2015 au11

Page 1

August 1, 2015 Volume 6, Issue 8

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June Issue 2015

OFFICERS AND BOARD MEMBERS 2015 OFFICERS

Club News - Items For Sale Magazine Review

4-5 6-12

Calender of Events

8-13

Club Calender

14-15

NSCA Schedule

16-17

Sporting Clays Program and Results

18-19

Skeet and Results InsideProgram this issue:

20-21

FSA Skeet Calender

22-23

Trap Program

24-25

Trapshooting Results

26-27

Youth Program

28-29

PRESIDENT—Vacant

VICE PRESIDENT—Vacant

TREASURER—Steve Sagal

SECRETARY— Joe Loitz

RECORDING SECRETARY—Jerry Schwab

DIRECTORS: •

Phil Demena

Steve Sagal

Rich Nilsen

Contact info: Markham Skeet, Trap, and Sporting Clays P.O. BOX 8853, Ft. Lauderdale, FL 33310 •

www.markhamclaytargets.com

www.markhamskeet.org

www.markhamsportingclays.org

E-mail: markhamshooter@gmail.com

Newsletter: jloit@bellsouth.net

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Next General Meeting October 1st Starting at 7:00 PM

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Club News Hot and humid is the best way to describe our shoots lately. The sporting clays shoot had 42 entrants with some not being able to finish due to rain. Wes Paradise used his new gun to lead the field by two over Alex Riera with a fine 88. Targets must have been tough, scores were slightly low. The skeet shoot was attended by five of our faithful shooters. Robert Vazquez won the 12 ga. and .410. Phil Keagy and Joe Loitz shot 48’s to lead the 28 ga. And 20 ga. respectively. Steve Norris had a lone 50 straight to lead the Singles and tied Alex Riera with high scores of 47 in the Handicap. Samir Chebat and Andrew Loitz lead the Doubles with 47’s. I have some sad news. Talking to Gus Pearthree last week I found out that Bobby R. has passed away. Bobby R. was one of the true characters of trapshooting. I will miss him. The Skeet shoot on Saturday August 1st will be in the very compe-

tent hands of Russ and Robert Vazquez.

Thanks guys! The Youth Program has seen great participation lately. See an update on Alex Rinnert on page 28. He has been having a great summer on the International Circuit. Sunday Emmett Hall from the Sun-Sentinel came by and interviewed some of us for a feature in the newspaper. I assume the article will run sometime in the next few weeks. If you see it let me know. I will be doing a great deal of politicking and marketing at the Grand. Hopefully I can pull something off for the FTA and our club while I am there. Steve Sagal has also been doing some behind the scenes things to get some sponsors to the Youth Program and the club as a whole. Hope we get some rain while I’m gone. The picture on page 25 is from last Saturday. Thanks go out to Doug and Tony for setting a field aside for us. Next time I will try to get a notice out ahead of time. See Ya’ at the Club. 4


Items For Sale Steve Sagal has the following items for sale: Remington 3200 Trap, complete custom engraving by Bill Mains, gold inlays throughout, very little usage, 30 inch barrels, beautiful nicely figured wood, adjustable pad. Golf cart set up for Sporting Clays (and golf) for sale with charger $2500.00 Trailer available for an additional $500.00. Call Steve 954-682-5000.

“Ability may get you to the top, but it takes character to keep you there.� John Woooden 5


Magazine Review Shotgun Sports - August 2015 L.P. Brezny is one of the best sources when it comes to a scientific approach to shotgun ballistics and this month he gives us some insight into long-range duckhunting ammo and choke tubes. His research tells him to use HEVI-Shot® ammo with their choke tube system on birds beyond 50 yards. For run of the mill shooting he suggests sticking with any modified choke tube. According to him, most manufacturers modified chokes give a better pattern than most of the specialty chokes. Who knew?! Mental toughness is the ability to adjust to adversity without letting your emotions get the better of you. How do you train yourself to do this? How do you train yourself to be resilient in your thinking so you can face problems with equanimity and calm? Michael J. Keyes, M.D. gives us some ideas how we can train ourselves to do just that this month. First, we need a cognitive reappraisal to change how we perceive problems and misses under match conditions. As far as misses are concerned we need to focus on how unimportant they are in the greater scheme of things. Reclassify misses as fixable mistakes. This prevents tying an emotional response to the miss which as so many sports psychologists tell us is exactly what you don’t want to do. Keep your emotions from attaching to the negative and keep them firmly tied to the positive.

ess instead of the results. Again you don’t attach an emotional response to mistakes. You observe them in an almost aloof state. Fixing our mistakes is what make us better. Just don’t keep fixing the same mistake! Ron Jones has been busy this month providing some good science this month on ballistics in three different articles in three different magazines. In this one he says for a 30” pattern to be free of pelletless patches you need at least 300 pellets in the pattern. For the 20” core pattern to be patchfree you need 125 pellets. That said, for skeet ¾ oz. of 9 shot will give you the 30” pattern you want at 25 yards. For a .410 you have the 125 pellets you need for the core 20” pattern but your 30” will have holes. Thus to be successful at skeet with the .410 you need to be able to consistently hit the target with the core 20” pattern. Shooting from the 22 yards line most trap targets are broken at 40 yards from the shooter. One ounce loads are only patch-free in the 20” core pattern. The 1 1/8th oz. load however has a patchfree 30” pattern even with 7 ½’s. Practice sporting clays with the one ounce loads to improve your shooting by highlighting any poor shot execution, remember 1 oz. has only a 20” pathchless pattern, then go to 1 1/8th oz. in the competition.

Mindful meditation is another technique where you learn not to judge your results, rather you accept what happens and concentrate on the proc6


pen. Finally, you are going to miss a lot of targets along the way. Learn from them and move on. The other five attributes will be printed in next month’s issue. Skeet Shooting REVIEW – July 2015

Richard Faulds at the 2015 English Worlds TRAP & FIELD – July 2015 What do you need to do to become a champion is three years or less? Bob Palmer proposes ten key attributes you need to master. First, expect your life to change and get used to it. As you progress people will change how they perceive you. Some of that change in perception will feel good and some may be disquieting. Be prepared to face “living outside the box”! Second, don’t be shy about wanting the spotlight. Bob makes this attribute sound more like a horoscope reading. You don’t have to be an extrovert to be a champion but it helps. Third, it is lonely at the top and it’s a lonely journey to get there. You may need to spend a great deal of time alone, practicing what you need to practice not what your friends want to practice. This reminds me of a saying Leo Harrison III used to profess: “Don’t forget the people you pass on the way up, because you’re going to see them again on the way back down.” Miss ya’ buddy!

How do we correct a mistake when in our self-analysis we can’t figure out what we did wrong? Todd Bender thinks we should first look to visual mistakes. Think, did you really see the target when you took the shot? If not you fall into the most common category of misses: you didn’t have good visual focus on the target. This constitutes about 70% of the misses according to Todd. Another 20% are form and technique issues that would be helped by better focus on the target. The last 10% are misses unrelated to vision problems. Everyone is different visually but you have to ask yourself: What do you really see when you set up for the target? Are you in hard or soft focus at your look point? Are you focusing on a distant point or are you soft focused in the target’s path? Are you letting your peripheral vision pick up the target first? What are you thinking as you call for the target and are your eyes set before you call or are they roaming around? Finally, how long are you staying in your look point before you call for the target? Is it too long or not long enough? You need to experiment with this and find out what works best for you. The more you know about shooting the more you realize most misses are certainly caused by visual miscues. Todd is right, there is a big difference between just seeing the target and focusing on it. Work on your consistency when it comes to your look points. The more consistent you are with your visual game the more consistent and better you will become.

Next you need to be a leader which is another way of saying you have to be assertive about your effort to be a champion. You need to decide how you are going to make this effort. You need to take charge of your three year campaign and own it if you want it to hap7


Magazine Review SPORTING CLAYS –August 2015 Gil and Vicki Ash want to talk about separation of church and state this month. You need to let the conscious mind do its job then release the shot to the subconscious so it is free to react to the target. I’m sure there are people who consciously break each target. Most people agree with them and advise separating the shot into conscious and subconscious parts where the conscious mind recognizes the target then turns over the actual shooting to the subconscious. Seems Gil and Vicki are finally buckling under and admitting you need an awareness of where the muzzle is without actually looking at it. Don’t know about anyone else but I am always aware of my muzzle without having to look at it. The problem with most people and this concept lies in their level of shooting experience. An experienced shooter has absolute muzzle awareness. The beginner or early intermediate has yet to gain such an intuitive relationship with the muzzle. They must get a lot of these shooters in their classes.

where the best breakpoint is, where the target is most vulnerable. Relate this information to the second target and determine a strategy based on your strengths and weaknesses as a shooter. Once you’ve determined what the target is doing, what is your strategy? Where is your look point, hold point, and break point? Where do you start your move? Where can you pick up the second target after the first one breaks? Do I need to skip the second target if I miss and shoot the first target twice? Ask yourself, am I still shooting the last station or have I dealt with it mentally and moved on? Are you enjoying the day of shooting or are you letting your expectations ruin your day? Get your head in order before you finish your pre-shot routine. Is my stance right for both targets or should I move between shots? Am I balanced and could my position be improved by moving from one side of the box to another? When the target comes have I reminded myself to keep my head still and are my eyes locked on a feature of the target? Fundamentals, fundamentals, fundamentals. Simple things failed means missed targets that you should break 100% of the time. Heed the details and everything will fall into place.

As always they emphasize good visual lock on the target to fix most problems and I agree wholeheartedly. The more I watch shooters the more I realize how many of their misses are due to poor visual discipline. Practice your mount and slow down are their final words in passing. Randy Lawrence throws some good reminders out as usual this month. Get a clear read on the target and identify exactly what it’s doing. Decide 8


I know I mentioned this before but here it is again. When I taught myself how to shoot skeet I kept a 3X5 card in my vest with all of my hold points on it and reminder notes about certain stations I had had problems with in the past. Each week I would make notes of changes on the card and when I got home I would make a fresh card with the changes on it. Marty Fischer relates a story this month about a student who had a habit of starting his gun too close to the trap. Marty moved his hold point out and the guy saw a dramatic change in his scoring. Nine months later he visited the guy again after his scores started slipping. Sure enough, he was back to his old habit of holding too close to the trap. If he had made a 3X5 card he may have saved himself a great deal of grief. As I said Tom Roster has three articles this month and this is the second. Here he debunks the myth surrounding speed and stopping power. He tested high velocity shells against your run of the mill 1200 fps rounds. He determined the extra 130 fps a 1330 fps shell has over a 1200 fps load probably isn’t worth the kick. What is important to note is how moving up one pellet size in a steel hunting load has tremendous benefits. The penetrating power of a larger pellet at the same velocity is increased by over 22%. That is a substantial gain. Granted, high velocity rounds make up for deficiencies in lead but it doesn’t help in the actual destructive power of the pellet. Speed only helps with lead not with killing power. Duck hunting loads are best kept in the normal velocity range of 1300-1400 fps when dealing with non-toxic shot. These retain more stopping power over their steel counterparts. Read this article in conjunction with Ron Jones’ article in Shotgun Sports.

I absolutely love the counterpoint Daniel L. Schindler provides to Gil and Vicki Ash. Daniel believes you cannot have an effective sight picture without muzzle awareness in your peripheral vision. I agree with Daniel. Too many times when teaching trap doubles I come across students moving to the second target faster than they can keep continuity with the muzzle. You can only effectively swing as fast as you can keep continuity with the barrels. If you don’t know where the barrels are when you get to the target how can you create a sight picture? How can you correct your mistakes if you don’t know where the muzzle is in relation to the target? If you don’t know that you have a hard time correcting your misses. Daniel calls it creating harmony between the target and the barrel. You have to be able to judge your muzzle speed with the speed of the target to sync them to create the correct sight picture. Shooting without muzzle awareness is like shooting in the dark and if you remember the story about John Kruger shooting at night you know that is hard if not impossible to do. WILDFOWL – August 2015 Federal has been producing Black Cloud Close Range ammo for a few years with great success. This ammo is known for its great patterning inside 40 yards and now they have a long range version that incorporates 40% Flightstopper pellets and 60% conventional steel. The author of this article, John Taylor, says as far as choke for these loads use the Muller decoy choke with Black Cloud Close Range. This gives you good coverage to 35 yards. For longer shooting go to the regular Black Cloud loads in 3s and you are good out to 50 yards. If using Mojo chokes use their short range with No. 3s or 4s and for open water use Mojo long range chokes with BB’s or 2s. 9


Magazine Review Ducks Unlimited – July/August 2015 There are several shooting tips covered in this issue. Will Brantley brings up something that not many hunters bother with but should: patterning their hunting shells with the choke they intend on using. There’s two ways to do this. The first is to mount the gun like a rifle and aim down the barrel at a spot on a board at 20 to 25 yards and fire off a shot. This tells you if your gun points true. Now drop the gun off your shoulder and fire at a new patterning sheet three times. Each time drop the gun down as if you are hunting and mount the gun as you would if you are in a hunting situation. This tells you if the gun shoots where you look when you get it to your shoulder. It’s one thing to know the gun shoots 60/40 when you pre-mount it, it’s quite another if you shoot 40/60 when you throw the gun up to your shoulder in a hunting situation. Under 60/40 means your stock is too low, over it and your stock is too high. Adjust it accordingly. Phil Bourjaily talks about lead using an Andy Duffy story I have heard before. As Andy explains it, “some” lead is what you need to hit a 20 -25 yard crossing shot. Now, this is dependent on the speed of the target. A duck’s top speed is between 60 and 70 mph however this isn’t the speed they are flying at when they pass your decoys. It’s probably in the 25-35 mph range. That would equate to a slow crossing target in skeet, so “some” lead makes sense. If they are really highballing it then go with a little extra lead. When birds get out to 40 yards and are crossing

you need “more” lead so you double “some” and when pass shooting beyond that you need “a lot” of lead which would be twice as much as “more”. Simple concept but I suggest you go to the fivestand and skeet field to practice those ideas. Try shooting post 3, 4, and 5 from the 30 yard line of the trap field. This means standing 4 or 5 yards behind the skeet posts to simulate the idea of “more” lead. Phil prefers using swing-through on birds inside 30 yards and likes maintained-lead beyond that. I really wouldn’t call his method maintained-lead. It is more of a hybrid method where he starts moving his muzzle behind the target and by the time he has mounted the muzzle is in front of it. He matches speed and shoots. He likes it. Sounds more like a swing-through/Churchill method. Nevertheless, keep your eye on the bird above all else. Did you know your gun looks different through your regular glasses than through your shooting glasses. In my case the gun always looks like the stock is higher. Change to shooting glasses and the stock looks right. Has to do with the angle of the lenses. I always change to my shooting glasses the morning of the hunt. I swap them out for my regular glasses the night before so I don’t forget. Steven Mulak agrees. Use the glasses you shoot with when you go hunting. Steven doesn’t like brimmed hats. Personally, I can’t shoot without them. He believes they limit your vision and block your vision when you go to shoot. I prefer a brimmed hat when shooting and hunting. The brim can be used to hide your face when you have decoying ducks. Try out several hat styles before you head to the blind.

Magazine Review

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When deciding on where to stand or place your blind always be mindful of the background you will be shooting against. Dark backgrounds early in the morning limit your visibility. Try to position yourself to have a sky background to shoot into instead of into a stand of trees or sawgrass. Also be sure to remove anything that will obstruct your view or get in your way when you mount your gun. Eliminate low hanging branches or other obstructions. I agree with Mr. Mulak, I shoot better standing up. Practice standing up and mounting your gun if you are sitting in the blind while you hunt. You would be surprised how unprepared you can be if you haven’t practiced this! SHOOTING SPORTSMAN AUGUST 2015

JULY/

Chris Batha presents us with part 2 of ‘Making a British Best Shotgun’. It can take 1,100 hours of skilled labor to produce one of these masterpieces. That’s eight months of full time work. Of course, that’s not how quickly you will receive your shotgun. It may take up to two to five years before they finish it.

are going to use. Now take three shells you are going to use and count the pellets in each. Average them to get a typical count. My caution would be to use another shell if one shell varies considerably from the other two. Throw out the outlier. Next, find the center of the pattern, where the pellet concentration is most dense, and draw a circle 30” in diameter around this center area. He suggests using a string 15” long then tying a felt tip pen to each end. Place one pen tip in the middle of your pattern and draw the circle with the other pen. What do you want to see on the patterning board? For 28 thru 12 gauge you want 60% of your pellets in the 30” circle. The .410 should have 7080% of its pellets in a 20” circle not the 30” circle at 21 yards. Don’t worry about perfectly uniform patterns. Unless all of them have an unusual shape don’t be worried. There is no such thing as a perfect pattern every time. What about holes. Unless the target is going directly away from you don’t worry about it. Any crossing target will get hit as it passes through the rest of the shot cloud. The hole may be large at extreme distance but for closer shots those holes disappear.

Pattern-Testing is different than POI testing. Pattern-Testing is all about the uniformity of your pattern. It doesn’t have anything to do with where the gun shoots. Tom Roster suggests you pattern the gun with the choke tubes you intend on using. For example, pattern your skeet choke at 21 yards, sporting clays at 35 yards, and trap at 45 yards. I would probably say 40 yards for trap but I shoot slightly faster than most people. Shoot one shell only at each patterning paper and shoot five patterns for each choke and load you 11


“If you don’t have time to do it right, when will you have time to do it over?” -John Wooden 12


Calender of events: Gun Shows: Sept. 19-20th War Memorial Auditorium, Ft. Lauderdale.

Skeet this month: Markham

Aug 1st

Zone 4

Aug. 7-9th

So. Fl.

Aug. 15-16th

Trail Glades

Aug. 22-23rd

Port Malabar Aug. 28-30th

Trap this month: South Florida Aug. 8th Markham

Aug. 23rd

Sporting This month: OK Corral

Aug. 1st

Quail Creek

Aug. 8th

South Florida Aug. 9th Markham

Aug. 15th

Indian River Aug. 23rd

Current shell specials: Walmart: Currently selling Winchester Universal and Federal 4 packs at $21.74 (12 & 20 ga.).

Cabela’s has Herter’s shells on sale for $599.85 for 10 flats. This includes shipping. These are 1 1/8 oz, 7 1/2’s, 1200 fps, 12 gauge. Palm Beach Trap and Skeet Pro Shop: Joe Fordham has a shipment of AA’s coming in. Call him for excellent pricing on these shells after rebate. Dick’s: Rio’s are on sale $5.48 a box until August 1st.

Rebates: Winchester is giving rebates of $2.00 a box on AA’s until August 31st. Below is the flyer and the reimbursement form for the program: http://www.rsrgroup.com/ opnrebatesfolder/assets/pdf/2015winchester2.pdf Remington is also giving rebates on some of its Hunting ammo. See this web page for more info: http://www.remington.com/pages/ news-and-resources/rebates-andpromotions/Spring2015-RebateAmmo.aspx

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AUGUST 2015 Sun

Mon

Tue

Wed

Thu

Fri

Sat 1 Skeet Tourney

2

3 Youth Program

9

10 Youth Program

16

17 Youth Program

23 Trap Tourney

30

24 Youth Program

4

5 Skeet Night

11 Skeet Night

18 Skeet Night

25 Skeet Night

6 Trap Night

12 Trap Night

19 Trap Night

26 Trap Night

7

8

14

15

Sporting Clays

13

Sporting Tourney

Sporting Clays

20

21

22

28

29

Sporting Clays

27 Sporting Clays

31 Youth Program 14


SEPTEMBER 2015 Sun

Mon

Tue

Wed

Thu

Fri

Sat

1

2

3

4

5 Skeet Tourney

6

7 Youth Program

13

14 Youth Program

20

21 Youth Program

27 Trap Tourney

28 Youth Program

8

9 Skeet Night

15 Skeet Night

22 Skeet Night

29 Skeet Night

10 Trap Night

16 Trap Night

23 Trap Night

11

12

18

19

25

26

Sporting Clays

17 Sporting Clays

24 Sporting Clays

30 Trap Night

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PALM BEACH TRAP/SKEET PRO SHOP FIREARMS ALL NEW FIREARMS WHOLESALE PLUS

10% TRADES INS ACCEPTED AMMUNITION AMMUNITION WHOLESALE COST PLUS $2.00 PER CASE WITH 10 CASE ORDER $4.00 LESS THAN 10 DELIVERIES TO Ft Lauderdale/Miami CONFIRMED WITH ORDERS

CALL FOR CURRENT PRICES ON FIREARMS/AMMUNITION

561-793-8787 16


2015-2016 Schedule of NSCA Sporting Clay Tournaments

Date

Tournament

Saturday - Jan 18, 2015

Snow Bird Open

Sunday - Feb 9, 2015

Honest Abe's Birthday Bash

Sunday - Mar 23, 2015

St. Patrick's Day Open

Saturday - Apr 19, 2015

Spring Blast

Sunday - May 17, 2015

Memorial Day Open

Saturday - Jun 27, 2015

14th Annual Sunshine State Classic

Saturday - Jul 18, 2015

Super Sizzle Open

Saturday - Aug 15, 2015

Summers End Open

Sunday - Oct. 11, 2015

Pumpkin Blast

Sunday—Nov. 8, 2015 (Tentative)

Richard Merritt Memorial

Sunday—Dec 27, 2015 (Tentative)

Bud Wolfe Classic

Concentration is the ability to think about absolutely nothing when it is absolutely necessary. Ray Knight

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SPORTING CLAYS PROGRAM Markham Skeet, Trap & Sporting Clays Club

SUMMER’S END OPEN 100 Targets Shot over 14 Stations

Saturday August 15th, 2015 Markham Park , 16001 W. State Road 84, Sunrise , FL 33326 (954) 357-5143 Registration: Opens 8:30 a.m. and will close at 10:00 a.m. All scorecards must be turned in by 1:00 p.m. in order to be posted.

Entry Fee: $50 N.S.C.A., $50 Hunter, $35.00 Sub-Junior, Junior Includes: Targets Only. No Scorers or Trappers will be provided. Shooters will be asked to squad themselves into groups of at least 4 and designate a field judge to verify scores for the squad.

This is a Targets Only format with No Lunch served. COURSE RULES: All shooters and spectators are required to wear ear and eye protection on the course. MAXIMUM LOADS PERMITTED: 12GA, 3 DR EQ, 1 1/8 oz. Shot 7 1/2.

For additional information contact: Steve Haynie (954) 980-4240 email: sdhaynie@comcast.net For Tournament Schedules and Shoot Results Please Visit Our Website: www.markhamsportingclays.org

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SPORTING CLAYS RESULTS

CONCURRENTS

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MONTHLY SKEET PROGRAM Daily Fees .410 gauge 28 gauge 20 gauge 12 gauge Doubles

$5/100 Targets

50 Targets 50 Targets 50 Targets 50 Targets 50 Targets

$19.50 $19.50 $19.50 $19.50 $19.50

Shoots usually held the first Saturday of every month. Gauges may be shot out of sequence with the permission of management. More than one 50 target program may be shot in the same gauge as a preliminary event. AWARDS Break a 50, 75, or 100 Straight and get one of these guaranteed awards! 50 Straight Kennedy Half Dollar 75 Straight Eisenhower Dollar 100 Straight Morgan Silver Dollar 50 Straight Doubles Liberty Silver Half 20


Skeet Shoot Results

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Trap Program ATA SHOOT SCHEDULE 2015 –2016

May 24th June 28th July 26th August 23rd September 27th October 25th November 22nd December 27th January 24th February 28th March 27th April 24th May 22nd June 26th

During the months of June, July, and August the trap program will consist of 50 target events: Singles, Handicap, and Doubles. Normal 100 bird programs return in September. Shooting Starts promptly at 9:00.

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Setting a goal is not the main thing. It is deciding how you will go about achieving it and staying with that plan. Tom Landry

Trapshooting Results

CUSTOM EAR PLUGS Advanced Quality Hearing Sample Rd. & FL. Turnpike @ Festival Flea Market Mall By appointment only 954-975-5756

Coupon $10. Off In-office only Cash and carry Includes pouch 26


Handicap

Doubles

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Youth Program

Former Youth Program member Alex Rennert has had a great summer campaign. He made the USA Team for the second year in a row with A Bronze finish at Nationals. He took Gold in the first final to lead all shooters and was in a shootoff for Gold in the second final (miss and out) ending up in the Silver / Bronze shoot off and finished w/ Bronze . He shot his first 100 straight in Colorado Springs where he is a temporary resident at the Training center for the Summer. We all wish Alex the best and look forward to updates from his dad. Congrats Alex! 28


ADVERTISERS Professional and Industry Vendors

We are going to update this section of the newsletter on a continuing basis as requests come in. If you would like to advertise your business in this section of the newsletter contact me at: jloit@bellsouth.net Joe Loitz at 954-857-5278 Business Cards - $50 for one year Full Page ads - $200 for one year

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