Markham Skeet, Trap, and Sporting Clays June 1, 2016 Volume 7 Issue 6
Safari Club International Donates $2,500 to the Markham Youth Program
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November Issue 2015
OFFICERS AND BOARD MEMBERS 2015 OFFICERS
Club News - Magazine Review Calender of Events Club Calender
4-11 12-13
14-15
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PRESIDENT—Vacant
•
VICE PRESIDENT—Vacant
•
TREASURER—Steve Sagal
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SECRETARY— Joe Loitz
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RECORDING SECRETARY—Jerry Schwab
DIRECTORS:
NSCA Schedule
16-17
Sporting Clays Program and Results
18-19
Skeet Program and Results
20-21
FSA InsideSkeet this Calender issue:
22-23
Trap Program
24-25
Trap Results
26-27
Youth Program
28-29
On the Cover: Rich Nilsen, President of Safari Club International donates $2,500.
•
Rich Nilsen
Contact info: Markham Skeet, Trap, and Sporting Clays 8299 Cassia Terrace Tamarac, Fl. 33321 •
www.markhamclaytargets.com
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www.markhamskeet.org
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www.markhamsportingclays.org
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E-mail: markhamshooter@gmail.com
•
Newsletter: jloit@bellsouth.net
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Next General Meeting July 7th Starting at 7:00 PM
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Club News Busy month June. On page 8 I discuss the possibilities of getting a bronze plaque for John B. I will be the lead on this for now. Let me know if you are interested in contributing to the cause. The front page photo shows Rich Nilsen giving the Youth Program a check from the Safari Club International (SCI) for $2,500 for new Youth guns. I can’t thank Rich and his organization enough. See page 10 and 11 for more details on SCI. Federico Ramirez will be taking over the Trap Program as Trap Chair. See page 25 for more details on this. The Frank Valle led all shooters in the 12 and 20 gauge events with a 48 and 49 respectively at the last skeet shoot. Hector Marrero led the 28, Doubles and HOA with Asif Sheerahamud winning the .410 event. Charlie Alvarez led the last Sporting Clays shoot by 6 targets over Lucio Herrera and 34 other shooters.
The last trapshoot saw 15 shooters in the Singles event with Chris Bounds leading the field with 49. Wu Yu Sheng lead the Handicap field with a lone 45 and Alex Riera led the Doubles event with a lone 93. We have restructured the prices on the trap events. Shooters will be eligible for a discount at the next shoot. We still need help during all of our registered shoots. If you would like to join in let us know. The ATA Southern Zone at Silver Dollar is July 14-17. I hope some of you plan on attending this important event. The NSSA Zone 4 Skeet shoot will be held at Jacksonville this year, August 11-14. I had a wonderful time with Ken Keth and Ralph Aaron of the NSSA at the Youth Camp in Palatka last weekend. This is a wonderful event. If you have a youth shooter interested in skeet I recommend sending them. Until then, see you at the club. 4
Book Review MODERN SHOTGUN SHOOTING By Lawrence B. Smith (1935)
your left arm as you swing.
“A gun to fit properly, should always slip into perfect position when mounted quickly, and without any adjustment.” Lawrence B. Smith page 78.
Mr. Smith has some interesting ideas about stock length and its relationship to barrel length. Long barrels need shorter stocks and doubles shooting needs a longer stock to keep the shooters face on the stock thus minimizing, wait for it……, head raising.
The last time I bought a shooting book on Amazon was over a year ago, but recently they were flooded with them, so I took advantage of my rewards points and purchased fifteen books. Among them was this little gem from 1935. Evidently Mr. Smith was a regular contributor to Field and Stream magazine and The New York Herald Tribune and used several articles as chapters for this book. Even though the ideas expressed in books like this are over 80 years old they still contain some nuggets of wisdom.
In the pictures accompanying the book you will see the upright stance he advocates. The shooter’s thumb and nose are 4 – 6 inches apart. Maybe it was the way the guns were stocked in his day but this is extremely bad form today. He did not approve of the fleshy part of the trigger finger either. Use the ball of flesh just off the joint. Point the thumb along the barrels not the left index finger is another idea I disagree with. I don’t like cupping my hand under the barrels. This is a side-by-side fixation not generally see in modern O/U’s.
Lawrence felt a shooter should do some shooting first, on borrowed guns I presume, before making a purchase. Like many good instructors he advises something approximating a provisional gun fit and practice at the range before making the ultimate decision on a shotgun. Once that gun is found it needs to be fit to the shooter. Proper fit means: “A gun fits when it can be mounted quickly to the shoulder and line up perfectly in all dimensions without adjustment of its position, or the shooter’s anatomy, to it.” He believed rightly that the gun is brought to the eyes not vice versa. He is the first author I have ever come across who also professes hugging the stock to the jaw as I do. To my knowledge pressing the face or jaw against the stock is never professed by anyone else. Personally, I don’t know how you can miss this important aspect of mounting a gun.
When it comes to a low-gun mount he is correct when suggesting the barrels should be kept horizontal rather than pointed overly vertical to the target’s line-of-flight. One more good idea is using the forearm hand and arm to accept and spread out the recoil. He believes the further out you hold the forearm the more you spread out the recoil. This is true, if you have too much bend to the elbow or hold the forearm hand too close to the receiver it is in no position to accept recoil.
He did not however have a realistic idea of what heads up shooting entails. From the pictures provided the shooting stance he advocates looks terribly uncomfortable and nonathletic. He also presents a picture of a stance he believes invites error. The second, unacceptable stance is much closer to what I would call good form than the form he advocates. We definitely disagree on this point. Every author has an issue and Lawrence believes shotgunners’ greatest problem is lifting their heads off the stock. In his opinion this is overshooting’s prime cause. Can’t say he’s wrong but his solution, frankly, is ridiculous. He does prefer a true pistol grip for trapshooting which is rather revolutionary thinking for the time. Something else I have never seen before is his suggestion to move the forearm hand back to swing more quickly on fast, erratic targets. I think you could also make an argument for right-handers to move the hand out further on right-angle targets and on lefts to move the hand in. With the hand in for left-angle or right to left targets in other disciplines you are not pushing against
The flashlight in the barrel trick must have come out around the writing of this book because he talks about it. He also suggests patterning your gun after you finally get it fitted. He comes up with an interesting dominance test that could be set up at any club. Set two stakes 20 yards down range, 10 yards apart: one at 20 yards, one at 30 yards. Stand the shooter in line with these stakes. Have them line up the stakes with their eyes then close the right then the left. Whichever eye keeps them in line is the dominant eye. Can’t say it works too well. Finally, one story I can’t resist relating. At the Grand American, presumably sometime in the early 1930’s he was on a hot shot squad in a Singles event. The wind came up and two shooters missed when the targets went higher. The third shooter adjusted his stock lower on his shoulder and broke his target. Adjusting lower meant he saw more rib thus raising his POI to adjust for the higher targets. Why you wouldn’t just raise your hold point is beyond me, but Lawrence thought this was the natural way to deal with higher targets. On the whole the book was a wonderful read. Mr. Smith is a good writer and kept me interested all the way through. A couple of good ideas only a few misconceived notions. Actually, pretty rare for a book this old.
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Magazine Review CLAYTARGET NATION – June 2016 How do you wipe your brain clear of extraneous thoughts so you can concentrate solely on shooting when you step to the line? You can use the process Kevin Costner does in For Love of the Game, where he erases everything but the catcher and the plate. Looks easy on film but way more difficult to accomplish when you are actively trying to do it. Gary Walstrom suggests something easier, take out pen and paper and write down whatever is on your mind other than shooting. For Gary this tells his brain to look at these things later, go shoot and come back to whatever it is you need to after you are done. Create lists of things to complete and check them off as they are accomplished. Sometimes simply knowing you remembered to write something down is enough to get it off your mind. That’s what you want, a clear mind to allow undisturbed focus on the target. I hate absolutes when it comes shooting. There are preferred methods and techniques but there are very few absolutes. Paul Giambrone, III believes we should always break the first target in Skeet Doubles 2/3 of the way to the center stake. If you can’t do this there is something wrong with your technique. Some people just can’t move that fast or recognize the target at the recommended break point. Forgiving that one breach of instructional etiquette the article and advice are very well grounded. His best advice has to do with the eye shift to the second target. After shooting the first target Paul continues with his follow-through, shifting his eyes toward the center stake. When he picks up the incoming second target he stops his gun, reverses his swing, gets visual lock on the target and pulls the trigger. He cautions that at no time does he swing past the center stake when looking for the second target. Skeet Doubles are one of truly
fun games in clay target shooting. If you haven’t tried them, come out and shoot them sometime. TrapShootingUSA – July – August 2016 Lanny Bassham likes the term rehearsal instead of visualization when it comes to mental imaging of the shooting experience. Regardless of the moniker visualization of the shooting process in your mind has been proven to work. Mental practice tricks the mind and it can’t tell the difference between mental rehearsal and the actual event. When you practice in your mind, practice those initial targets on the first trap and on every post. Decide on an attitude to have when you practice those targets in your mind. If you are anxious on the first trap practice having a calm, confident attitude on those first targets. You are the one in control of those targets they don’t control you. Take charge and practice breaking those targets in your mind with the calm confidence you are trying to achieve in the real situation. If you like historical articles, check out the history of the Pennsylvania State Sportsmen’s Association. Richard Hamilton has put together a nice three article series on this state’s trapshooting history. The Southern Grand and Florida State Shoot reports are also in this issue.
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break it down into its bite-size parts. By doing that we can work on fixing parts of the problem rather than making wholesale changes.
2015 Worlds Zach Kienbaum TRAP & FIELD – June 2016 Featured this month are two articles covering the Bill Jacobsen Memorial Shoot. This shoot will replace the Silver Dollar Open in February. Shotgun Sports – July 2016
We learn in small increments not in big chunks. In time the accumulation of these small pieces of learning become knowledge we can access to solve problems be it either life related or shooting related. Michael equates this type of learning with fractals and their properties. As we push to raise our scores those last two targets or so, change on a much finer level is required of us. We can’t expect to suddenly raise our scores a target or two by changing a hold point or by shifting our stance. Mistakes are more subtle as we get more proficient. We can’t make a gross change when the need is for a change on a much finer level. This is when you go to a higher power, a coach, who can diagnose your problem and get you started on the right path toward real improvement.
Why failure is good, is the topic of discussion this month in Michael J. Keyes, M.D.’s column. The real topic is what we do after a failure to fix the problems highlighted by our apparent shortcomings. We like to think linearly. See a problem and solve it, is the usual mindset. We sometimes fail to remember everything has a future impact or price to pay. Michael suggests we look at the overall problem then 7
Magazine Review John Beedenbender’s memorial service was a truly wonderful ceremony. The Veterans Cemetery on U.S. 441 south of Lake Worth is well groomed as you would expect and is an amazingly tranquil spot. There are several lakes and of course the profoundly solemn fields of grave markers. It was and honor participating in the service. I have nothing but praise for the soldiers that performed the ceremony. I have to give the trumpeter high praise. His rendition of taps was flawless and very moving. There were several shooters at the ceremony and I am sure he was smiling down on us, happy to see his family and his shooting friends all celebrating his internment with his fellow veterans. I talked to sources at the club. If we want to purchase a plaque like the one for Dave
Knapp it is okay with them. If it suddenly appears on the wall nothing will be said against it. I will talk to the appropriate parties soon. If you would like to donate to this cause let me know. John’s grave is #436 in Section 34C. For now, Good Bye good friend. You will be missed!
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At South Florida Shooting Club’ last trapshoot I got the chance to try some ZZ birds with the manager Joe Fasulo. Wow! ZZ’s are incredibly fun! Pretty cool, they were designed to simulate true live bird shooting and I think they come close to accomplishing that. If you get a chance to shoot these targets I definitely recommend trying it. It is rather expensive at $2.00 a bird for practice targets, but my bet is after 10 or so practice birds you will want to go on and shoot in a full blown competition. Joe tells me the derbies will be
30 target competitions shot in events of 10 targets each round. I look forward to getting into this sport. I will keep you posted!
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SCI Donation Sometimes we need to be reminded how far we have come and how we got there. From a humble start 13 years ago the Youth Program at Markham Park has grown to one of the best and certainly the longest running program in Florida. Over 1,200 ten to seventeen year-old shooters have gotten their start with us. We have coached Boy Scouts, Girl Scouts, kids who have never shot before and everyone in between. Our shooters have accomplished incredible things, winning state, zone, and national championships. Many have made state teams, become All-Americans, and one is currently on the U.S. Army Marksmanship team. I want to personally thank all of the coaches who have worked with us over the years. Steve Norris has been part of the foundation of the program. Dave Kessell and Jack Krouskroup were both instrumental in the program’s initial creation. Since then Rich Nilsen, Fred Joy, Justin King, Billy Osceola, Jerry Schwab, Tony Moreno, Ed Bryan, Federico Ramirez, Steve McGillicuddy, Mary Norris, Nickie Schwab and Andrew Loitz have all joined us in coaching or working in the office. Our friend John Beedenbender supported the program working on the guns and fitting stocks to a youth shooter’s dimensions. Tony Boyd has always been one of our staunchest supporters and without his help and patience we couldn’t be the program we have become. If I have forgotten anyone I apologize. Everyone has been essential to the program’s success and I thank you all!
It is an honor working with this organization and providing this service to the community. I am always humbled when a parent comes to me and thanks me for being part of the program. So many times I will be at the club and someone will come up to me and say “Remember me? I learned to shoot through the club’s program. You and Steve (or one of the other coaches) coached me.” Almost nothing is more satisfying than the thanks I get from these parents and our program alums. I am sure the other coaches feel as I do. Few people know we got our first Winchester shotguns from the Carnival Cruise Line after they ended their trapshooting off the back of their cruiseliners. Since then those shotguns have been replaced by Weatherby’s, Remingtons, and Berettas. The Safari Club International’s (SCI) $2,500 donation will finally phase out the last of those original shotguns from Carnival. These will be sold and the money will be pooled with SCI’s to buy more youth model guns and to upgrade what we currently use in the program.
Safari Club International 4800 West Gates Pass Road Tucson, Arizona 85745-9490 USA Main Phone: (520) 620-1220 Toll Free: 1-888-HUNT-SCI 10
I cannot tell you how advantageous it is having more than a dozen guns to choose from when fitting a shotgun to one of our youth shooters. This is a major reason our program is so successful. Unlike many other programs our students learn on guns that fit, making teaching and learning so much more effective. Without the original contribution from Carnival we wouldn’t have had such a good start and without continued support from organizations such as SCI we wouldn’t be able to continue to excel. When you see someone with an SCI logo on their shirt or shooting vest be sure to thank them for their generous gift. SCI has been instrumental in supporting many organizations in our South Florida community. They have given their support to the Boy Scouts, the Youth Hunt in the Lake Istopoga Flood Plain, and other Youth Deer and Hog hunts. Their members volunteer to act as guides and cooks for many of these events. Like Rich Nilsen, SCI’s members also volunteer their time and services teaching safety courses and giving firearm training. From organizing Youth and Disabled Veteran Hunts and other community
service projects SCI has helped to make our South Florida community a place we can take pride in. From all of the members of Markham Skeet, Trap, and Sporting Clays we send our thanks to Rich Nilsen and the Safari Club International for their thoughtful and generous donation!
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It ain't what they call you, it's what you answer to. ~W.C. Fields 12
Calender of events: & 8’s, 1200 fps, 12 gauge.
Gun Shows: Sept. 17-18th Ft. Lauderdale War Memorial Aud.
Dick’s: They are running specials every other week. Watch the papers and check out their website.
Skeet this month: Markham
July 2nd
Trail Glades
July 23-24th
Port Malabar July 29-31st
Trap this month: Indian River
July 3rd
South Florida July 9th Markham
July 24th
Sporting This month: Quail Creek
July 23rd
Markham
July 16th
OK Corral
July 10th
South Florida
July 17th
Indian River
July 9th
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 $529.90 for 10 flats. This includes shipping. These are 11/8 oz., 7 1/2’s
If you hear a voice within you say "you cannot paint," then by all means paint, and that voice will be silenced. ~Vincent Van Gogh 13
July 2016 Sun
Mon
Tue
Wed
Thu
Fri
Sat
1
2 Skeet Tourney
3
4 Youth Program Cancelled
10
11 Youth Program
17
18 Youth Program
24 Trap Tourney
25 Youth Program
5
6 Skeet Night
12 Skeet Night
19 Skeet Night
26 Skeet Night
7 Trap Night
13 Trap Night
20 Trap Night
27 Trap Night
8
9
15
16
Sporting Clays
14
Sporting Tourney
Sporting Clays
21
22
23
29
30
Sporting Clays
28 Sporting Clays
31
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August 2016 Sun
Mon
Tue
Wed
Thu
Fri
Sat
1
2
3
4
5
6 Skeet Tourney
7
8 Youth Program Cancelled
14
15 Youth Program
21
22 Youth Program
28
29
Trap Tourney
Youth Program
9
10 Skeet Night
16 Skeet Night
23 Skeet Night
30 Skeet Night
Trap Night
17 Trap Night
24 Trap Night
11
12
Sporting Tourney
Sporting Clays
18
13
19
20
26
27
Sporting Clays
25 Sporting Clays
31 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 16, 2016
Snow Bird Open
Sunday - Feb 7, 2016
Honest Abe's Birthday Bash
Sunday - Mar 20, 2016
St. Patrick's Day Open
Saturday - Apr 17, 2016
Spring Blast
Sunday - May 15, 2016
Memorial Day Open
Saturday - Jun 25, 2016
15th Annual Sunshine State Classic
Saturday - Jul 16, 2016
Super Sizzle Open
Saturday - Aug 13, 2016
Summers End Open
Sunday - Oct. 9, 2015
Pumpkin Blast
Sunday—Nov. 6, 2016
Richard Merritt Memorial
Saturday—Dec 31, 2016
Bud Wolfe Classic
“The moment you doubt whether you can fly, you cease for ever to be able to do it.” ― J.M. Barrie, Peter Pan
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SPORTING CLAYS PROGRAM Markham Skeet, Trap & Sporting Clays Club
SUPER SIZZLE OPEN 100 Targets Shot over 14 Stations
SATURDAY JULY 16TH 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 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
Markham Park , 16001 W. State Road 84, Sunrise , FL 33326 (954) 357-5143
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SPORTING CLAYS RESULTS MAIN EVENT 35 Entrants Shooter
CONCURRENTS Shooter
Score
Score
CH CHARLES ALVAREZ
90
RU LUIS HERRERA
84
M1 RODRIGO A MEHICH
83
M2 LUCIO GOMEZ
82
M3 JEFFREY P ANGELLO
81
AA1 GERRY STUMM
80
AA2 RICHARD LEEDS
76
A1 WILLIAM VALDEZ
68
B1 WESLEY PARADISE
81
B2 NATHAN EVANS
77
B3 GREGORY MORISSET
69
C1 DARIUSZ RECZEK
80
C2 MAX REPIK
79
C3 LARRY CRISMOND
75
D1 ASIF SHEERAHAMED
75
D2 STEVEN HAYNIE
73
D3 CHARLIE DE ANGELIS
70
E1 RICHARD NILSEN
76
SUB JR CH JOSEPH PINCHIN
80
E2 JEAN MA. BOUCHEREAU
66
LADY CH CHARLIE DE ANGLIS
70
E3 PETER FLEMING
63
VET CH JEFFREY P ANGELLO
81
VET RU GERRY STUMM
80
SUPER VET CH LARRY CRISMOND
75
SUPER VET RU RICHARD NILSEN
73
HUNTER CH GIL NEHAMKIN
65
HUNTER RU LESLIE NAZON
64 19
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
“You wouldn't worry so much about what others think of you if you realized how seldom they do.” ― Eleanor Roosevelt
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Trap Program ATA SHOOT SCHEDULE 2015 –2016
January 24th February 28th March 27th April 24th May 22nd June 26th July 24th August 28th
Trap Program for Summer: 50 target 16 Yd and Hdcp events. $19.50 First Fifty targets $17.50 Subsequent Fifty target events. Doubles events will remain 100 targets. $33 if shot with other events, $37 as single event. See Federico Ramirez for details: 954-394-5134
Anyone who ever gave you confidence, you owe them a lot. ~Truman Capote . 24
Federico Ramirez:
As a former member of the Markham Youth Program, Federico is familiar to all of us. He has excelled as a shooter winning both the Southern Zone Singles Championship and the Florida State Singles Titles. Federico is currently enrolled at Nova Southeastern University in the PreDental program. Be sure to thank him for his dedication to the club and to trapshooting as his sport of choice.
Federico Ramirez has agreed to become our new Trap Chairman! Mike Freeman has served wonderfully in this position for as long as I can remember but is moving on to pursue other things. Thanks goes out to Mike and Eric Toline for heading our Trap program for so long! The Summer shooting format is now in effect and is printed on the previous page. There were some pricing issues on the first shoot. We will work with all of you to get you a discounted price for the upcoming shoot in July. I look forward to seeing you there! 25
Trapshooting Results
Singles SHOOTER CHRIS BOUNDS ANGEL ESTEVEZ ALEX RIERA WU YU SHENG TED VANDLING JACK MOORE ED GREEENE EMILIA EBIHARA PETER MILLS RICH NILSEN HENRY OVARES GLENN HANF WARREN LEDFORD LOU PEVARNIK AARON KLETZKIN
CLASS B A AA B D B D B B D B D B B C
CUSTOM EAR PLUGS Advanced Quality Hearing Sample Rd. & FL. Turnpike @ Festival Flea Market Mall By appointment only
SCORE 49 48 47 47 46 45 45 45 44 45 43 43 42 42 42
Coupon $10. Off In-office only Cash and carry
954-975-5756 26
Handicap SHOOTER
YARDAGE
SCORE
WU YU SHENG
20
45
PETER MILLS
20
44
EMILIA EBIHARA
19
41
RICH NILSEN
20
39
CHRIS BOUNDS
20
38
TED VANDLING
18.5
37
Doubles SHOOTER ALEX RIERA FEDERICO RAMIREZ ANGEL ESTEVEZ PETER MILLS LARRY CRISMOND WU YU SHENG WARREN LEDFORD RICH NILSEN
CLASS AA A B B C B B B
SCORE 93 90 83 79 75 67 64 56 27
Youth Program
I want to congratulate Nick and Ashley Blenker, and Joey Pinchin for making several NSCA All-American teams this year. Markham’s program continues to produce some of the leading shooters in the country. It is an honor and a privilege helping these shooters reach their potential. The SCTP National Championships are this month and many of our shooters are also on the Quail Creek Young Guns team. Good Luck everyone, we look forward to hearing about your successes! 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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