Kids on Clays
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- Pippin89
- Posts: 1036
- Joined: Thu Apr 04, 2019 11:54 am
- Home club or Range: Chichester Rifle and Pistol Club
- Location: West Sussex, UK
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Kids on Clays
What is a good age to get the kids out busting clays? My local ground has a minimum age of 10 for organised events and lessons but no minimum if I want to take them out myself.
My daughter is only 4 at the moment so still far too young to safely hold and fire a shotgun. Just wondered what people thought about a good age to start her off would be. She keeps begging me to go!
My daughter is only 4 at the moment so still far too young to safely hold and fire a shotgun. Just wondered what people thought about a good age to start her off would be. She keeps begging me to go!
Re: Kids on Clays
Once the child is big enough to be able to follow instructions implicitly and control and operate a shotgun, would be the benchmark, I reckon. My boy was 8, but, he's a unit. He was then. He was already three years into Karate and had the discipline. My daughter is 10, she'll be lucky if she ever gets near a gun! I don't use google, because she knows effing everything!!
Age is not the factor, but you're clay ground insurance may stipulate for ease sake.
Age is not the factor, but you're clay ground insurance may stipulate for ease sake.
In 1978 I was told by my grand dad that the secret to rifle accuracy is, a quality bullet, fired down a quality barrel..... How has that changed?
Guns dont kill people. Dads with pretty Daughters do...!
Guns dont kill people. Dads with pretty Daughters do...!
- Polchraine
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Re: Kids on Clays
The answer has to be "when the child is ready".
Do they understand instructions?
Do they do as they are told?
Can they hold a gun?
Do they understand safety?
Where I shoot, one member brought his son at 7 - all fine. Another child was around 10 and I believe his parent was politley told "not again" because of safety issues.
As for insurance - does the association you are a member of, offer a family membership? If so, can you upgrade and get cover?
Do they understand instructions?
Do they do as they are told?
Can they hold a gun?
Do they understand safety?
Where I shoot, one member brought his son at 7 - all fine. Another child was around 10 and I believe his parent was politley told "not again" because of safety issues.
As for insurance - does the association you are a member of, offer a family membership? If so, can you upgrade and get cover?
"The trouble with quotes on the internet is that it's difficult to discern whether or not they are genuine." - Abraham Lincoln
Why did kamikaze pilots wear helmets?
God loves stupid people, that is why he made so many of them.
- Pippin89
- Posts: 1036
- Joined: Thu Apr 04, 2019 11:54 am
- Home club or Range: Chichester Rifle and Pistol Club
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Re: Kids on Clays
Thanks chaps! Of course when she is ready is the best bet. But it looks like I should be deciding that when is is 8-10ish. Thats what I was looking for!
- 20series
- Full-Bore UK Supporter
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Re: Kids on Clays
Buy her a little bb gun and plink in the back garden. Treat it like a real gun and she'll be learning and having fun at the sane time until she's big enough.
Alan
Alan
A common mistake that people make when trying to design something completely foolproof is to underestimate the ingenuity of complete fools!!
Douglas Adams, 1952-2001 RIP
Douglas Adams, 1952-2001 RIP
- Pippin89
- Posts: 1036
- Joined: Thu Apr 04, 2019 11:54 am
- Home club or Range: Chichester Rifle and Pistol Club
- Location: West Sussex, UK
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Re: Kids on Clays
She currently has a nerf gun which I make her treat like a real gun. She knows how to hold it when it is and isn't loaded etc. And it gets locked in my gun safe. And she has a safe direction for firing it etc. Its very cute!20series wrote:Buy her a little bb gun and plink in the back garden. Treat it like a real gun and she'll be learning and having fun at the sane time until she's big enough.
Alan
- 20series
- Full-Bore UK Supporter
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- Joined: Mon Nov 08, 2010 10:42 am
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Re: Kids on Clays
That's great, excellent way to teach kids firearms safety .Pippin89 wrote:She currently has a nerf gun which I make her treat like a real gun. She knows how to hold it when it is and isn't loaded etc. And it gets locked in my gun safe. And she has a safe direction for firing it etc. Its very cute!20series wrote:Buy her a little bb gun and plink in the back garden. Treat it like a real gun and she'll be learning and having fun at the sane time until she's big enough.
Alan
Alan
A common mistake that people make when trying to design something completely foolproof is to underestimate the ingenuity of complete fools!!
Douglas Adams, 1952-2001 RIP
Douglas Adams, 1952-2001 RIP
- Polchraine
- Posts: 6420
- Joined: Sat Nov 06, 2010 11:46 pm
- Location: Middlesex
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Re: Kids on Clays
Wait for the next inspection and if the FLO does not ask why it is not on the certificate, you can always ask how to do it! It would, in my opinion, show a positive attitude to gun safety.Pippin89 wrote: She currently has a nerf gun which I make her treat like a real gun. She knows how to hold it when it is and isn't loaded etc. And it gets locked in my gun safe. And she has a safe direction for firing it etc. Its very cute!
The only problem with nerf guns is hat everyone is shown firing them at other people ...
"The trouble with quotes on the internet is that it's difficult to discern whether or not they are genuine." - Abraham Lincoln
Why did kamikaze pilots wear helmets?
God loves stupid people, that is why he made so many of them.
- Pippin89
- Posts: 1036
- Joined: Thu Apr 04, 2019 11:54 am
- Home club or Range: Chichester Rifle and Pistol Club
- Location: West Sussex, UK
- Contact:
Re: Kids on Clays
Yes I have made the joke with my partner of "what will the FEO say if she turns up and sees that in there..."Polchraine wrote:Wait for the next inspection and if the FLO does not ask why it is not on the certificate, you can always ask how to do it! It would, in my opinion, show a positive attitude to gun safety.Pippin89 wrote: She currently has a nerf gun which I make her treat like a real gun. She knows how to hold it when it is and isn't loaded etc. And it gets locked in my gun safe. And she has a safe direction for firing it etc. Its very cute!
The only problem with nerf guns is hat everyone is shown firing them at other people ...
I think she would be happy to see I am teaching firearms safety. I have had one person in my family claim I am teaching her to be violent... I then showed them a picture of me and my daughter butchering a lamb together (I was teaching her where her food comes from) and I got the response "Oh my god you're raising a psychopath...."
I told her to go and get a piece of meat from the fridge and ask her son where it comes from and if he says "Tesco" you have a problem. I didn't get a response to that one!
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