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RE: Time to act

in Outdoors and more3 years ago

Damn! That's a harsh outcome for him, but considering the consequences, not just the fallout that the range might get but the potential loss of life or serious injury, I get it. Sounds like the right thing, and a good example for others of how seriously they need to treat safety there. Truth is, I've had a safety lapse or two (accidental flagging, with finger off trigger of course) with my own unsupervised public land range, but I think I would have been more vigilant if there were supervision.

So with the laws in your jurisdiction, is that guy basically fucked out of his pistols by getting his club membership revoked?

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Unfortunately these scenarios are often treated as object lessons for everyone else, at the expense of some poor unfortunate, in this case the young lad.

I think we've all flagged, all moved with the finger on the trigger and so on; those are the things we treat with more understanding. But loaded gun on bench? Nope.

With respect to the last point...Yeah, the lad will have to gain membership at another club/range or his H-class license will be revoked. We are helping him do so.

I suppose I've left loaded and chambered rifles with the safety on on the range table, and I don't really see that as a problem. But the scenario is different as out where I shoot, I know who's there and it's hard for someone to show up unannounced.

This post does make me think that the small inconvenience of having to put a mag in and chamber a round when I want to pick my rifle up is worth the safety aspect, though. And it's a good habit to establish.

You're right and in certain circumstances that's probably fine - I shoot a lot on private property and in solitude so what happens there is quite different. At the range, my range in any case, it's inexcusable and the kid knew it as soon as he saw me too.

Cutting corners when no one is looking is a bad habit when it comes to firearms. Having said that, when I hunt and cull I work the bolt back to closed and pull the trigger, then insert the loaded mag and leave it in that condition - Impossible to fire. When I need to shoot I work the bolt and shoot. When done I take the mag out and do the process again and off I go. I never use the safety. At a range I'd never do that though.

Your last line...I think safety is always a good habit and at ranges a must.