Missed Opportunities
The material for this tech tip began coming to me over 30 years ago at
the rifle range in Tampa, Florida. I was busy shooting 100 yard
groups with a Remington 700 chambered for 22-250. I was getting
several better than average 5 shot groups and my mind was totally on
shooting. I didn't want to be interrupted. Before long, I
was approached by an elderly shooter. He introduced himself, and
he told me that he was about finished up for the day. He said
that he had been looking over the targets downrange, and he noticed the
tight groups that kept appearing on my targets. He said that he
just wanted to know what caliber I was shooting and if I had done any
custom accuracy work on my rifle. He seemed like an interesting
old geezer, very modest and polite. I also noticed that there
was something unusual about this guy, as if he was on a mission to get
to know me. However, in those days I was a bit over worked and
my time was valuable. He told me that he was shooting a heavy
barreled Winchester Model 70. It was also a 22-250, and he
started telling me about trying some great new handloads. I was
running out of time before the dreaded "cold range bell" and just as I
was about to politely interrupt his line of questions, he pulled some
targets out of his shirt pocket to show me. I've never seen such
tight groups. Some of those groups looked almost like a single
.45 caliber bullet hole. That's when I knew that it was time to
listen and learn.
In those days, I had read every gun book in print,
and I had never even heard about anyone shooting groups as small as
that. He now had my undivided attention. How could this
older gentleman possibly shoot targets that much better than mine?
I had qualified each year as an expert rifleman while in the
Marines, and I was quite confident about my shooting skills. I
was spending every weekend searching for the answers that he had
already found. Before he got away, I had to get his phone number
so that I could discover how he was doing it.
The next few weeks flew by, and I discovered that
I had lost his phone number. I was mortified. I've never
known anyone that could shoot that well. When I was at the
range, fellow shooters usually wanted to know my shooting tips.
That was a new experience for me to encounter someone that obviously
had one over on me. I remembered his name and was glad to find
it in the phone book. His name was Al Sears
from New Port Richey, Florida. I gave him a call, and he invited
me over for lunch. I knew that if I was going to become a better
shooter, I needed to learn what he knew about accurate rifles and
precision handloads. The trip to his house was well over an hour
away, but I was motivated to uncover this information. When I
arrived, I found that his wife, Fauna, had fixed an elaborate lunch
that looked like a banquet dinner at the White House. I didn't
make this trip to gain five pounds, I just wanted to collect a few
important tips on shooting and reloading. I soon learned that
they were two of the most interesting people that I've ever met.
I was glad to hear that he was also a varmint hunter. They were
both just over 75 years old, and I found that they were originally from
Rockville, Tennessee.
Al had qualified as an expert rifleman in the Army
back in 1919. Wow .... that was 30 years before I was born!
They had worked together in the restaurant business from about
1925 to 1950. Even through the great depression, they almost
always made enough money to buy new cars. They retired at the
age of fifty and moved to Florida. Al showed me pictures of his
many cross country trips long before interstate highways came along.
I discovered that this couple firmly believed in old fashioned
American values. Their lives were the ultimate example of how
our forefathers had intended us to live. Their hard work and
integrity was beyond question. They described the Christian
lifestyle that they lived while growing up on the farm during the early
twenties. The hours ticked away as he told me how he has spent
his whole life shooting everything from BB guns to cannons. He
told me that "anything that shoots could be made more accurate".
That was all very interesting until they began to quote bible scripture
and then I noticed that it was getting late. On the way back
home, I was surprised to realize how little time that we actually spent
discussing shooting tips. It was a very interesting day, and I
knew that we'd get together again. I'd have plenty of time to
learn his gunsmithing tricks on another visit.
I wound up making countless trips to visit Al; and over
the years, we became best friends. We found that we had a lot in
common, and I learned more than I ever would have imagined from him.
We discussed bedding, barrel harmonics, powder burning rates,
cartridge design, trajectories, wind effect, bullet design and the list
went on and on. After I moved to Orlando, we often scheduled our
trips to meet at the Tampa range so that we could get in more shooting
time. Al was one of the most innovative people that I've ever
known. His knowledge of shooting and reloading was extensive and
his intense competitive nature made him almost impossible to outshoot.
We eventually got permission to shoot on a 1,000 acre private
range. That was a dream come true for a couple of long range
shooters like us. When we planned a day at the range, that meant
"bring your lunch .... you'll need it".
We
never intended to spend less than the whole day shooting, and many
times we were not quite finished when it started to get dark. I
was surprised to find that Al was as handy with a pistol as he was with
a rifle. He taught me how to do some very interesting trick
shooting. Every time we got together, we compared notes on our
latest handloading tips and shooting techniques. He could always
estimate distance and windage well enough to place his shots better
than anyone that I've ever known. When he was in his late
eighties, he could still out shoot anyone that wanted to step forward
and give it a try. One day I realized that, imbedded in our
conversations, this clever old friend had been slowly and continuously
slipping me bits of wisdom from bible scripture. It's now clear
to look back and see that many of the most important decisions in my
life were dealt with after hearing his advice. If I had never
met this ol' shooter, I would never have met the girl that I married
over 26 years ago and even if I did, I might have never realized what a
great deal I got when I did get married. Come to think about it,
there are a few other things that probably would have gone quite badly
without the wisdom that he shared with me.
I had the great honor to know Al Sears as a close
friend, until he died at the age of 99. The life of Al Sears was
a great example of how to get the most out of shooting, life itself,
and all of eternity. The moral of this story is this ... the
next time you get interrupted by an old geezer at the range .... take
the time to listen carefully to what he has to say. If you
don't, you could just be missing one heck of an opportunity.
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