I wonder after drinking and eating, are you all good fellas gonna drive you car back home or you gonna take a cab? You know, let alone drinking and restraunting, but to top it all, drinking and driving? Hmmm....
I wonder after drinking and shooting, are you all good fellas gonna drive you car back home or you gonna take a cab? You know, let alone drinking and shooting, but to top it all, drinking and driving? Hmmm.... nicely played, gunners, nicely played.![]()
First off, please don't change my posts when quoting. It's uncalled for.
If I plan to have a drink with dinner at a restaurant, I come and go by cab.
Please, name the shooting clubs you belong to that allow you to drink while shooting.
Stupid question--- How many of the clubs you guys belong to allow consumption of alcohol while shooting, or on the club property during shooting hours
In addition to HGC, Galt Sportsmens Club has a licensed facility on the second floor of the club house. Bridgeport Rod and Gun is another. In both places no one drinks while shooting but can and do drink after finishing shooting for the day.First off, please don't change my posts when quoting. It's uncalled for. Second, you think it's no different, I think - it is. If I plan to have a drink with dinner at a restaurant, I come and go by cab.
So far I hear blah blah blah. Please, name the shooting clubs you belong to that allow you to drink while shooting. I wonder how their range rules and license look like. I also would like to hear the opinion of the club owner regarding this subject. I wonder if he/she thinks that having a glass of wine in premises is the same as having a glass of wine at the restaurant.
And I asked a different more specific question. I am going to satisfy my curiosity and email the club to ask how the family membership goes together with parents having a beer while shooting clay.
Great. The clubs you do belong to have a ZERO alcohol policy. But then you sayFunny responses. You can do whatever you find right. I am not your mom. This is my point of view, you like it or not - don't drink and drive, don't drink and shoot. Yes, even one beer. Both clubs I belong to have ZERO alcohol policy on premises and I am very happy about it. As for harmless drinking while shooting, I will see you all at the bottom line of the upcoming hunting season accidents count. Good luck!
Do your belong to Hamilton Gun Club? If so you were inaccurate in your first post. If you don't belong there why would you bother contacting them about their serving of alcohol when the club is licensed?I said "please". Means, I asked you nicely. Also means that I don't care if it's common or not.
Nothing to do with my limits.
I am not the OP. And I asked a different more specific question. I am going to satisfy my curiosity and email the club to ask how the family membership goes together with parents having a beer while shooting clay.
As I said before. I stick to my guns (pan not intended) - I personally think that shooting and drinking does not go together. You however, (general "drinking and shooting" you), can do whatever you want.
Open minded, you say... Wanna match the statistics below "drunk drivers kill people" with "drunk shooters kill people" because somebody is "open minded" enough to drink and shoot? I bet this will give you a HUGE leverage to attract new shooters. I always thought that it's a safety of the sport will attract more shooters. Not when they think that they might be killed by a drunk club member (sh*t happens, ya know).
" Fatalities
In 2007, it was estimated that 3,045 individuals were killed in motor vehicle crashes in Canada. MADD Canada estimates that at a minimum 1,239 of these fatalities were impairment-related. Moreover, in MADD Canada's opinion, the 1,239 figure is a conservative estimate, due to the underreporting that results from the inability to test surviving impaired drivers and reliance on police reports.
As well, the 1,239 fatalities do not include individuals killed in impaired crashes on the waterways. In 2005, it was reported that there were 126 boating fatalities, 47 of which involved known or suspected alcohol use. Nor do the 1,239 fatalities include fatalities arising from aircraft, trains and industrial vehicles such as forklifts.
Given the limits on the 1,239 fatalities figure, MADD Canada estimates there are somewhere between 1,350 and 1,600 impaired crash fatalities in Canada each year (3.7-4.4 deaths per day).
Injuries
In 2007, it was estimated that about 359,310 individuals were injured in motor vehicle crashes. MADD Canada estimates that approximately 73,120 of these individuals were injured in impaired driving crashes (roughly 200 per day). Note that this figure is limited to motor vehicle crashes only."
source: ht tp://madd.ca/english/research/magnitudememo.html
Some of the comments here don't quite square up. Because of the posters extreme sensitivity about edits I have bolded the relevant portions.
Great. The clubs you do belong to have a ZERO alcohol policy. But then you say
Do your belong to Hamilton Gun Club? If so you were inaccurate in your first post. If you don't belong there why would you bother contacting them about their their serving of alcohol when the club is licensed?
Do you intend to contact other clubs you don't belong to as well?