What can a bagpiper teach us about shooting?
Posted: Sun Aug 12, 2012 7:38 am
A good guy I know from another forum posted this, and I thought it was worth pondering . . .
NavyChief wrote:What I learned about shooting from a bagpiper. (But should've known - and been practicing - all along anyway.)
Most days at lunch I drive up to a little park no one in the area seems to know about to "get away from it all" and spend some quiet time reading. Well, most don't know about it. There is a fellow that goes there to practice his 'pipes. (For those that don't know, bagpipes don't really have an "indoor voice.") So sometimes I get to enjoy a book and some music. Not too long ago we had a conversation. I learned he's been playing 50 years. Fifty years! ...since he was 7 seven years old. So you would think he's into pretty advanced pieces of music, eh? Well, perhaps he is. But here's the thing. I normally am only there when he's getting warmed up. And what does he do? ...rip right into a heart-breaking rendition of Amazing Grace? Nope. He does scales. Yep. do-re-mi and all that.
And that's when I had my epiphany. "Good grief," thinks I to myself, "if this guy, with fifty years of experience starts each session with the basics, what the heck makes me think marching up to the line, drawing and shooting is such a great training regimen?"
Last night I started off my range session with a hundred .22s out of the Huntsman working on stance, trigger press, sight alignment - and doing it sloooowly. Can you guess what my results were when I finally did transition to the G19 and a box of 50? Yep. This is my new routine.