jennis said:Does anyone know if these are still in use (Cadets / CF) ????
chanman said:I was last in Air Cadets 6 years ago (North Delta), we had 3 sets of rifles.
1 set of Lee-Enfield drill rifles - these were not shot, I think they were dewats
1 set of Lee-Enfield No. 7 .22's
1 set of Anshutz .22's.
We shot them at indoor ranges, the first one somewhere in Richmond near the airport, and the second one in Queens Park.
Lawrence D said:Yes the Cadets still use the Enfield in .22 cal. The .22 is much better than the pellet gun. No more indoor shooting with the .22 though. DND claimed that the lead that they inhale is poison. I wonder weather our politicians where cadets in the past?
Any how the ranges in most armories are not used by CF cadets and have to look elsewhere. This could be a big problem for the future shooters.![]()
curtton said:alot has changed in the 6 years you been in chanman. no cadets group shoots at my club in queens park anymore (sapperton fish and game) . some cadets group have tried but any more than 4 cadets shooting indoors must get approval from regional victoria and they are not likely to get it.
very stupid rule when you consider us civilians shoot there all the time and the club meets all regulatory rules and air controls standard.
Lawrence D said:Since we're on this subject, I think that DND should get more practical people to go down to the cadet levels and evaluate the circumstances properly.
IMO they talk too much about safety (lead inhalation) and kids with guns (brain washing), etc. I just shake my head because if it isn't for some really dedicated cadets the rest of the cards would fall down. What about the cadet spirit and exiting days at the range?
It really makes me sad to see the LARGE potential of young cadets going down the drain. Down the drain just because of a few decision makers that have their head 20 feet under the sand. They can't understand that one main reason why these kids join is to have fun, shoot and their close relationship with the forces. These topics can not be taken away without losing the kids' interest. Shooting the .177 is better than nothing but they should go back to the 22's on regular bases.
Splatter said:The C10 ? Never heard of it, can you tell us more?
I work summers at the Vernon Army Cadet Summer Training Centre (or whatever it is they'll call themselves this summer). Almost all the kids shoot the Daisy ( which is not a bad air rifle, it's not an Anshultz; but it's not $1k either), Those taking the Marksmanship (1 or 2) camps will shoot the .22rfs, both the No 7 and the Anshultz. To the best of my knowledge no one at vernon has fired the C7 in the past 2 years, because the range has been closed to centrefire rifles. (Total horsecrap!)
curtton said:hate to disagree with you buddy but it was in vernon last summer cadets was shooting the C7s.
Splatter said:To the best of my knowledge