Training Day One
I woke at 5am, and through the fog of a too-early alarm, I managed my morning routine and was equally lucky remembering all my stuff. Like all of these complex and fringe pursuits, the gear needed for defensive pistol is extensive.
1. Primary weapon: PARA 1911
2. 8-10 magazines (eight round capacity). Gunsite recommends a minimum of six magazines. I think eight is a good number.
3. Holster. Something without a strap or complex retention system.
4. Magazine pouch for two magazines.
5. Backup weapon: Remington R1 1911
6. Stiff, webbed belt
7. Daytime eye protection
8. Nighttime eye protection
9. Electronic hearing protection (muffs)
10. Cleaning kit
11. Gunsmithy tools
12. Range Bag
13. $500+ in ammo, including frangible for the scenario houses
I rolled through Method Coffee for a triple-cap, and the mood and excitement improved. Gunsite is about 30 minutes from our offices and down a pretty bumpy dirt road. I cringed at the students with low-slung sedans. I pulled up the classroom area and tucked the G-Wagen and trailer into a spot in the shade. We had tons of paperwork to complete, including some gnarly (but appropriate) hold harmless agreements. Basically, even if another student shoots you and kills you, Gunsite is not responsible. I signed the docs and filled out a gift membership to the NRA for Brian (I already had a lifetime membership). Gunsite gives a free one year membership to the NRA with each course. The last step is to order lunches for the week, which has proven to be a great program. Bringing your own food would be foolish- this stuff is fresh and tasty.
The class started with instructor introductions, starting with Ed, our range master. Ed it ex DPS, Marine EOD and a few SF programs. He served from the mid-1960s until after the first Iraq war. Impressive resume and a cool dude. Incidentally, he drives a fully prepped FJ Cruiser and has been a subscriber to Overland Journal for over six years. Purely coincidence, but fun none the less. Other instructors include Chris, a retired Marine and Steve, a serious killing machine with major skills with edged weapons, etc. His specialty was asset protection. A few other instructors have also participated, so the class is well staffed. Not too many, but certainly enough instructors to ensure safety and constant feedback / correction, of which I needed a lot. . .
Fortunately, the class is completely void of the tactical ****************** and wannabe killing machines. About a third are professionals like doctors, attorneys, etc. The other third are LEOs or military. The last third are older retired interested in learning a new skill. Refreshingly, there are many women in the course and most are outshooting the gents. The classroom time continued with an emphasis on safety and a few hard/fast rules. One interesting one was speed holstering. They are ok with a fast draw, but the weapon should be reholstered slowly, reluctantly and only after a thorough area assessment. They talked a lot about dry fire drills and gave some horrific stories of mistakes made, including one student shooting and killing his best friend that was taking the class with him.
We reviewed basic gun handling and the
Modern Technique of the Pistol, the combat triad (Mindset, Gun Handling and Marksmanship). As the day would progress, I would quickly come to terms with the fact that I am a pretty good marksman, but a rookie gun handler. The mindset has only been touched on briefly, but is supposed to progress through the week. We reviewed marksmanship, which best describes the shooting I have done for the past 30 years- slow, methodical accuracy shooting as sport. The last points of discussion was weaver stance, push/pull and the 5-step presentation. Everything made sense in the classroom, but then we drove to the range to put it to practice. Humble pie was served.
Driving down to the range, we spent about 30 minutes working on manipulating the firearm, stance and dry fire presentation. Then we started shooting, concentrating on marksmanship. At this point I was feeling like a champ shooting machine, hitting tight groups and certainly within the top three of the 24 person class on accuracy. Then we started incorporating stance, push/pull and the 5-step presentation. With each new piece, my marksmanship started to degrade, even introducing problems like pulling shots and crappy trigger pull. With each new piece, my rookie(ness) was becoming clear. The mental replay shouting, GRIP, CLEAR, CLICK, **********, LOOK - FIRE. The movements were robotic, slow and inconsistent. However, I love learning and embraced my inner rookie- keep trying, keep practicing. By the end of the day, my hands were sore and my ego thoroughly bruised. We went back to the classroom and reviewed safety while dry practicing off-range. Our homework was to spend 20-30 minutes just practicing presentation, ready position and tactical reload.
I decided to camp the first night, so I headed to the (very nice) Gunsite RV and campground area, popped the Jame Baroud and then started dry practice. I went back to the basics and made sure each step was perfect before adding any speed. If I screwed up or missed a step, I slowed down again. After about 15 minutes, I was getting significantly more smooth. The reloads were going exactly as planned and I even surprised myself a few times with a fluid, technically perfect presentation. Not fast, but it was starting to "click". I decided enough was enough and sat down with my friend Dave (who has a sweet EarthRoamer) for some steaks and a few beverages. Ed, the Range Master stopped by for a few minutes to chat and the conversation shifted to overlanding. Great way to end the evening and I was thoroughly spent, falling to sleep before 10.
Day one was humbling, but no less awesome.
The Good:
1. I am a pretty good shot, so long as I am just pointing the gun at the target and have a ton of time to shoot. Essentially, lots of years "plinking", but no real work on being a shooter.
2. The PARA is nice to shoot. The small frame required a few adjustments to standard technique and the muzzle lifts more than the USP, but I was able to manage with a strong push/pull. Now my tricep hurts!
3. The Gunsite facility is pretty amazing and feels not only academic, but substantial. The history of that place and the volume of servicemembers that have been trained there is impressive. Kind of like walking the halls of the RGS, but for shooters.
The Bad:
1. My mag pouch started having screw back out. Once in the gravel on the range and then another in the tent. I have it sorted now, but another reminder of showing up at anything important with new and untested gear.
2. I believe I started the class underprepared in a few key areas. I have done a lot of shooting, but had almost no fundamental understanding of the core principals of handgun manipulation and handling. Even starting the class with a basic understanding and experience on push/pull, presentation and tac reload would be huge.
3. I should have taken this class 10 years ago. However, ignorance was bliss. I did not know what I didn't know. . .
More on day two soon!
Birdseye of some of the class. Denise in the lower left is a great shot. In fact, the women in the class were overall better marks"man" than the dudes. You can see Ed, the Range Master instilling wisdom on the eager.
This gives a view of one of the Gunsite ranges. There are dozens of ranges on the 500+ acre property.
They send you home with a safety plate for dry practice. Given the attention they put to this subject, I suspect NDs are a huge problem amongst the students. Either way, it made me a lot more careful, which is a good thing.