Scar270,
I think that we are talking about 2 separate things? I have no problem with paying $40.00/100 at Brooks Clays and Feather or Silver Willow. It's a good bang for the buck. What I think is a gouge is them charging $145.00/200 for a registered shoot. If they are in business for $40.00/hundred or $80.00/two hundrerd, they should be able to run a no frills shoot at the same rate? It would be good week end business. Skip the lunch or charge for one, and skip the dusty medals, and prizes and let us shoot for the thrill of victory and the agony of defeat. OOOPS, a day burning powder is never defeat. What I think is a gouge is that between them and the association the shoot price is outrageous and the only option is to shoot 200 targets.
Partly 2 things, and partly not, my question is would it boost the sport that much if the tournaments were no frills? If cheap shooting is what people want, they have lots of opportunities to do that outside of tournaments. Or is the thrill of competition and cheap shooting necessary?
I don't honestly know the answer which is why I'm asking. Cheaper tournaments wouldn't hurt my feelings, as I am not winning anything anyway, however I don't see it affecting how many tournaments I make, that tends to be much more dependent on timing and what other shooting I have going on, as I shoot much more then just shotgun. If it would make a difference to lots, then I'm interested in seeing it happen.
Another question is can a no frills tournament really be hosted for the same cost as regular shooting? Generally a tournament takes some advertising, having perhaps extra staff to either trap at the couple places using hand traps yet, or just to have staff filling and maintaining on a much busier then average day? Perhaps the increased number of shooters on that day, can easily absorb the added expenses, the club would certainly still be making money off of each shooter.
These are just questions I think need to come up in the conversation, I'm not so much disagreeing with you Covey, as just trying to spur more conversation, as I think it's a really good conversation, but we need to look at it from both a shooters and operators perspective, as both need to benefit, but growing the sport certainly does benefit both.
For 100 or 200 bird options, is that something easy to do? For a place like Brooks or Hidden Ridge, their courses are fairly laid out, if your going to walk them, I'd rather not walk them twice to shoot my 200. However most are using carts or motorized transport of some sort, so maybe it's not an issue.
Maybe if you had the 100 bird shooters just shoot half the course, but the same number of pairs per stand, so they just finish up earlier in the day, but 100 bird and 200 bird shooters could all go around at the same time and not interfere with each other.
I'm sure their are opportunities to make it work.