Potterfield of MidwayUSA.
-Jim Low
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