Markham November Newsletter

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Volume 13 Issue 03 November 2023

TRAIL GLADES TRAPSHOOT SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 18th

Markham Park Gun Club Youth Program Mondays 6-9 NSSA Skeet Saturday, November 4th ATA Trap Sunday, November 26th NSCA Sporting Clays Sunday, November 5th

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TABLE OF CONTENTS PAGE 4 5 6-11 12-13 14 16 18-21 22-23 24-27 28-29 30-31 32 33

CLUB NEWS STEVE AND DAVE MAGAZINE REVIEWS 6-11 CLAYTARGET NATION PICTURES Palm Beach Grand Prix RC-USA CUP ROYAL SPORTING ARMS Markham Hours and Rules Trap and Skeet Programs EVENTS CALENDAR CLUB CALENDAR Palm Beach Trap and Skeet Pro Shops SPORTING CLAYS CALENDAR

34-37 38-39 40-41 42 44-45 46

SPORTING CLAYS PROGRAM AND RESKEET PROGRAM AND RESULTS FSA SKEET CALENDAR TRAP PROGRAM TRAP RESULTS YOUTH PROGRAM

OFFICERS AND BOARD MEMBERS 2021 OFFICERS · PRESIDENT—Vacant · VICE PRESIDENT—Vacant ·

TREASURER—Vacant

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SECRETARY— Joe Loitz

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RECORDING SECRETARY—Vacant

DIRECTORS: Jon Roberts Sporting Chair Steve Norris Youth Chair Andrew Loitz Director

Contact info: Markham Skeet, Trap, and Sporting Clays 11873 NW 30th Street Coral Springs, FL 33065 954-857-5278 · www.markhamsportingclays.org · E-mail: jloit@bellsouth.net · Newsletter: jloit@bellsouth.net

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Next General Meeting ON REQUEST FROM SECRETARY

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Club News Well, the big story this month is Steve Norris moving to Melbourne. In case you don’t know Steve, he’s the guy with the “It’s My BIRTHDAY” crown on the right. Steve has been a fixture at Markham Park almost since it opened in the mid1980’s.

Originally from Indiana and an Air Force veteran, Steve has been with the Club since the beginning. While primarily a trapshooter, Steve has been a driving force for the club and all of its activities. He runs the trapshoots with me, runs the games on Wednesday night, and coached the Youth Program every Monday night for the last 16 years. Steve has also been the contract Instructor for the park for close to 30 years. To say his absence is going to affect me personally more than anyone else would be an understatement. If it needed doing for the club Steve was there to do it. This is al-

so my lame way of saying the club could use some more volunteers on Monday night with the Youth Programs and for the Trapshoots at the end of the month. Ed Bryan has already volunteered to help with the trapshoots and I am very appreciative. Anyone else who would like to become active with the club, please let me know and I will sign you up to volunteer. Steve plans on setting up shop to continue giving lessons at the Port Malabar Gun Club. This facility has Trap, Skeet, Sporting, and a number of pistol, rifle, muzzleloading, and archery ranges. We all wish Steve and Mary well as they make their move. I expect to see them back at the club from time to time. Good Luck in your new home! See you at the club. Joe Loitz jloit@bellsouth.net 954-857-5278

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Magazine Review CLAYTARGET NATION—Sept. 2023

John Shima introduces something new this month when he instructs us to accept the target as our friend. The concept of the target as our friend is an attempt to change the way we think about the target, not as a vindictive construct designed to defeat our attempts to break it, but as our friend. This all leads to the real problem we have breaking a target: impatience. Skeet targets are fast and close. Many shooters never learn how to move correctly with a smooth unrushed swing, resulting in a clear sight picture. They either attempt a rushed, blind swing or their swing is too fast and too long in duration. The rushed, blind swing can’t be effectively repeated. Yeah, it works 70% of the time and on good days works every time. On bad days it results in three misses in a row.

The long swing is another problem. Shooters set up their hold point just outside the window and start swinging at madcap speed after the target only to shoot it after it has passed the stake. By that time the target has lost at least a third of its power and speed. With this swing approach the barrel is either still moving too fast or the shooter tries to slow down to match the speed of the target. Neither are optimal swing methods. Why do I bring this up in regard to John’s article? John believes shooters become impatient because they perceive their situation as “me against the target.” This causes heightened tension which causes a cascade of other problems visual and mechanical. I agree. Once you approach targets with patience, all your visual problems evaporate and the mechanical issues with them. 6


In skeet find the hold point where you can see the target clearly, yet still able to make a move that produces a true sight picture. Too many shooters never experiment with hold and look points. Find the hold and look point where you see the target clearly and can make an efficient swing and shot. Next time you go to the practice field and shoot a normal round using your normal techniques, ask yourself, “Did I really shoot that target on purpose or was it just a reflex.” The shooters using the rushed, blind swing will have no sight picture captured in their head after the shot. The ones who swing too long will no doubt have a muddled remembrance of what their shot looked like. This is not what you are trying to accomplish. Find a hold and look point where you can make a patient, controlled, and smooth move to the target. Only with patience is the shooter “looking expectantly to detect the emergence of the target and acquire it properly.” If you see the target correctly, the swing and shot should feel like a calm, relaxed experience. Patience. John Shima brings up a second point in his article requiring a separate discussion linked back to his original idea of patience. When shooting a second target in trap, skeet, or sporting clays there is a “subtle pause in gun movement after the first shot to allow for eye shift.” John explains this subtle pause as a brief interval between shots that allows the eyes to shift their depth and point of focus. First the visual adjustment to soft focus to find the second target, then a shift to hard focus. Once hard focus is established, the target is again the shooter’s friend and hard focus on it tells your subconscious mind where to move

the barrel, how fast to move it, and when to release the shot. Move your eyes first, the barrels will follow. Throwing the gun over at the second target without first establishing where the second target is, is a recipe for disaster. An unguided barrel flashing across the sky without purposeful direction is not a good strategy. Barrel control, while secondary to visual control, must still be purposeful. Once you have hard focus on the second target, your shooting reflex will gauge the speed, direction, and attitude of the target. Patience. Move your eyes and barrels deliberately. Ideally, the eyes are moving to the target and the barrels are closely trailing behind them, ready to alter speed and direction when directed by the shooting reflex. Once full information is received through visual hard focus. That’s a Faulkner sentence, but I can’t say it any better. 7


Magazine Review A mature competitive shooter knows process-based goals produce more successful results than outcome-based goals. Working towards process based goals is the subject of Clayton M. Rues’s article this month. Many shooters have dreams of becoming a locally, nationally, or world-renowned champion. Realistically, these are rarely achievable goals without first setting intermediate goals. Outcome-based goals are nice, but you

won’t get there without first meeting intermediate, process-based goals.

If you don’t practice like a champion, you’ll never achieve champion level success. That practice has to be practical and processbased. Only by becoming a better shot will you achieve outcome-based goals, which means learning how to shoot better than you do now. Most shooters who get upset when they didn’t shoot up to their expectations never put in the time and effort needed to reach a higher plateau in their shooting. Find a qualified instructor who can tell you why you missed, not where you missed. More importantly, find one who can tell you exactly what you were thinking and seeing as you shot. If your instructor can’t tell you that on the majority of your shots, then you haven’t found the level of instructor you need. Also, find one who is honest with you. A qualified instructor should be able to pick up on patterns in your misses that point to underlying systematic problems. They should be honest enough with you to recommend dramatic changes if you need them. A poor instructor will never pick up on those patterns. All they know is how to recite, foot position, look point, hold point, break point, without any solutions to curing your real problems. 8


Victoria Stellato produced a good article on swing follow-through this month. Followthrough in shotgunning is just as important as it is in golf, tennis, basketball, or any throwing motion. One of the best follow-through exercises is John Shima’s incomer drill performed on a skeet field. This drill is designed around following an incoming target and shooting it to perfection. Smooth swing followed by a

structors will tell you to follow any pieces of the target to the ground. Really, only a smooth follow-through is appropriate.

smooth follow-through. All performed on the same plane as the target’s flight. There shouldn’t be a sudden surge at the end of the swing when the shot is taken, there shouldn’t be a thrusting of the gun towards the target at the shot, and you should see the target break as you complete your follow-through. Some in-

means you are paying attention to a fullbody move and not just a twisting of the upper torso with the arms being the major driving force. That’s not how a golf or tennis swing works and it shouldn’t be how you swing a shotgun.

Being an advocate of the full-body swing, the swing and follow-through should be done from the ankles up and you should continue to drive your body through the shot during the follow-through. Proper practice of this follow-through drill

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Magazine Review I agree with Don Currie, most misses are lack of visual focus prior to and through the break point. You should clearly see the target break, no matter what shooting game you enjoy, and the only way to do this is to have continuous hard focus on the target. Don suggests three explanations for lack of visual focus. Excessive muzzle movement or gun speed inconsistent with target speed. I talk about this in the John Shima article. Quar-

tering and straight-away targets require a hold and look point further away from the trap to avoid this mistake. Next, placing your look point too close to the trap causes an overestimation of the target speed. Give yourself enough distance away from the trap for your eyes to go into soft focus. This allows the target to enter your peripheral vision with enough time to easily transition to hard focus. Too close and excessive eye movement, trying to catch up to the target, will inhibit an efficient transition to hard focus. Finally, target occlusion, where the barrels interfere with visual focus on the target. One of the greatest problems in shotgunning is the tendency to spoil the line. Yes, this comes from lack of hard focus on the target but is more of a technical problem than visual. People forget or don’t know, to keep the target above your barrels until they both meet at the break point. A common technical mistake is setting a hold point above the target line. Another common problem involves swinging a shotgun. Some people have a tendency to swing the barrels upward faster than the target is rising, eventually carrying the gun over the target line, spoiling the line The end result is as shot over the target. Maybe it’s a strength issue, it’s physically easier to swing in a constantly rising swing than it is to swing the gun in a direct or parallel line. 10


Funny thing is Daro Handy, a famed trap instructor swears the shots are under and behind and points to video evidence proving it. The video is irrefutable. It shows the shot is physically, under and behind. This is because due to barrel occlusion, the target is lost from vision and when the target is lost from vision a shooter will stop their barrels and the shot will be triggered. The barrel stops, but the target keeps rising. The shot was triggered over the target line but by stopping the barrels, the video records the shot as under and behind.

Regardless of the physics, I’ve observed thousands of missed targets because the barrels rose faster than the target line required. Didn’t matter that the target with a risingquartering target, a level-crossing target, or a rising-crossing target, the shooter’s gun rose faster than the target, crossed the target line, and the shot went over the target. Maybe I’m missing something here, eyes shifting to the barrel or loss of hard focus on the target, but the end result is the barrels crossing the target line, the target is occluded by the barrels, and is missed over and behind.

Why is that? Stopping the barrels, isn’t accounted for in the shot interpretation. In the 0.089 seconds after the barrel stops and the trigger’s pulled, the primer ignites the powder, the shot travels down and leaves the barrel, eventually the shot whizzes out past the target. The barrels stop, the shot is triggered, and in that 0.089 seconds the target speeding through the sky at 45 mph has traveled four feet, up and away from where the barrel has stopped. Therefore the shot shows up as under and behind when at the moment the trigger was pulled the shot was over. This is why follow-through is so important. It makes up for the 0.089 second lag. Sorry, Daro, where they shot doesn’t tell the whole story. Why did the barrel stop is the real story. The fix for a spoiled line is far different than the fix for a shot under and behind. Cure the disease not the symptom.

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Magazine Review

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ROYAL SPORTING ARMS located in Davie, FL right on I-595 and 5 Minutes From Markham Park Trap Skeet and Spor ng Clays Club. We are open year round to serve you at our FL Loca on. Here at Royal Spor ng Arms we are excited to help you with your next gun purchase.

We carry new and used Bere a, Perazzi, Rizzini, Krieghoff, Blaser, Syren, Fabarm, Caesar Guerini. We are a full service shop, offering Fine guns, Ammo, stocks, over and under Barrels, gunsmithing, Gunstock work, recoil pads etc We'll Pay TOP DOLLAR for your used guns and also take firearms on trade / consignment! We are excited to see and work with you! Please contact our team to make an appointment or to stop in!

FLORIDA /USA: (954)-676-0714 / (954)-394-5134 Federico Ramirez Royal Sporting Arms Phone: (954) 394-5134 Email: royalsportingarms@gmail.com Website: https://www.royalsportingarms.com

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FLORIDA / USA: (954)-676-0714 / (954)-394-5134 Federico Ramirez Royal Sporting Arms Phone: (954) 394-5134 Email: royalsportingarms@gmail.com Website: https://www.royalsportingarms.com 21


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Markham Skeet, Trap & Sporting Clays

ATA Trapshoot Sunday, November 26th Signup starts 8:00 Shooting Starts at 9:00 100 16 Yard targets 100 Handicap targets 100 Doubles targets $40 first 100 targets $34 for each additional 100 Additional Shoot Dates See Page 34 24


Trail Trap & Skeet

ATA Trapshoot Saturday, November 18th Signup starts 8:00 Shooting Starts at 9:00 100 16 Yard targets 100 Handicap targets 100 Doubles targets $40 first 100 targets $34 for each additional 100 2023 Trail Shoot Dates Saturday September 16th 25


Markham Skeet, Trap & Sporting Clays

NSSA Skeet Tournament Saturday, November 4th Signup starts 8:00 Shooting Starts at 9:00 50 targets 12 gauge 50 targets 20 gauge 50 targets 28 gauge 50 targets .410 gauge 50 targets Doubles $21 each 50 targets 26


South Florida Shooting Club

NSSA Skeet Tournament Sunday, November 25th Signup starts 8:00 Shooting Starts at 9:00

Lunch is available in the clubhouse

50 targets 12 gauge 50 targets 20 gauge 50 targets 28 gauge 50 targets .410 gauge 50 targets Doubles $21 each 50 targets 27


954-846-2336

Correct one fault at a me. Concentrate on the one fault you want to overcome. Sam Snead

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Registered Shooting and Events in South Florida

Gun Shows Miramar National Guard Armory November 25-26th

Skeet Markham Trail Glades So. Florida

November 4th November 18th November 25th

Trap PBS Complex Trail Glades Markham

November 11th November 18th November 26th

Sporting Clays Vero Beach November 4th Markham November 5th South Florida November 11th Gulf Coast Clays November 12th Quail Creek November 18th OK Corral November 25th

To be consistently effec ve, you must put a certain distance between yourself and what happens to you on the golf course. This is not indifference, it's detachment.

Sam Snead

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NOVEMBER Sun

Mon

Tue

Wed

Thu

Fri

Sat

1

2

3

4

Skeet Tourney

5

6 Youth Night

7 Skeet Night

8 Trap Night

9 10 Spor ng Clays

11

12

13 Youth Night

14 Skeet Night

15 Trap Night

16 17 Spor ng Clays

18

19

20 Youth Night

21 Skeet Night

22 Trap Night

23 Club Closed

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26 Trap Tourney

27

28 Skeet Night

29 Trap Night

30 31 Spor ng Clays

Spor ng Tourney

Memorial Day Closed

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Sun

Mon

Tue

Wed

Thu

Fri

Sat

1

2

Skeet Tourney

3

4 Youth Night

5 Skeet Night

6 Trap Night

7 Spor ng Clays

8

9

10

11 Youth Night

12 Skeet Night

13 Trap Night

14 Spor ng Clays

15

16

17

18

Youth Night

19 Skeet Night

20 Trap Night

21 Spor ng Clays

22

23

24

25 Range Closed

26 Skeet Night

27 Trap Night

28 Spor ng Clays

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30

Spor ng Tourney

Trap Tourney

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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 THANK YOU IN ADVANCE FOR YOUR BUSINESS JOE FORDHAM 32


2023 Schedule NSCA Sporting Clay Tournaments Date

Tournament

Saturday - Aug 12

Summers End Open

Saturday - Sept 9

Markham Fall Fest Shoot

Sunday - Oct 15

Pumpkin Blast

Sunday - Nov 5

Richard Merritt Memorial

Sunday - Dec 17

Bud Wolfe Classic

January 2024

Snow Bird Open

February 2024

Honest Abe's Birthday Bash

March 2024

St. Patrick's Day Open

April 2024

Gerry Stumm Memorial

May 2024

Memorial Day Open

June 2024

23rd Annual Sunshine State Classic

July 2024

Super Sizzle Open

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SPORTING CLAYS PROGRAM

Markham Skeet, Trap & Sporting Clays Club

RICHARD MERITT MEMORIAL 100 Targets Shot over 14 Stations

SUNDAY NOVEMBER 5TH Registration: Opens 8:00 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: $60 N.S.C.A., $60 Hunter, $40.00 SubJunior, Junior No Scorers or Trappers will be provided.

Shooters will be asked to squad themselves into groups of at least 3 and designate a field judge to verify scores for the squad.

Lunch will not be 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:

Jon Roberts (786)-210-9448 email: jonroberts45@gmail.com

Please Preregister using: scorechaser.com 34

S S V V V S S S S S S H H


SPORTING CLAYS RESULTS 2023 FALL FEST OPEN HOA 57 ENTRANTS

CONCURRENTS \

SUB-JR CH PATRICK BROOK SUB-JR RU TYLER ELMORE VET CH EMILIO TEJA VET RU SALIM HADDAD VET 3RD TED GRAY S VET CH ALEX RIERA S VET RU EDWARD LEE S VET 3RD MELVIN SOSA SSR VET CH RICHARD REBER SSR VET RU ALAN FURIA SSR VET 3RD JAMES JACOBS HUNTER CH BARRY CORWIN HUNTER RU NAJEEB HABER

73 65 91 88 87 83 76 74 77 72 70 86 72

CH HERBERT KANZKI RU BOB WORSWICK M1 EMILIO TEJO M2 JUAN ALVARADO M3 JUAN CUETO AA1 DONOVAN AMRITT AA2 GERGORY MORISSET A1 RICHARD THOMPSON A2 JAMES ANDERSON A3 ALEX RIERA B1 TOM DALY B2 FERNANDO ALVARADO B3 CHRISTOPHER MORENO C1 TREVOR ROWARS C2 YUSSAF HADDAD C3 BILL CAMPBELL D1 JAMES BALDWIN D2 JOHN ELDRIDGE D3 MARC MALLOY

96 95 91 90 89 85 84 84 84 83 86 84 74 88 81 80 87 77 76

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SPORTING CLAYS PROGRAM

Markham Skeet, Trap & Sporting Clays Club

BUD WOLFE CLASSIC 100 Targets Shot over 14 Stations

SUNDAY DECEMBER 17TH Registration: Opens 8:00 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: $60 N.S.C.A., $60 Hunter, $40.00 SubJunior, Junior No Scorers or Trappers will be provided. Shooters will be asked to squad themselves into groups of at least 3 and designate a field judge to verify scores for the squad.

Lunch will not be 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:

Jon Roberts (786)-210-9448 email: jonroberts45@gmail.com

Please Preregister using: scorechaser.com 36


SPORTING CLAYS RESULTS 2023 FALL FEST OPEN HOA 77 ENTRANTS

CONCURRENTS

\

LADY CH MEGAN ELROD 71 LADY RU RYLIE SASS 60 SUB-JR CH REAGAN ELTUS 73 SUB-JR RU DAMIEN CRELLER 67 JR CH RYLIE SASS 60 VET CH EMILIO TEJA 89 VET RU DEREK JANOWICZ 88 VET 3RD TED GRAY 88 S VET CH ALEX RIERA 75 S VET RU RICHARD SLEEM 74 S VET 3RD RICHARD WILLIAMS 66 SSR VET CH WILLIAM T. MUIR 88 SSR VET RU ROCKY LONG 82 SSR VET 3RD ELIO CIOCCA 80 HUNTER CH MICHAEL PETERS 79 HUNTER RU BARRY CORWIN 79

CH HERBERT KANZKI RU DANIEL BINGEL JR. M1 EMILIO TEJA M2 WILLIAM T. MUIR M3 RORY WILSON AA1 ANDRES CAMPOS AA2 LENIN THOMPSON AA3 ROCKY LONG A1 DEREK JANOWICZ A2 RICHARD THOMPSON A3 ALEX RIERA B1 FERNANDO ALVARADO B2 TOM DALY B3 DAVID DEBRULE C1 JAMES BALDWIN C2 TIMOTHY OVERTON C3 ELIO CIOCCA D1 JEAN FRANCILLON D2 JUSTIN KETCHAM D3 RAY SANTANA

91 91 89 88 88 85 83 82 88 81 75 79 78 72 82 81 80 79 77 76

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MONTHLY SKEET PROGRAM Price per 50 targets includes $5/100 NSSA/FSA Fee

.410 gauge 50 Targets $21.00 28 gauge 50 Targets $21.00 20 gauge 50 Targets $21.00 12 gauge 50 Targets $21.00 Doubles 50 Targets $21.00 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! 'Pressure' is a word that is misused in our vocabulary. When you start thinking of pressure, it's because you've started to think of failure. Tommy Lasorda

50 Straight Kennedy Half Dollar 75 Straight Eisenhower Dollar 100 Straight Morgan Silver Dollar 50 Straight Doubles Liberty Silver Half 38


Skeet Results Markham and South Florida Shooting Club

First and fore-most, you must have confidence. Your second mental problem is concentration. Think the shot through in advance before you address the ball. Draw a mental image of where you want it to go and then eliminate everything else from your mind, except how you are going to get the ball into that preferred spot. Sam Snead 39


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Trap Program Trap Program: SPECIAL NOTICE

Trap Tournaments are usually the fourth Sunday of the month.

100 target 16 Yd, Hdcp and Doubles events. First 100 targets. $40.00 (Includes ATA and FTA daily fees)

ATA SHOOT SCHEDULE 2023-2024

Additional 100 target events.

June 25th

$34.00

July 23rd August 27th September 24th October 22nd

See Joe Loitz for details: 954-857-5278

November 26th December 30th January 28th February 25th March 10th April 28th May 26th 42


WEDNESDAY NIGHT SHOOTING IS STILL POPULAR WITH THE SHOOTERS. SIGN UP WITH THE REST OF THE REGULARS AND TRY YOUR SKILL AND LUCK AT ALL THE GAMES.

Come out and join the fun!

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TRAP RESULTS Markham Skeet, Trap, and Sporting Clays

16 Yards OCTOBER RESULTS SINGLES

SEPTEMBER RESULTS SINGLES DAX DEMENA ADOLFO MILIANI ALEX RIERA BRETT VANDLING VALENTIN MILLAN ISIDORO LOPEZ DAMIAN CRELLER ORACIO RICCOBONO MIKE FREYER ROGELIO FOLCON JOSE LOPEZ TED VANDLING

99 98 97 93 92 90 89 88 87 87 81 76

ALEX RIERA DAX DEMENA ROGELIO FOLCON ISIDORO LOPEZ MIKE FREYER ORACIO RICCOBONO JOSE LOPEZ MARLON LOPEZ IVAN VILLALOBOS JORGE SOLARES

98 97 94 93 90 86 86 85 82 79

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Handicap No Handicap event was held.

Doubles SEPTEMBER RESULTS DOUBLES DAX DEMENA 95 ALEX RIERA 91 ADOLFO MILIANI 89 VALENTIN MILLAN 88 DAMIAN CRELLER 88 JOSE LOPEZ 85 MIKE FREYER 84 ISIDORO LOPEZ 75 ROGELIO FOLCON 71

OCTOBER RESULTS DOUBLES MIKE FREYER 89 JOSE LOPEZ 79 ISIDORO LOPEZ 73 IVAN VILLALOBOS 72 JORGE SOLARES 63 MARLON LOPEZ 57

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Youth Program

Markham Youth Program Ages 10-17 $18 includes targets & ammo Shotguns available free of charge Every Monday 6-9 PM. 46


SPONSORS 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 sponsor our newsletter: contact me at: jloit@bellsouth.net Joe Loitz at 954-857-5278

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