Guy Miner
Master Loader
- Apr 6, 2006
- 17,746
- 5,823
In my basic handgun class yesterday, I had five great people - one of whom turned out to be a ringer! Nice lady who told me she hadn't shot a handgun in decades, and wanted a course to refresh her knowledge as she wanted to start carrying a .38 for protection.
Okay - sounds good to me. She listened, soaked it all in, did pretty well with all our unloaded pistol drills.
We went out to do the live fire portion and she struggled a bit with the recoil from her lightweight .38 revolver, but managed to hit the targets every time. Then, when she was obviously becoming uncomfortable with the recoil, I urged her to switch to a .22 target pistol...
Seldom have I seen such shooting!
Turns out that as a kid, she had been on a pistol shooting team - and even after several decades, that skill and knowledge had not vanished. Some of the tightest pistol groups I've ever seen... Watching her shoot was a lesson in trigger control. Several times she brought the pistol down instead of shooting, because the sights weren't aligned perfectly, or her breathing wasn't perfectly timed. Then she'd raise the pistol again, and put more bullets into the same tiny group.
She told me later than she and her sister had trained together as children, and that her sister had gone on to the Olympics. Yes, there are shooters among us, and we don't even know them. She was amazing with that .22 pistol!
Wow! Much respect.
Guy
Okay - sounds good to me. She listened, soaked it all in, did pretty well with all our unloaded pistol drills.
We went out to do the live fire portion and she struggled a bit with the recoil from her lightweight .38 revolver, but managed to hit the targets every time. Then, when she was obviously becoming uncomfortable with the recoil, I urged her to switch to a .22 target pistol...
Seldom have I seen such shooting!
Turns out that as a kid, she had been on a pistol shooting team - and even after several decades, that skill and knowledge had not vanished. Some of the tightest pistol groups I've ever seen... Watching her shoot was a lesson in trigger control. Several times she brought the pistol down instead of shooting, because the sights weren't aligned perfectly, or her breathing wasn't perfectly timed. Then she'd raise the pistol again, and put more bullets into the same tiny group.
She told me later than she and her sister had trained together as children, and that her sister had gone on to the Olympics. Yes, there are shooters among us, and we don't even know them. She was amazing with that .22 pistol!
Wow! Much respect.
Guy