[For those who attended - WE WANT AAR. POST THEM HERE or on the FB site]
Ok, I will

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Speaking for myself:
Friday night, as posted by all, was excellent. A first aid module that is relevant to the material being taught is the perfect way to start a course, especially when it comes to flinging bits of lead around at high velocities.
If I had to nit-pick (Nick-pick?) I would like to see the presentation shaved in favour of more hands-on time, but that's me, I enjoy learning things through doing, and I find first aid scenarios to be a good team building exercise. This is really me trying to find something, anything, wrong with this; this portion was very well presented.
Saturday morning started with pistol fundamentals, which I can appreciate, as the instructors have no idea what the people in front of them are capable of; however, I would have compressed this portion of the course heavily, as it bled into Saturday afternoon. One way to speed things up that you may find beneficial is a change of targetry management? Coming from a civilian competitive background, target patches would have made for faster evolutions....a common practice when drilling on the range is to just tape the misses, saves even more time, and obviates the need to patch on patches in the scoring zone.
The movement drills Saturday afternoon into the evening were a great primer for Sunday, and I thought the teaching methods employed were very effective.
I have to confess to disappointment in the lack of the low-light portion. This is not something we get a chance to train with in Canada very often (if at all, for some), although I'm not sure if this was a communications breakdown with the host range, as I personally (erroneously) assumed that the (very nice) lights installed on the range could be shut down. Perhaps next time this could be ascertained in advance, and corrections in the syllabus could be forwarded to the participants prior to the course.
Sunday was a hell of a lot of fun

. I would have liked more iterations of these serials, perhaps with the changes suggested above, this could be realised?
I have a range specific suggestion, as well. With us on site at 0800, but the firearms staying cased until 1000, we could have perhaps practiced commands, and movements with unloaded firearms, giving us a chance to advance further with the live-fire drills?
Overall, a great course, with a specific skill set being presented. I can see how the material offered was just the tip of the iceberg of knowledge contained in our instructors, I wish we could have spent a week on it! Oh, and it must be very difficult to balance the curriculum with our idiotic magazine laws...although it made some of the stoppage drills hilarious

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Thank you for presenting this MWO course, hoping you guys can come back again soon.
...oh, and I really need to work on remembering not to leave a guy on the end to die alone when I peel off to cover. Sorry smellypete!! LAST MAN!!!


