especially when you can pass your black badge course and not shoot at all after your qualifing match (let's say for over 10 years) and as long as you kept paying your membership fees you're qualified to walk right on the field and compete..... shaking hands and all......but if you change to say IDPA, SASS, PPC, or Bullseye and come back after 4 years of not being an IPSC member you will have to re-take it all over again or prove very effectively that you can still shoot safe .Dragoon said:The Black Badge course will only scratch the surface. Going to matches and competing is what will make you a better shooter.
maxpig said:especially when you can pass your black badge course and not shoot at all after your qualifing match (let's say for over 10 years) and as long as you kept paying your membership fees you're qualified to walk right on the field and compete..... shaking hands and all......but if you change to say IDPA and come back after 4 years of not being an IPSC member you will have to re-take it all over again.....
so moral of the story ... if you do take and pass ur Black Badge..... protect your investment .... keep ur membership current ( at least in Ontario).
And you should be required shoot a match or two to remain current.... otherwise why bother with a safety course if all you need to remain a member in good standing is being current on ur fees and not having to participate.bc_shooter said:Nope... Sorry... Not in BC.
You must compete in two Level 2 qualifiers per year to stay current. Not doing so requires recertification. Depending on the length away, you could be required to retake the BB course.
maxpig said:especially when you can pass your black badge course and not shoot at all after your qualifing match (let's say for over 10 years) and as long as you kept paying your membership fees you're qualified to walk right on the field and compete..... shaking hands and all......but if you change to say IDPA, SASS, PPC, or Bullseye and come back after 4 years of not being an IPSC member you will have to re-take it all over again or prove very effectively that you can still shoot safe .
so moral of the story ... if you do take and pass ur Black Badge..... protect your investment .... keep ur membership current ( at least in Ontario).
ENSHOOTER said:Sorry Max, not in Ontario either. You have 1 year to qualify or little longer with permission and supervision. Just went through this to get some qualified. Where have you been lately by the way? The league ended last week I have not seen you for a while.
ENSHOOTER said:I agree the official ( much maligned these days it seems ) is the best judge during a course of fire weather someone is safe. If you are not safe then you get DQ'd.
I am not really sure about how you would track participation in a match yearly. I thought that years ago that is why we were all issued a number and the number was supposed to be incorporated into MSS and then every time we competed it would give us points on the level of the match. 1 equals a level 1 ECT. DQ some other code. The scoring person for the province keep track. End of the year would give us some concept of who was and was not playing and this would let us ask them why? Something like that. I am not the computer geek but I would think this would be possible.
However this would not solve the safety problems on the range. My experience is very seldom is it the inexperienced shooters who DQ's but rather the over confident ones.
maxpig said:if returning shooters who haven't maintained their membership for 3+ years ( again in Ontario) needs to prove they are qualified to shoot or retake B.B. then current members who haven't fired a shot in 3+ years should do the same....



























