Anakie Rifle Range
Posted: Tue May 15, 2007 9:17 pm
I have been overseas for the last two weeks and so I missed the discussion about the Geelong Rifle Club's range at Anakie which was part of the one-gun shoot debate.
Firstly I should lay to rest one misconception. The Geelong Rifle Club did not choose to go down the track that it has. The original concept was for a traditional range which also incorporated all the other shooting disciplines. This was quashed in the courts and so the only way we could build a range was the way we have done it that is, with acoustic baffles and tunnels. If anybody believes that they can build a range in Victoria any other way under the current rules then they need a reality check.
I remember a time when the fullbore shooting fraternity used to stand together. I wore "I aim to save Castlemaine Range" stickers on my car and drove from Gippsland to support the club. We were keen to see the progress af the new Bacchus Marsh Range and financially supported its development and turned up for the opening even though we knew it was fogged out.
What happened to that spirit? Now it is more "me" than "us" and that is the fastest way to self-destruction. Do the nay-sayers really believe that by not supporting the other clubs the movement will be stronger, or don't they care?
Frankly, the Geelong Rifle Club will survive whether shooters attend our prize meetings or they do not. We built a range for our own use. It may be different and that may put people outside their comfort zones but it is another place to shoot that provides new experiences. That is surely what our sport is all about.
There will always be those who will not go to ranges like Bacchus Marsh, Rosedale or Geelong because they find it different. Isn't it interesting that those three ranges are all ones that have been developed in the last 30 years. Compare how many ranges have been developed in that time with how many that have closed.
Surely in this time of seriously declining membership it is time to support one another rather than become more insular.
Cheers
Peter Hulett
Firstly I should lay to rest one misconception. The Geelong Rifle Club did not choose to go down the track that it has. The original concept was for a traditional range which also incorporated all the other shooting disciplines. This was quashed in the courts and so the only way we could build a range was the way we have done it that is, with acoustic baffles and tunnels. If anybody believes that they can build a range in Victoria any other way under the current rules then they need a reality check.
I remember a time when the fullbore shooting fraternity used to stand together. I wore "I aim to save Castlemaine Range" stickers on my car and drove from Gippsland to support the club. We were keen to see the progress af the new Bacchus Marsh Range and financially supported its development and turned up for the opening even though we knew it was fogged out.
What happened to that spirit? Now it is more "me" than "us" and that is the fastest way to self-destruction. Do the nay-sayers really believe that by not supporting the other clubs the movement will be stronger, or don't they care?
Frankly, the Geelong Rifle Club will survive whether shooters attend our prize meetings or they do not. We built a range for our own use. It may be different and that may put people outside their comfort zones but it is another place to shoot that provides new experiences. That is surely what our sport is all about.
There will always be those who will not go to ranges like Bacchus Marsh, Rosedale or Geelong because they find it different. Isn't it interesting that those three ranges are all ones that have been developed in the last 30 years. Compare how many ranges have been developed in that time with how many that have closed.
Surely in this time of seriously declining membership it is time to support one another rather than become more insular.
Cheers
Peter Hulett