As Deri said Mag: With Blanks.
----Original Message Follows----
From: Toddy <[log in to unmask]>
Kyle;
I enjoyed reading your post. Both my sons spent 6 years in the Marine Corp.
My
father was an avid hunter all his life and he did a lot of trap shooting.
(Guess
who influenced his grandsons to join the service?) My husband is not a
hunter,
nor am I.
We lived in Wyoming for a couple of years. They had an early hunting season
there for bow hunters and disabled hunters. Think some others states might
have
the same arrangement.
Kyle E. Cleveland wrote:
> Well, mags, for one thing, my CP is not that "involved". I can still do
> most tasks, even play the piano (sorta), fly a plane, etc. I have
problems
> with my affected (left) hand and fine motor skills (can't button), but
I've
> made a lot of my own adaptive devices. My mom's a retired Marine Corps
> engineer and my Dad's a retired Marine sniper instructor, so I have a lot
of
> resources to draw from.
>
> Shooting is not as much of a problem as you might think. There are many,
> many adaptive devices for wheelchair-bound folks to hunt and fish
> independently. Because I've done a good bit of outdoors writing, I've
been
> fortunate to meet a lot of these folks and see how things are engineered
to
> let them pursue their sport (btw--lots of women involved in both fishing
and
> hunting/shooting). In my trap club (where we use shotguns to shoot at
> flying "clay" pigeons) there is a blind--yes I said blind (as a bat)--man
> who shoots with us.
>
> This is how it works: He walks to the "stand", unguided, and loads his
own
> weapon. He mounts the shotgun to his shoulder and calls for the target
by
> yelling "pull!". When the clay pigeon flies, an individual called the
> "spotter", who is looking over the shoulder of the blind man and down the
> barrel of the shotgun, calls out commands like "3-high" (point the weapon
at
> 3 o'clock and a little high) so the blind fellow knows, generally where
the
> target is at the time. Remarkably, he can also "hear" the flying disk
and
> can tell direction and speed from those cues as well. A round of trap is
25
> shots, and he can generally get 10 hits/round.
>
> I guess it just depends how bad you want to do something. Being out in
the
> woods and fields, hunting and fishing, is such a part of my life and
history
> that I can't imagine not being able to be there.
>
> -----Original Message-----
> From: Magenta Raine [mailto:[log in to unmask]]
> Sent: Friday, February 11, 2000 12:01 AM
> To: [log in to unmask]
> Subject: Re: north/south
>
> ok, kyle, how does a pwcp shoot a gun?
>
> ;-)
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