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Appleseed Rifle Clinic at Harvard tomorrow (5/26)

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Just a reminder I'm having another appleseed tomorrow Saturday May 26th at Harvard Sportsman's Club in Harvard, MA. 3pm-Dusk

I willl be cancelling the one scheduled for Memorial Day Monday (I'll be out of town), so this is your last chance until June. Some of you were only a couple points away from the Rifleman score last time, so come on down and get er done. [smile]

What is Appleseed:
Appleseed is a grass roots program popping up all over the country started by the Revolutionary War Veterans Association (www.rwva.org). The basic premise is that the health of the Second Amendment (and the country) is directly proportional to the number of active Riflemen and Riflewomen in it. Mini-Appleseed events (like this one) are basically groups getting together on their own and shooting. Full-scale Appleseed events (like what will be happening in Hartford, CT on 4/21 and 4/22) are weekend long shoots where RWVA national instructors will travel to a location and anywhere from dozens to hundreds of shooters will come to learn from them. The program has been around for a little bit over a year now, and ~1000 people have come to appleseed events so far. This year's calendar is already packed with events almost every weekend somewhere around the country.

What do we shoot:
I like to explain appleseed to other shooters as an entry level version of NRA High Power rifle -- less gear, less distance, less money, but building almost all of the same skills. It's a Junior Varsity to High Power's Varsity (living happily together) The standard course of fire is the Army Qualification Test (AQT) on scaled targets at 25 meters (simulating 100, 200, 300, 400 meter targets) in standing, sitting/kneeling and prone positions. Scoring 200 out of 250 for an "expert" Rifleman score is the basic level of proficiency we're shooting for (~4MOA, or 1" at 25 yards or 4" at 100 yards). When space, time, and skill allow we shoot long range too (Harvard has a 100yard range we will use, and a 200/300 yard range for club members only), but the bulk of practice is done at 25 meters.

What equipment do we use:
The single requirement is any safe, working rifle (bolt/semi/whatever) in any caliber (22lr to 30.06+) that'll reach 25 meters. If I were to suggest a rifle to get the most out of the program, it would be semiauto, mag-fed (10 round mags are fine) with iron sights but if you have something other than that, the program will bend for you. In addition, you might want to bring whatever you need to be comfortable in prone (mat/carpet/tarp and some elbow protection).

Directions
Take I-495 to Route 2 west. Immediately take exit 39. Turn left at the end of the ramp onto Taylor St. Take your first left onto Porter Rd. and follow it to the end. At the end of Porter Rd., turn left onto Whitcomb Ave. (Whitcomb Ave. becomes Littleton County Road). After 1.3 miles, look for a driveway on the left side (small sign, dirt road, easy to miss). If you reach Old Schoolhouse Hill Rd. or Cleaves Hill Rd., you've gone too far.

Please do not speed! Respect the surrounding residential neighborhood.
 
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"Hi,my name is Greg and I'm from the internet".
Reminds me of a post over at zombiehunters.org: "We can handle this; we've talked about this on the internet."

Seriously, Appleseed is a great program. I had been interested in doing some NRA HighPower shooting for a few years, but had no background in shooting and didn't want to show up woefully unprepared.
Enter Appleseed. A great way to learn The Basics. And by the way, if you think you're too advanced a shooter to worry about the Basics, I have bad news: you need to refresh the Basics occasionally.

If you're within a few hours' drive of an Appleseed and you're not attending, you are doing yourself and America a great dis-service.
 
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