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#3 | ||||||
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David,
My number is 843-816-5665. Lets figure out a good time to meet, possibly in the turkey woods? |
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#4 | ||||||
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We have a very necessary ingredient now... Momentum
If that is allowed to die... well, you can guess the outcome. |
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#5 | ||||||
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I have expressed to Dean I would be interested in acting as coordinator for this project. I think it has merit. I also think it could be done simply and with little expense to the PGCA. I think of this as a seed planting endeavor. Maybe in some of the kids that seed will grow into the overwhelming, all abiding obsession we all suffer from. I don't see this as the ultimate solution or maybe even the best solution. But it is an outreach to a generation being lost to shooting sports. We're not going to save the future of collectability but you never know who this might affect and it might change things. It's been my experience that when a kid is introduced to firearms in the right way they generally love it. When they're introduced to old doubles they are curious and fascinated. Like most of us, at their ages they are shooting auto loaders, pumps, o/u's. But just maybe when they pick up that Parker, the age old mystique will communicate with them and they'll be hooked. I Love these old guns for no apparent rational reason. I don't mind investing my time trying to share that with some kids.
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| The Following 8 Users Say Thank You to Mike Franzen For Your Post: |
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#6 | ||||||
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I think an exchange of ideas right here on the forum might be best in that it gets everything out in one exchange that everybody who is interested in it can read and contribute their own ideas to. Anything that is suggested or promoted here, in no way should be taken as 'adopted' by the PGCA or the Youth Program committee, but simply put out there for consideration.
Some ideas will certainly be unrealistic while others may well be worked into the draft or outline of the operation and management of a Youth Program. |
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#7 | ||||||
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I think to commit any real money to such a Program might be premature at this point - especially for the PGCA to do so without a very viable plan in place that has been thoroughly discussed and agreed upon.
Those who have volunteered should get together and develop a working plan, with all contingencies covered, and submit it to the BOD for discussion and approval before anything else is done. Over a year ago Allen Newell submitted an outline that his sportsman's club had developed for a Youth Archery Program. It won't work, as written, for a PGCA Youth shooting and appreciation program but it has some very good points that could be incorporated in developing a PGCA Youth Program here. |
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#8 | ||||||
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The Brays Island show is coming up, the week before the southern, I think. That would be a good place for David and John and I to meet. The next question is what do we want to do to advance this idea?
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#9 | ||||||
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I disagree David. I believe the group of volunteers for a Youth Program should put their ideas together and develop an outline and a mission statement and then submit it to the BOD for approval. This must come from the membership, not the BOD.
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#10 | ||||||
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For a moment, back to the basics, as an individual — spot a kid, speak to the parents, invite a kid; spot a veteran, thank the veteran, invite a veteran.
__________________
Bob Roberts |
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| The Following 3 Users Say Thank You to Bob Roberts For Your Post: |
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