Elkhorn club has fun with guns

By PEDRO OLIVEIRA JR. ( Contact )   Saturday, June 27, 2009
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Firearms safety


Bob Burton of the Elkhorn Pistol Club recommends these three "must-dos" when handling firearms:

-- Always keep the muzzle pointed away from people.

-- Keep your finger away from the trigger until you're ready to shoot.

-- Keep guns unloaded until you're ready to use them.

Join the club


To join the Elkhorn Pistol Club, you must be an active member of the National Rifle Association and an active member of the Wisconsin Rifle and Pistol Association.

Elkhorn Pistol Club fees include:

-- $35 for an annual regular membership fee, $45 for an annual family membership fee or $25 for a junior membership fee.

-- A one-time $40 initiation fee.

-- An annual $35 National Rifle Association fee.

-- An annual $15 Wisconsin Rifle and Pistol Association fee.

The club invites visitors to come in for two initial visits at a cost of $3 per evening.

PhotoVideo


John Bohm of Williams Bay takes aim during a practice session by members of the Elkhorn Pistol Club at the Walworth County Range.

John Bohm of Williams Bay takes aim during a practice session by members of the Elkhorn Pistol Club at the Walworth County Range.

PhotoVideo


Jim Bartnik of Elkhorn checks the pattern of his shots on a bull's-eye while changing targets at the Walworth County Range.

Jim Bartnik of Elkhorn checks the pattern of his shots on a bull's-eye while changing targets at the Walworth County Range.

— I'm not completely opposed to firearms, but I've never been much of a gun guy.

I grew up playing the piano, reading books and writing angry editorials about the terrible food at the high school cafeteria.

On Thursday, I visited the Elkhorn Pistol Club to take a shot at target shooting with 10 or so guys who normally practice at the Walworth County range.

Joan and Edmund Fellmeth of Lake Geneva also were visiting Thursday at the invitation of Bob Burton, who is club secretary and was our instructor for the evening.

Burton explained the types of pistols and the importance of safety. Always keep the muzzle away from people, finger away from trigger and gun unloaded until you're ready to use it, Burton said.

"They are an absolute must," he said.

Joan went first, shooting a Browning Buck Mark .22 caliber. Though timid at first, her shots hit closer with each try.

"It feels OK, not bad at all," she said after her first time holding and shooting a pistol.

Then it was my turn. I didn't do too badly, with a few shots in the dark center area of the target and one right in the middle.

"Do you want to join the club?" Burton jokingly asked me.

Well, maybe.

Edmund followed and destroyed my hopes of becoming a shooter. He had never shot a gun either, but he put almost all of his five bullets in the center.

Dreams crushed, I went on to learn a bit about what it takes to be a part of the half-century-old club.

Pleasant and quick to welcome newbies, President Jim Nerud said the club was founded in the late 1950s by a group of Elkhorn men. They started the group as a rifle club and progressed into pistols, later becoming a pistol-only club.

About one-third of the 32 members competes in the Border Pistol League, made up of shooters from Elkhorn, Beloit, Janesville and McHenry, Ill.

And the Elkhorn club won a few prizes in the latest round of competitions.

Bob Arnold took the Division I first-place award in the .22 match. Burton won first in the .45 match. Gary Furman won Division II first place in centerfire. Jim Bartnik took second place in .22 Division IV.

Arnold is one of the charter members of the club and has been a member since its beginning. He began shooting while in the military, and has since been doing it as a hobby.

He proudly wears a Distinguished Pistol Shot award on his shirt.

"I was one of the top 10 percent of shooters in three different regions," Arnold said. "I was put on the Fifth Army Pistol Team, an all-army group of distinguished shooters."

He later founded the Elkhorn club in 1956 with a few other friends and currently serves as the club's chief instructor.

Nerud hopes to bring younger members to the club.

You've got to like to shoot, he said, though it doesn't matter if you want to compete.

"About a third of our shooters are competitive, but some of them don't care to compete," Nerud said. "They're welcome to shoot, too.

"It's a fun thing, it's your club."

The competition

The competitive season is from September until May with matches every other week, Nerud said

During the season, competitors train at the Walworth County Range, N6637 Hodges Road, Elkhorn.

"We'll run through an actual match scenario," Nerud said. "The guy calls out as if you were in a match. It depends on what course you're shooting, but we shoot three different guns, 90 shots per course."

The competition starts with the slow target. Competitors are allowed 10 minutes to shoot 10 times. Then comes the timed target, when competitors get two 20-second periods to shoot five times each round. After that comes the rapid-fire target, when competitors are allowed 20 seconds for 10 shots in two rounds of 10 seconds.

Competitors do three types of target three times: First with a .22 caliber, the second with a 9 mm or .32 caliber in the round called centerfire, and the last round with a .45 caliber.

A club can bring as many shooters as it wants, but only the top five scores are recorded.

Competitors are coached by certified instructors at the club.

"On the practice section night, we have whatever a guy wants to do," Nerud said. "If a guy wants to practice, he can practice on his own, or if he wants some coaching, we'll ask one of the instructors and do some coaching."

"Sometimes you develop a problem and you don't realize what you're doing. But if you have a coach watching you, he can tell you what you're doing."

And it takes both mental and physical abilities.

"It's pretty interesting," Nerud said, "because it's a mental effort as much as a physical state."







reader COMMENTS (8)
JozeMozes
Jun 29, 2009 at 11:06 p.m.
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Yes Ozzman but like it or not these facilities are ran by volunteers. No volunteers means it is ran as a business that you or I would not be able to afford given the libelious nature of firearms and insurance.
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With that said even if you are busy most clubs insist you become an NRA member and then there are dues to be paid in lieu of work.
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Small price to pay to play if you ask me.
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Thanks Sarah.

ozzman99
Jun 28, 2009 at 2:26 p.m.
Suggest removal

It would be nice if we had a public outdoor range in rock county for rifles and shotguns. All the ranges around here are private clubs. Not everyone has the time to commit to being a member of a private club

SarahB1
Jun 27, 2009 at 11:43 p.m.
Suggest removal

JozeMozes: My apologies. You brought up points that I had not considered in my attempt to be funny. Can we toss rocks at the windows instead? I see it as one way for the City to make some money off the place ... kind of like those charities that let you take a sledgehammer to a junked car for $1.

janesvillecomments
Jun 27, 2009 at 10:12 p.m.
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The Stoughton Conservation Club also has a nice facility, including trap and skeet ranges, an indoor pistol range and outdoor 25/50/100 yard pistol and rifle ranges, indoor and outdoor archery. Their web site is at http://www.stoughtoncc.com/
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It would be nice if the Sunday Outdoors section would have regular articles about the local shooting facilities in Rock and Walworth counties.

JozeMozes
Jun 27, 2009 at 9:04 p.m.
Suggest removal

Sarah your comments are not in the least bit funny and is the very issue that scares most people about others owning firearms. Wrong mentality even though your kidding.
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Beloit Rifle and Pistol Club is the oldest range in the state of Wisconsin and although it tends to be selective through word of mouth and sponsorship, it is not impossible to become involved and a member of this great establishment with much more to offer than pistol shooting.
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Pedro, stop on down sometime for your hand at .22 silhouette, high powered rifle, blackpowder, archery or one of my old favorite pastimes, hatchet throwing.

JTRourke
Jun 27, 2009 at 8:34 p.m.
Suggest removal

that empty GM facility would make an excellent indoor firearms range & training facility.

SarahB1
Jun 27, 2009 at 4:36 p.m.
Suggest removal

Maybe they can have fun shooting out the plant windows now that GM rejected Janesville as the site for the new car.

glock21sf
Jun 27, 2009 at 4:32 p.m.
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Good story, nice to see some positive coverage of the shooting sports. All you ever hear is the negative when it comes to guns. However, we have a club right here in Janesville across from GM that has a pistol league that shoots on Tuesday evenings. I wonder why you had to go to Elkorn for this story, either way, thanks for the good press.

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