Field Target - Part 1
Starting a club
by Tom Gaylord
Exclusively for PyramydAir.com. Copyright © 2007. All Rights Reserved.

Field target matches draw a large crowd. This three-day event is a world championship.
No shooting sport captivates airgunners as much
as field target. Even those who do not compete and have no plans to
ever compete still make a large percentage of their choices to purchase
based on this sport. They quote specifications and demand equipment
that is field-target ready, even if they will never use it for that
purpose.
I thought you might like to learn a little about
the sport. I competed for several years and was a co-founder of the
Damascus, Maryland, Isaac Walton League of America Field Target
Association or DIFTA. When we started the club, there were only four of
us, Phil, Ed, Jim and me. I owned a few targets, and I was the only one
who had shot field target before, so we had to do almost everything
from scratch.
Getting started
We contacted the American Airgun Field Target Association (AAFTA)
and joined as the DIFTA club. They sent us their rule book, which we
all read. The Isaac Walton League, which sponsored us, gave us the use
of about 10 acres of woods on their 100-acre property. In the past,
there had been a 25-yard handgun range there, so we turned it into a
sight-in range. The woods were the actual field target matches were
shot had been a 3D archery range.
Phil, Jim and Ed bought some lumber and built
several sturdy shooting benches for the sight-in range, and together we
marked out 12 lanes of fire in the woods. An overgrown path ran
straight into the woods, so we used it as the baseline for the 12
firing positions. Lanes radiated out from that path into the woods. Two
wooden stakes marked the firing position for each lane, and they were
numbered so everyone knew where they were. When firing, your barrel had
to be somewhere between the two stakes for your lane.
A field target lane is a sector of land in which
the targets are placed at distances between 10 and 55 yards. The firing
position forms the baseline for the lane. Most lanes are not more than
15 feet wide, and they can be narrower than that.
I had been shooting field target with Trooper
Walsh down in Virginia for several years, and I knew that his club had
some old targets they weren't using any longer. We borrowed 20 field
targets from that club and made plans to buy more targets as we grew.
In those startup days, we had no money, nor could the club give us any
because all their funds were already earmarked for other projects, so
each of us chipped in and bought things like wood and paint. When we
did get money later on, Phil made sure we were reimbursed for our
expenses.
We had worked on our range for about a month
when we decided to hold a test match in November 1997. I told Trooper
about it, and he recruited several shooters from Virginia and Maryland,
plus we put out the word at the Isaac Walton League. I guess we had
about 12-14 shooters for that first match. I was the match director
because the others thought I knew more about the rules. I didn't, but
the rule book is easy to learn.

We shot everything in our early days, like the FWB 124 sporter this kneeling shooter holds.
Test match
We decided to run the first match for free but told
everyone that there would be a fee for future matches. We charged $10
per shooter and gave discounts to anyone who helped in some way, or who
was a member of the Isaac Walton League. The money went to purchase new
field targets and to buy other nice things for the club, but I'm
getting ahead of myself.
The first match went well, though we all learned
several important things, like the need to have properly working
targets before the match starts; the need to repaint targets at the
halfway point; the need to have some kind of food for the shooters or
to make them bring a picnic lunch (the better way); the desirability of
computing match scores as soon as the match finishes (everyone wants to
know); and posting match results on the internet soon thereafter
(shooters want to see where they fall in the whole group).
First season
The following March, we started our first match
season with eight scheduled monthly matches. We ran them on Saturdays
because of work schedules, but I soon learned that it was best to set
the targets out the evening before. We were now bringing in money, so
we started buying targets. Before the year was half finished, we had 30
targets - the original 20 we borrowed plus 10 of our own.

Although we had plenty of benches to shoot from,
many shooters preferred to confirm their zero from the AAFTA seated
position. Near shooter wears a bracing harness to hold him in the
seated position.
Our course had 12 lanes with two and sometimes
three targets on each lane. We had the shooters shoot each target
twice, and two times 30 targets is a 60-shot match. That's a pretty
normal number for most non-championship matches. With the 20 shooters
we now attracted, a match started about 10 a.m. and finished at 2:30.
Given an hour for lunch, that's about 3.5 hours per match.
As I said before, the targets were positioned
anywhere from 10 yards to 55 yards to fit the AAFTA rules. If we erred,
it was in having a couple targets closer than 10 yards. Before long, we
learned to position the targets behind vegetation so the shooters would
have to stand or at least kneel to see several of them. That sometimes
didn't take into account individual height differences. So, later on,
the club made certain targets mandatory offhand shots without regard to
where they were positioned.
Our club continued to grow and reach out. By the
second full year, we sometimes had as many 24 shooters show up for a
match. Many traveled from several hundred miles away, so we had to stay
on the published schedule at all times. In the three years that I was
match director, I remember canceling only one match for inclement
weather, but even that was bad since two shooters had driven over 400
miles to be with us. In that second year, the club bought a target I
had been testing for The Airgun Letter. A full-sized tom turkey
hiding behind a log, we set him out at 55 yards on our longest lane.
His one-inch kill zone was a real challenge so we nicknamed him Long
Tom. He was the only target whose distance was never in question. I
don't think I ever got him two times in a row!
Awards
At first, there were no awards. We published only
the ranking of shooters, but some of them asked about trophies. We
tried certificates and dropped them soon after leaning that most people
don't care for them. Then, one of our founders came up with a wooden
trophy that looked like a field target. They were easy to make and the
shooters liked them, so that's what we gave from then on.

We had awards for the winners. One of our founders made up trophies that resembled field targets!
Damascus Airgun Show
To raise more money for both our field target club
and our junior air rifle team, we started holding an airgun show in
August of each year. It grew to be the second most heavily attended
airgun show in the U.S. and was the leader when it came to new and
modern used airguns. Because of this, we attracted more shooters than
collectors to our show - sort of the reverse of other airgun shows.
Some of the club members gave field target classes and demos at the
show, which recruited even more new shooters.
By
the third full year of matches, we knew what we were doing. We now
owned all our own targets and had returned Trooper's with profound
thanks. We moved the sight-in line back to 50 yards and built a shelter
over the benches. This range was also used for BR50 matches when it
wasn't being used for field target, so it was heavily utilized. Club
members could use it any time it wasn't used for a match, so the club
got its money's worth.
Several
fathers and uncles brought kids to shoot with us. We squadded them
together and the men made sure the kids kept up with the pace of the
match. In fact, we had more slowdowns from fiddly adult shooters than
from kids. Some of the kids were pretty good shots and kept the rest of
us on our toes.

Dad spots for his boy. Spotting isn't legal in formal matches, but we never cared when it was for kids.
We got most of our good ideas from
the shooters who came to compete with us. For example, a bunch of
shooters requested a match with no scopes and silly rifles such as
Benjamin pumps and open-sighted R7s, so we did that. A bunch of us
oldsters hosted an over-50 match. Youngsters could still shoot with us,
but only the over-50s were in the running for prizes. I still got waxed!
Gary Barnes, who lives nearby, used the matches to
prove his smallbore rifles. He competed with us, plus he supplied his
rifles to others who shot them. I shot a Barnes Ranger - the first ever
made - for a whole year. Gary also drew a representation of Long Tom
for a t-shirt stencil, and we had a DIFTA t-shirt made up. The club was
very strong.
Maryland State match
We eventually held a Maryland State match at the end of one of the
seasons. It was open to all shooters - not just those who were Maryland
residents. For this match we enlarged the course to 16 lanes, and the
number of shots increased as well. Even so, the shootoff for top honors
was a drawn-out affair. Too many great shooters were in the running.
DIFTA always used AAFTA rules when I shot with
them, but some other clubs had hunter classes, as well. Hunter class
means that all shots are fired offhand, usually with a scope that
magnifies no more than a certain fixed amount, like 6x. In some of our
later matches, certain lanes were designated as offhand shots, making
the competition harder.

Shooting offhand is much harder because a standing body tends to move more.

Co-founder Jim uses the classic AAFTA seated position in the Maryland State Championships.
Eventually, I was happy to turn over the match
director's position to others. DIFTA was blessed with wonderful guys
who could pick up the slack without missing a beat, so the club
continued to prosper and grow.
DIFTA is still going strong today. Some
of the old-timers are still there, though there's a lot more young
blood now. The club is viable and fresh and a wonderful place for
people in the Maryland/ DC/northern Virginia area to learn about field
target.
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