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Tune Up Your Gun Handling

March 19, 2012 by  

Tune Up Your Gun Handling
All the photos taken to show these examples were done using a handgun with a training barrel or other non-firearm props, to ensure that no gun safety rules were broken.
USCONCEALEDCARRY.COM

Over the past 20 years, I’ve taught everything from National Rifle Association Basic Pistol to Texas Concealed Handgun Licensing to Defensive Pistol Skills to students with a wide range of skill, experience and prior training.

As a competition shooter and customer of commercial ranges, I’ve had the opportunity to observe good, bad and ugly gun-handling habits. That experience has led me to accept an inconvenient truth about gun owners: Every gun owner believes that his or her gun handling is safe, regardless of how good or bad that gun handling is.

This is an example of illusory superiority: a cognitive bias that causes people to overestimate their positive qualities and abilities and to underestimate their negative qualities, relative to others. It’s also known as the Lake Wobegon effect, because none of us believe we are below average.

That means, of course, that none of the discussion that follows applies to you, but you probably know someone who would benefit from this article. What separates a gun owner from a “shooter” is how you handle your gun during the 99 percent of the time you aren’t shooting it. Strive to be a “shooter” and ensure that your gun handling is safe 100 percent of the time.

Most gun owners can recite either the NRA’s Three Rules of Gun Safety or Jeff Cooper’s Four Rules, and they will claim (even as they violate one or more rules) that they obey those rules all the time. My observation is that while the absolute gun safety rules are common to all situations, their interpretation varies widely, particularly with regard to gun handling at commercial shooting ranges and less formal situations.

Most of them occur because the person handling the gun does not fully grasp the concept of “safe direction” and incorrectly believes that there is an “It’s OK; it’s unloaded” exemption.

In addition to basic gun safely rules, there are fundamental rules of range etiquette, such as only handling guns at the designated firing line, and stopping all shooting immediately if a cease fire is called. Those who have shot only in informal situations or at poorly supervised ranges often are unaware of these range etiquette policies.

What to do when you encounter one of the Terrible Twelve at a range or a gun shop? As they are in the act of committing one of these gun handling sins, ask them, “Would you be willing to fire a shot out of that gun, pointed where it is right now?”

Hopefully they will answer “No.” Then ask, “Then why are you pointing it in that direction?” If enough people start correcting others on these errors, perhaps we can indeed, all be above average in our safe gun handling skills.

NRA Three Rules

  1. Always keep the muzzle pointed in a safe direction
  2. Always keep your finger off the trigger until ready to shoot.
  3. Always keep guns unloaded until ready to use.

Jeff Cooper’s Four Rules Of Gun Safety

  1. All guns are always loaded. Even if they are not, treat them as if they are.
  2. Never let the muzzle cover anything you are not willing to destroy. (For those who insist that this particular gun is unloaded, see Rule 1.)
  3. Keep your finger off the trigger until your sights are on the target. (This is the Golden Rule. Its violation is directly responsible for about 60 percent of inadvertent discharges.)
  4. Identify your target and what is behind it. Never shoot at anything that you have not positively identified.

The NRA rules are each stated as specific direction, with most important first. With the gun pointed in a safe direction, if you fire a round you didn’t intend to, it still goes in a safe direction. Cooper uses three of his rules (1, 2 and 4) to address safe direction in various ways. While he’s correct that failure to obey his Rule 3 is responsible for most negligent discharges, the safe gun handling failures described in the adjacent article are overwhelmingly a result of failing to follow NRA Rule 1 or the other three of Cooper’s rules.

SOURCES: www.USConcealedCarry.com, NRA Gun Safety Rules, Jeff Cooper’s Commentaries, April 2003.

The Gut RackerThis error most commonly occurs when the shooter rotates the pistol in his hand to be able to more easily lock the slide back. One solution to this problem is to insert an empty magazine and pull the slide back to engage the slide lock, instead of putting the gun in this clearly unsafe position.
The SpinnerThis error typically occurs when the gun is carried in a rectangular case that gives no indication as to which direction the gun is pointed inside the case. The simple fix for this is to mark one end of the case as the muzzle end, and be consistent about always placing the gun in the case facing that direction.
The CowboyThis practice is unsafe at all ranges except those which are fully baffled to block extremely high shots, and even in that situation, it’s clearly a case of pointing a gun in a direction that is not the intended target.
The DangleThis is also known as the “my gun is heavy” position and occurs when the person holding the gun gets mentally or physically fatigued, and simply lets the gun drop. Would you be willing to fire a loaded gun from that position? If not, then it’s unsafe. How to avoid this? Holster the gun or set it down on a downrange table or bench.
The CheapskateLast year, a shooter in Houston was shot in the leg and suffered serious injury when a range customer took an uncased rifle out of his vehicle. The trigger of the rifle snagged on something in the vehicle, causing the loaded, off-safe rifle to fire. How to avoid this? Carry your guns in cases, bags, boxes, holsters — something that covers the trigger guard of the gun.
The Side RackerThis is why the dividers between stalls at indoor ranges are bulletproof. As I heard one range user say to a side racker, “If it’s OK for you to point your loaded gun at me, that means it’s OK for me to point my loaded gun at you, right?” If you physically cannot rack the slide without using this technique, the solution is simple: Turn your lower body 90 degrees so that your muzzle is pointed downrange, and not at the person next to you.
The Lone (Up) RangerDon’t handle your gun when you are behind the firing line. If you are on the firing line, don’t handle your gun when shooters are downrange resetting targets. Is it possible to handle your gun behind the firing line and keep it pointed in a safe direction? Maybe, but unless you are under attack, there’s no reason to violate range etiquette rules.
The MuffThis often occurs immediately after the user has already fired one shot without hearing protection, and they reach to adjust their earmuffs, loaded gun in hand, pointed at the sky. Would you be willing to fire a loaded gun from that position? If not, then it’s unsafe. How to avoid this? Holster the gun or make it safe and set it down on a downrange table or bench.
The Trigger GuardianThe trigger guardian will insist that their finger is “off the trigger.” Technically it is. But when the finger is placed in that position, it’s extremely easy for the finger to get to the trigger, should the shooter be startled or bumped. Some argue that it’s tactically important to have the finger that extra quarter-inch closer to the trigger, resting on the trigger guard and not on the slide, because they believe that it makes them faster to the first shot.Nowhere in the shooting world does speed matter more than at the IPSC Grand Master level, where multi-day matches are sometimes decided by fractions of a second. If that marginal change in trigger finger position made a measurable difference in speed, one would expect that the top shooters would use that technique. They don’t, and I state that as a Master class shooter who has taken courses from, practiced with, and RO’d top level shooters.
The Palm ShooterThe disassembly procedure for a Glock handgun requires that two levers be pressed down, one on each side of the frame, and the trigger pulled to release the slide. Unfortunately, one technique that many shooters adopt for this procedure places the muzzle pointed into his palm. There are multiple firsthand accounts documented online (including photos of the resulting injury) of shooters putting holes in their hands as a result of failing to remove the round in the chamber before pulling the trigger.
The Barrel LookerThis usually occurs after a malfunction has occurred, and the shooter is trying to determine whether the barrel is blocked or the chamber is fouled. Unfortunately, this method requires the shooter to point the gun in an unsafe direction. Safe alternatives include removing the barrel from the slide before inspection or using a Bore Snake or cleaning rod through the barrel.
The Ammo SaverThis usually occurs while unloading a semi-automatic pistol. After the magazine is removed and the slide is racked, the ammo saver stops paying attention to muzzle direction and becomes obsessed with the ejected live round. Often, this results in the muzzle pointing at the shooter’s feet or pointing up range. To correct this unsafe behavior, the shooter should ignore the ejected round and instead complete the unloading process by checking the chamber to ensure that it’s empty, and then holstering the pistol or setting it down, muzzle in a safe direction, before bending over to pick up the ejected round.

Karl Rehn

Karl Rehn

is the lead instructor for KR Training (www.krtraining.com) and has taught classes in the Central Texas area for the past 20 years. He is an NRA Training Counselor, Texas Concealed Handgun License Instructor, and a Master class competitor in IPSC, IDPA and Steel Challenge, who has trained with dozens of well known tactical and competition instructors. To learn more, visit www.USConcealedCarry.com

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  • MontieR

    This is a great article. Sadly it is essentially about one thing missing from today’s society,
    common sense.

  • Paul

    Great article! You can never be too safe. One correction for palm shooter;
    it is not necesary to pull the trigger on a Glock to release the slide. The slide is pulled back too far if you have reset your trigger. Try pulling the slide back about 1/4 to 1/2 inch without exposing your palm (or any other body part) to the muzzle. The slide should release easily.
    We all need to practice safe gun handling and alert others politely when they stray from safe gun handling. The rules are simple but the costs of violation can be severe.

  • so far so good

    Great article, and thanks for putting it out there. With the barely noticeable increase in sales lately, I’m sure we have a few newbies in the game….. I tell most I run into who are interested to go to a local indoor range. They will rent and instruct.

  • mark

    Obama sucks!!!!!!

  • Ron

    Excellent advice!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!

  • http://www.facebook.com/profile.php?id=1007113269 Marc Albertario

    My first onboard cpo told us “You must be smarter than the equipment you operate, if not it will kill you and/or your shipmates.” We worked with S/A, S/S missiles and 5″ .54 Cal gun systems. There were many parts of the systems besides the armaments that could kill. I still have all my body parts and never harmed my shipmates! But after 40 years of gun handling I have had an unintentional discharge into the ground just 6″ from my foot!!!! It forever changed how I hunt, the gloves I wear and the thoughts I have in mind while holding a gun.

  • scout

    Most people handle ALL firearms very carelessly. They are scary. I hunt and shoot alone…It even gets worse as time goes on. They do not respect anything…….

    • Jerry Marshall

      Scout, if you are finding “everybody is unsafe with guns” maybe you should get away from these people!
      But I think you are one of these people that have NO IDEA what you’re talking about, and just come to this site so you can stir up controversy for your LEFTIST anti-gun, anti-American friends!
      Go occupy something, and leave the important conversations to the GROWN-UPS!

  • Don

    All of the examples shown are quite common proceedures for people that only shoot in stalls at the range. Most people that engage in the shooting disiplines like USPSA or IDPA quikly learn to avoid these mistakes or get set home .

  • 45caliber

    I told my kids that if they were stupid enough to point a gun at something they didn’t want to shoot, make sure it was pointed at their own foot. That way no innocent person would be harmed. They got the point. This weekend I was teaching my grandson how to use a rifle. I told him the same thing. He understood it too.

    The main failure I see of hunters is a failure to look beyond their target to see what might be on the other side of it. They get too excited when they do see something. The real problem is that they get too excited to think.

    Recently I went to a gun shop to look at a gun. The clerk picked it up and set it down on the counter pointed directly at me. I didn’t say anything until I finished. Then I told the clerk, “You may get more business if you are careful to never point the gun at anyone.” She got the point and appologized. The next time I was in there, she was very careful to not point it in anyone’s general direction.

  • Roger

    One more thing I have to share. The infamous Remington 700. When I was 15 (my first rifle) 25.06 bolt action (loved that rifle). My first deer hunt. I had just walked into camp. safety ON. I flipped the safety off to unload the rifle… and boom…right through the corner of the tent without me ever touching the trigger. I did have it pointed at the ground, but my angle was just little off. I thought it was a fluke until about two years ago when I read an article about another and then found out there were thousands of the same. Please re-post for everyone. In my case luckily it was the very edge of the tent but that was a great first lesson at a young age for me and for everyone else in our camp.
    Thanks again
    Roger

    • 45caliber

      I make a point of pretending the safety isn’t even on the gun. It is too unreliable to trust. If you aren’t planning to shoot something, unload it immediately. Depending on what I am doing, I may keep a magazine in the gun but never a bullet in the chamber.

    • http://gravatar.com/hattles JeffH

      Roger, “The infamous Remington 700″? Bet you saw CNBC’s broadcast of “Remington Under Fire”. The premise of the story is that for years Remington knew about a deadly trigger flaw with the Remington 700. I owned and used a Rem 700 for decades without an incident and have known many who’ve never had an incident with the 700. For nearly 6 decades, the Remington Model 700 rifle has been the preferred choice for millions of hunters, shooting sports enthusiasts and military and law enforcement personnel. I watched the broadcast and during the whole story I kept thinking that every one of the accidents they described could of been prevented by simply following the 10 commandments of gun safety and thought it very typical of a biased anti-gun report.

      NRA News – Remington CNBC Response
      http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=YFP2RgaHRuQ&feature=related

      Its not a malfunction or a design flaw. Its called having a negligent discharge and saying; ” I didn’t even pull the trigger !! …It just went off “

      • independant thinker

        I saw a video supposedly showing the flaw in the 700. It has been to long for me to remember the details but I do remember in every instance of an AD they showed it was obviously “operator” error not a manufacturing defect.

      • GeoInSD

        In addition to the NRA and Mr. Cooper rules, in my extended family we have a rule that the action be left open when not shooting. I won’t forget the scolding my grandfather gave me when I brought my .22 into the house with the bolt closed.

        It has always been maddening to me hearing on the news about someone being shot while one was “cleaning the gun”. As JeffH says, these “accidents” wouldn’t happen if people strictly followed basic gun safety, which isn’t hard to do. Some might say a person might slip up once in awhile during a brain f*rt. While true, I think it would happen far less if people had the attitude to never violate the rules, to make it a habit. I think it is human nature to do what one is conditioned to do, especially during a brain f*rt. So it is extremely important to ingrain those proper gun safety habits so brain f*rts are non issues.

      • 45caliber

        I was helping with a Scout troop one day when the Scout Master brought in an old guy to teach them about gun safety. In the process of handing around the guns, he slid a blank cartridge into one. Sure enough, within minutes someone fired it. It scared all of them badly – and all remember that to this day. (It was startling to me too.)

      • http://gravatar.com/hattles JeffH

        GeoInSD, I agree with you. Whenever I’m around others, I make it a habit to always keep my action open and try to make it visible to those around me, at home, on the range and when carrying my gun to and from the field. With a revolver, I’ll open the cylinder and carry it with two fingers under the top strap showing the empty cylinder.

    • Jerry Marshall

      Everyone that hunts in our family, and invited guests are always warned to unload their firearms before entering camp, and always have the action open on their rifles.
      We have never had an accidental discharge in 50 years that I have been going out, and hopefully all of these safety practices have helped to prevent accidental discharges, and I have not heard of any within our circle of hunters.
      GREAT ARTICLE!
      It never hurts to be reminded, no matter how many times, of the importance of being safe, and assisting those around us to be safe, as well. I have found that the majority of people exercising their Second Amendment Rights try to be safe and responsible, but sometimes everybody can use a helpful reminder.

  • http://httpaol.com sean murrey ILLInio

    i always have my muzzle pointed down range until i am ready to shoot where i shoot at they hasnt an accident for years.

  • DavidL

    Great article and solid safety advice that all of us gun owners, and those we bring to the range for the first time, should review over and over again.

  • Dm

    I was at a public gun range last week (2nd week in march) a guy was putting his AR-15 away in a case sitting on the bench after just shooting it. I was standing at the back right corner of bench talking to him (he was on the back left side and his wife was near the left front corner) all of a sudden I heard a loud bang, like a firecracker went off. I said “what the hell was that”? here the gun had a round in it and went off while it was laying on the bench, about 2 feet away from his wife. the round blew a 3″ hole in the end of his soft case and blew some gloves off the bench 10 feet away. she would have gotten hit right in the stomach if it was pointed at her. scared the hell out of me! People, you gotta check your guns better after shooting, especially when other people are around.

    • 45caliber

      Ever heard of a “cook off”?

      This is when a gun gets hot enough from firing that it will continue to fire even if your finger isn’t on the trigger. The heat of the gun causes the powder to ignite.

      Since it WILL occur, always be extra careful where a gun is pointed.

      • Joe H

        45,
        Saw it happen TWICE with an M-60 in nam!! It CAN happen!!!

  • Roger

    I’m a Master Electrician (35years). I relate this to my advice about electricity. If the power is connected to the building (or some other source ie.solar or generator) then yes it IS HOT and you should handle it accordingly. The same goes for an “unloaded firearm” There is no such thing in my books. Thanks for the tips. I’m printing this out for my family to read and to teach to my children and grandchildren. I usually have just told them that anything that you point a firearm at will die and it won’t come back in the nest level. LOL
    Roger

  • Ron

    As I read your article, I found that I was experiencing mixed feelings. While I agree 100% with what you are saying, I will also disagree on some points, in some regards. Many persons and groups have attempted to establish a “one size fits all” set of rules for gun safety. However, firearms safety is a relative subject. What you have said seems to apply 100% to the safe handling of weapons during competition. And for someone that is going through the process of learning how to technically handle and fire a gun, these rules would also apply The major exceptions to the rules as stated would be to Law Enforcement and the military. The world that these people experience can be so entirely different than what day to day life civilian life is, that a different set of safety standards needs to be used. Other than that, an excellent article. Thanks for posting it.

    • Gun Doctor

      Ron,
      How you handle your gun on the range or in public most likely will be different from how you handle it at home. And, that will be influenced by other factors such as children or grandchildren at your home. As for me, my personal handguns are ALWAYS loaded and ready. As Uncle Ted would say, “cocked, locked and ready to rock.” As with all guns, the way they deploy is based upon the manufacturer’s design of the weapon. A Glock, for instance, is ready when there is a live round in the chamber whereas a 1911 is ready when there is a live round in the chamber and the hammer is cocked back. With the 1911, I keep the hammer cocked back with the manual thumb safety engaged. The main thing to remember here is how you have stored the gun for deployment use. In other words, is there a round in the chamber or not and how easy is it to get to the weapon.

      • Ron

        Sounds like we are pretty much on the same page.

      • http://www.ifonlyphotos.com Alex Frazier

        The last thing you said is the most important. Just like having a muzzle side of the case, it is my opinion that the firearms you intend for home defense should be stored in the same way as each other. I, too, keep mine loaded and chambered. Since we all know that a perpetrator can cover thirty feet in a matter of seconds, the last thing I need is to grab my gun and have to chamber a round before I can use it. The delay could be the difference between life and death. I think they say that the average gun fight lasts about five seconds. There just isn’t a lot of room for error.

        And I have four kids in my house. I just taught them how to handle, fear, and respect a firearm.

  • Fox

    Excellent article. We need more like them.

    Who can mishandle a firearm? There are two answers, those who have and those who will.

    Having spent more years on firing ranges than most folks have been alive, I would like to say that in my long and happy shooting career, I have twice fired weapons accidentally. Fortunately, no one was injured and no property was damaged. But, with all my knowledge and skills of firearms handling and instruction, if it can happen to me, it can and will happen to you.

    For Ben Lindamood; To copy and save any text of any article, just highlight the text you wish to save, right click the mouse, select “copy”, then move the cursor to the place you wish to save it (such as wordpad or notepad) and right click again, then select “paste”. All the text you highlighted will appear magically there. You may then save it to a file which you name. Put that file in a place you will remember, then whenever you wish to print it, bring it up and do so.

    Hope this helps.

    The 99.9999999999999999999999998% safe shooter!

    • Jerry Marshall

      Fox, when I was competing in USPSA, we had a saying: “there are those who have had an Accidental Discharge, and those that will”!
      I’m still in the latter category, and hopefully always will, but everybody that handles a firearm has to get a completely new mind-set the moment a firearm is present. This was the theme of my teaching, when I was 5 years old, and was constantly reminded all through my developing years.
      When I went into the Army I was surprised by how many people had no idea how to handle firearms, and, thankfully, this was drilled into their heads!
      Preserve our Second Amendment Rights, and PRACTICE and enforce SAFE HANDLING OF FIREARMS! Why give the LEFTISTS anything else to beat us up about?

      • http://www.ifonlyphotos.com Alex Frazier

        I’ve only ever had a single unintended discharge. I don’t rightly remember how the discharge occurred. It’s been a while. However, because I was following basic firearm safety rules, the shot went off downrange (I was aiming at my target and it went off before I intended it to).

  • Charles

    “The Gut Racker This error most commonly occurs when the shooter rotates the pistol in his hand to be able to more easily lock the slide back. One solution to this problem is to insert an empty magazine and pull the slide back to engage the slide lock, instead of putting the gun in this clearly unsafe position.”

    I must disagree! If the gun is in this state, do I KNOW that there is no round in the chamber? How to find out? Rack it. Putting an empty clip in DOES NOT REMOVE THE ROUND THAT MAY BE IN THERE. If you are able to logic your way thru to determine that there is no live round in the chamber you are also capable of pointing the muzzle in a safe direction. There is NO EXCUSE for the Gut Racker.

    The solutions is to adopt a safe position. As my Dad used to say: NEVER POINT A GUN AT ANYTHING YOU ARE NOT WILLING TO DESTROY.

    • 45caliber

      I’ve always said, “Never point a gun at something you don’t intend to shoot right now.” That particularly includes people. If I do point a gun at a person it is not a threat; it is an intention.

    • http://www.ifonlyphotos.com Alex Frazier

      Putting an empty magazine in the firearm is so you can rack it and lock the slide back automatically, at which point you can eject the magazine and inspect the chamber and magazine well, all without having to point the firearm in an unsafe direction.

      And Glocks, by the way, don’t have clips. They have magazines. There is a difference.

      • independent thinker

        “And Glocks, by the way, don’t have clips. They have magazines. There is a difference.”

        Ah but the terms have been used interchangably for at least 50 years and probably longer. technacly (sp) all multi shot firearms except revolvers use magazines to hold the cartrages ready for loading into the firing chamber and clips are the items used to hold cartrages ready to replins the magazine but as I said the terms have been used interchangably for many many years.

  • Gun Doctor

    Karl,
    Thanks for a much needed appearance in PLD. I am posting this article in my gun shop for all my customers to read and the 3 NRA rules along with Jeff Cooper’s 4 rules at ALL my gun counters. I am appalled at how many people come into my shop and ask to look at handguns and invariably point them at me or other customers. I am constantly correcting them and some even claim to be experienced. Another word of caution to all who go to public gun ranges. At our local public range, I am seeing more and more Hispanics and Latinos who I can plainly see have absolutely no knowledge or training on range safety and etiquet. Now, I have no problem with Hispanics or Latinos leagally having firearms, but some of them do not own them legally and are not themselves in this country leagally. Something the Obama administration has clearly neglected to warn us about. If, like me, you happen to incounter a similar situation, be very careful in approaching these individuals as I do. Fortunately, I can speak Spanish well enough to get their attention and my point across to them. If you can not or don’t feel comfortable with the situation, the best option would be to exit the range, contact local law enforcement and let them handle the situation.

    • 45caliber

      I agree. I will never use a gun range or knowingly hunt with someone who is unsafe. If the problem cannot be corrected, I go home.

      And some “hunters” – I use the name loosely for those involved – who believe in “sound checks” amaze me. Shooting at something you can’t see just because you heard a noise? These people need to lose their license and gun!

      One of the funniest stories I heard was from a game warden. He always camped during deer season at a bridge in the National forest in AR. He had a six wire fence around some trees he used as a corral for his horse.

      He told be that once, before daylight, he heard what he thought was a young war outside his tent. He came running out in his underwear to find his horse dead in its pen. Four men were standing over the horse (buck only season which means it should have antlers) arguing over which one of them had killed the “deer”.

      I asked him what he had done. He said, “I confiscated their licenses, rifles, and fined them $5000 each. Then I sent them home.”

      Incidently, he had also had three other horses shot while he was riding them.

      • Joe H

        45,
        where I used to deer hunt in Michigan, there was a wardens office about five miles down the road. I was hunting below a tree where I had spotted a good sized buck daily for a week before season and while sitting there, wearing blaze orange, had a branch shot off about a foot above my head. I yelled, and bellied over to where the shot came from. There, sitting on a log with an empty half pint on the ground and another in his hand was a guy, plastered all to hell. I came up behind him, grapped his rifle, knocked him half silly, and told him he could get his rifle from the warden down the road. I knew the warden very well as he was married to my girlfriends sister. I found out later that the guy got thirty days and lost his rifle along with his priveledges!! I guess the warden went out and the guy was asleep (passed out) on the ground. what an idiot!!!

    • http://gravatar.com/hattles JeffH

      Gun Doctor, excellant. One thing that is fairly common at public ranges are the younger, less experienced shooters who think they know it all about guns and safety. If someone approaches them with some sound advice on safety, they’ll generally say “I know what I’m doing”. That is a red flag for me and I’ll either attempt to politely correct them or if I get resistance, I’ll report them to the range officer and keep some distance from them until they clear the area. There is nothing more rewarding to the experienced shooter that to have a new shooter ask for help and then work at applying safe practices at any range. Most of us will help them in some way or point them towards someone who can help them.

    • independant thinker

      Since they are likely not using hearing protection do what a guy I know did. He went shooting and was in a similar situation. None of the hispanics had any hearing protection so he went to his truck and got his Barrett 50 rifle. He then fired a couple of rounds and watched them run around with their hands over their ears, gather up their guns, and leave. Of course you do have to be able to afford a big 50 to do that.

      • http://gravatar.com/hattles JeffH

        independant thinker, eye and ear protection is generally a requirement at most ranges…again for safety sake.

        I hunted waterfowl and upland game for years without any hearing protection and, to a small degree, am paying for it now. I now use hearing protection whenever I hunt or shoot as well as having safety lenses in my perscription glasses.

      • independant thinker

        It depends on the range JeffH. This occured at a public range in the National Forest with no attendants. There are several of these in my general area.

      • http://www.ifonlyphotos.com Alex Frazier

        I’ve been to outdoor ranges that don’t require ear protection. It was years ago, and that may have changed. But I don’t recall any issues with my ears ringing or anything like that, despite firing a .357. At an indoor range, a .22 will make my ears ring if my earplugs aren’t in correctly. So part of the ear protection issue might be the echo of an indoor range.

        I’m talking out of my a$$ to try and make sense of it … but that’s my take.

    • http://gravatar.com/hattles JeffH

      45caliber :) …I taught my nephew, Casey, how to shoot and hunt when he was 11 years old…bought him a Browning BPS 20ga youth model for his birthday as his first gun. When he was 13 I took him duck hunting with some of my buddies to a marsh near Lake Alminor/Chester, Ca. We treated him as if he was one of the guys rather than a child, which he embraced with respect. There weren’t any blinds so each of up hid where we could and new everyones location. I kept hearing a clicking noise and realized it was coming from my nephew’s spot. He was clicking the safety on and off out of boredom. I warned him that it was unsafe to do and told him to stop. His gun was pointed up as it should have been. Well, about 5 minutes passed and all of a sudden his gun went off and boy did I get on him hard. No damage except to his embarrasement. I got the point across and told him I won’t dwell on it…he saw the reasoning in my initial warning…we ended up having a safe, wonderfull weekend and all of my hunting buddies treated him as just another one of us. He earned our respect and volunteered to clean all of our ducks but all of the shotguns too.. I was pretty proud of him and everyone thought highly of him as a respectfull young man. He learned a valuable lesson, fortunately without incident, and we still have a chuckle about it now and then.

      • 45caliber

        I took both my sons to a deer camp to hunt. The owner was a friend. He had half a dozen old hunters with him.

        My boys went on stands and later came in with the rest of us. They were off doing something when one of the older men turned to me. “I’ve been watching your sons,” he said. “I’ll hunt with them any time.”

        It made me really proud as a father to know they were accepted by other experienced hunters.

  • FreedomFighter

    To reduce the fear mongering of the left on guns and safety levels for legal carry and use of firearms is a noble cause and the artical was well written.

    Thanks

    Laus Deo
    Semper Fi

  • Marv

    That was a very accurate and informative assessment of gun safety or the lack thereof. Good job. Keep the good articles on such topic coming.
    Marv

  • Benton (Ben) Lindamood

    Please restructure the rules in a printer friendly format.
    Would I be in violation of copyright to post this on my gun clubs bulletin board.

    • http://boblivingstonpl.wordpress.com Bob Livingston

      Dear Benton (Ben) Lindamood,

      You have permission to post this on the bulletin board. Our “printer friendly” option is not currently functioning properly, but the tech team is working on it.

      Best wishes,
      Bob

      • Gun Doctor

        Thanks Bob, Benton can highlight the items, copy and paste to a clean documents sheet and then print. Worked fine for me and all the pcitures came out as well.

  • BigBadJohn

    Thanks good article.

    “That experience has led me to accept an inconvenient truth about gun owners: Every gun owner believes that his or her gun handling is safe, regardless of how good or bad that gun handling is.”

    Too funny same goes for drivers. Ever notice how everyone else is an idiot?
    If you are driving 5 mph over the limit and someone is in the fast lane in front of you, they are an idiot.
    If you pull over and drive in the right lane and someone passes you – they are idiots.
    If someone pulls up to a light and refuses to turn on red, they are idiots.
    if someone pulls up to a red light and turns right in front of traffic, they are idiots.

    • 45caliber

      I remember a comment I read once. A boy was riding with his dad. When they got home, the boy asked, “Dad, why do all the idiots drive when you do and not when Mom does?”

      • Randy G

        The Guy didn’t look in the mirror to see the biggest idiot of all.

  • Mike

    I am a range officer at a gun club twice a year. You have touched on safety! The only rule should be be safe! I can tell horror stories all day about idiots showing up with a new gun and wrong bullets. That is easy to fix. Had a non speaking english person putting 20 guage shells in a 12 guuage shotgun once. Good thing another person could communicate with him. I thought my days were over if he pulled the trigger. Thnaks for pushing safety.
    .

    • Wumingren

      I had a non-English speaking Hmong man, a regular customer and very nice guy, purchase a Remington Model 870 12-gauge shotgun some years ago, when I worked at a sporting goods store. He always brought his English-speaking daughter with him to help with translation. I had to explain the difference between trap loads and magnum loads, lead shot and steel shot. And, I went through the small game regulations, just to make sure he understood bag limits, bird identification, treaspassing law, etc. It was an arduous task, because I had to get the girl to understand, and then she had to get her dad to understand. It took me all afternoon, but hunting season was some ways off, so I had the time.

      He came back a week later complaining that he couldn’t hit anything with the gun and thought it was defective. I had to teach the daughter about proper bead sighting and leading the fowl before pulling the trigger. Well, naturally, inability to hit what you’re shooting at is not one of the conditions that would allow the return of a firearm, but I did take a look at the gun anyway. Good thing I did. I found that the choke tube was missing. It turned out that Dad thought the choke tube was in there for shipping, to protect the barrel. He had thrown it away! I had him buy a new choke tube, which was a bear to insert due to the fowling of the threads. Both father and daughter laughed it off and went their way.

      Some of us grew up with guns and know these things just from observation. Others don’t have a clue. Of course, if the ones you were observing were doing it all wrong, well, I guess that’s how shooting accidents happen.

  • CJ

    I’ve witnessed many of the issues mentioned. Most people will not correct another, on the range or anywhere for that matter, because of the possibility of receiving a response similar to ‘mind your own business.’ Most feel above reproach and think ANY constructive comment is a personal attack and get defensive. As a society, we need to get this chip off our shoulder. But it may already be too late. Without a responsible rangemaster to mediate, many won’t speak up. The government’s intent to make sheeple of us is nearly complete.

    • Wumingren

      I use my smart phone to video my daughters during karate practice, so I can show them what they are doing right or wrong. It’s a lot easier than just words. Then, no matter what they thought they had done, I can show them exactly what they had done. No more arguments. “Gee, Dad, you’re right. I do need to get my block higher.”

      Perhaps a video camera trained on the shooter’s stall can be used by a range master to instruct individuals who need instruction. Of course, then we run into the cost factor and the conspiracy factor. I’m not sure it would be very expensive these days to set up wireless cameras and a computer, but I am sure some people will not want to be imaged, even though it is likely that they are already imaged upon entry into the facility.

      Frankly, I wouldn’t mind a critical review of my performance by an expert who can show me what I’m doing wrong, not that I’m doing anything wrong, what with being from Lake Wobegone.

      • Me

        Hmmmmm. I’m all for safety, but MORE CAMERAS???????? Come on! I know there are careless people out there, but when will we start treating people like grown ups and not two year olds? What to do about the careless people? I WOULD say let them learn the hard way, but that could mean that SOMEONE ELSE gets hurt because of THEIR carelessness. Aside from the intrusive, baby sitting camera idea, I only know of one solution, no matter what the reaction, TELL THEM POLITELY WHAT THEY ARE DOING and don’t be shy! This is YOUR life they are playing with.

      • http://gravatar.com/hattles JeffH

        Wumingren, there are some indoor ranges that do monitor the shooting stalls/lanes, much the same way one might have security cameras to monitor your home. Stricktly for safety. Generally, I’ve found that shooters tend to monitor their own.
        I shoot skeet weekly and any unsafe practices are pointed out very quickly and without negative confrontation.

        The first rule of any gun handling is to treat every gun as if it were loaded, without fail. The general rules of the NRA and Jeff Cooper are the standards to safe gun handling and the efforts of shooting organizations to teach proper safety and handling are at an all time high, as they should be.

        I’ll add that whenever I’m at the range, whether shooting clays, indoor pistol or outdoor rifle, when the range isn’t HOT(shooting), every gun muzzle is either pointed doewn range with the breach locked open for anyone to see. When shooting at the skeet, trap or sporting clays range, the guns are always open and empty when not shooting and always…the shotguns are carried with the actions open and the barrels pointed down at he ground or down range.

        Shoot safe and keep some powder dry.

      • Joe H

        JeffH,
        We had a guy get shot the other day by some idiot pointing his glock across booth and accidental fire!! I think if they just practiced rule #1 most of these problems would be solved. Ask yourself ” would I point a loaded gun at a non-offender?” MOST would answer “NO”!

    • PARIS

      YOU GOT THAT RIGHT! THAT IS 100% OF THE PROBLEM. MOST PEOPLE WILL NOT LEND THEMSELVES TO CORRECTION.

    • Gayle Rogers

      I have weapons I have not shot in 30 years! I am 71 years young and the time to start learning “how to” again has come full circle, for many reasons! I’ll leave those to you and others, BUT I would never NOT say what I thought was pertinent to a “live” situation. And I would welcome anyone to “correct” my gun handling! I don’t want to shoot myself OR anyone else accidentally because I felt “too proud” or “too smart” to learn a “how to”, correctly.
      Thanks!

  • Mike

    A well written non-acusatory but factual article filled with something lacking in todays world, common sense. I look forward to more.

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