Well, I promised a report and a few photos of my visit to Wellington, to the Grenada North range with the Ngaio Rifle Club back on the 11th of May.
Firstly I need to say a big thank you to the club and its members. They made me very welcome, from John the RO, to the various members (Graham, Brendon, Davey, and the others) who let me have a go with their kit, or just took the time to have a chat. And thanks to the ladies who supplied the scones to go with the cuppa (told you I was made welcome….they were good scones!).
I also have to say a big thank you to Adam for getting it all sorted and getting me there and letting him use his gear and mentoring me and for basically doing a fine job of looking after me. Really appreciated. It wouldn't have happened without you mate!
Now, the kit…..
Adam started me off with his HP Steyr, a very nice rifle with all the adjustments you could ever ask for. And it definitely shot well when I did my part. I had a bit of trouble getting a comfortable cheek weld and the right eye relief with it, though and I’m definitely not used to shooting with a fixed 45x scope, so it was a relief when I went “old school” with a springer. Adam’s TX200 was as smooth as butter, and I could wind the variable scope down to 20x, so I started shooting at 24x for positional targets and 20x for offhand. The feel was much like my BSA Hornet, so I was quickly enjoying this rifle, and finding the targets much quicker and more confidently.
I also got to hold an FX with a rather impressive silencer fitted (yeah, there were silencers, and yes, I’m jealous).
I also saw an Edgun bullpup, and the Mac1 in the photo below. The kneeling attachment should help!
This is where I should mention that the kneeling and sitting positions for Field Target are not quiet the 3P air positions I am used to. By the time the positions are slightly different, and the target lanes are sloping up or down to around 20 degrees, the positions felt a little like a class in yoga. I definitely found the downhill lanes much more comfortable. Offhand shots were not as bad. When I woke up the next morning, I could identify precisely the muscles that had got the workout. With practice though, I reckon I could really enjoy it.
All in all, it was a great day at the range. I don’t think I embarrassed myself or my country too severely…..I was told I was being watched as to gauge the competition from Australia.

All tongue in cheek, but what a way to get pressure put on a lad! In the end I was knocking over about half of what I aimed at, and first time out, I don’t think I did too badly. For anyone interested, I reckon if you can consistently clip the 9 ring in 10m air, you should able to knock the targets over, as long as you can judge the wind – which is a bigger challenge than it sounds on slopes with intermittent foliage to break it up – and get over the uneven ground to shoot on and across. Sounds easy if you say it fast, doesn’t it!

My missus won’t be reading this, but she deserves thanks too. How many wives would let their husband go shooting for the bulk of the day in the middle of her dream holiday? And on Mother’s Day as well? She’s a keeper.

Life is good!
Cheers, curan.