Stick around Mr Maetsack; it gets worser and worser. You must be old, retired and a fudd just like a few of us. Try hitting your thumb with a hammer a few times and you can zone out.
Let's hope it doesn't come to that
Stick around Mr Maetsack; it gets worser and worser. You must be old, retired and a fudd just like a few of us. Try hitting your thumb with a hammer a few times and you can zone out.
So I gotta say I find this thread a little ridiculous
We teach holster certification at our club and anyone who thinks it is about wearing a plastic holder on your waist and it ends there is an idiot.
If you are using a holster, chances are you are using it as part of a group of holster qualified shooters. This means you need to understand an advanced set of range commands, proper draw, load and unload techniques, movement protocols, etc. Wearing and using the holster is about 10% of what you need to demonstrate to proved competent holster usage and saying that ACTS and PROVE covers it just shows how completely ignorant you are on the subject. Buying a holster doesn't qualify you to use it safely and effectively anymore than buying a precision rifle makes you a sniper.
There is nothing exclusive or elite about this and there is nothing simple about wearing and using a holster.
I'm sorry, it is simple, and it begins and ends with safety. If someone isn't safe I don't want to be at the range with them. Whether you're unsafely placing your gun on a bench or in your holster, you're either safe or not.
I have no holster certification, I use it every time I'm at the range. I doubt there's ANYTHING your course could teach me that I don't already know about safety. Quickdraw? Maybe, but I'm not interested in that. My friends and I do a cease fire, guns are cleared and holstered. When range is active, guns can be loaded. Simple. Don't shoot yourself in the foot and always point the gun in a safe direction, then I show them a video of tex grebner and I'm comfortable with someone using a holster.
That's nice, when you run your gun loaded to and from the holster then comment on the topic. As for safety, there are four rules and only four rules. As for using a holster safely, it takes zero effort as long as you're well versed in the fundamental four. Using a holster efficiently takes training and practice.
Tdc
That's nice, when you run your gun loaded to and from the holster then comment on the topic. As for safety, there are four rules and only four rules. As for using a holster safely, it takes zero effort as long as you're well versed in the fundamental four. Using a holster efficiently takes training and practice.
Tdc
If you're going to inject logic, reasoning and common sense into the discussion, how do you expect the d!psh!tz to rebut? That's not fair.
I don't recall saying I didn't run my gun loaded to and from the holster. You reading something that's not there?
This topic is not about quickdraw, so I can comment. If the topic was about how fast you can draw from your holster, then yeah, I'd keep my mouth shut. But we are talking only about why Canadians use holsters, which turned into how to use a holster safely, which doesn't require a course.
Talk about needing to spell it out for you. Geeze.
Stick around Mr Maetsack; it gets worser and worser. You must be old, retired and a fudd just like a few of us. Try hitting your thumb with a hammer a few times and you can zone out.
Reread your post I quoted. "my friends and do a cease fire, guns are CLEARED and holstered".
Quick draw is a specific discipline, drawing from the holster quickly when competing in an action shooting event, training, or simply trying to improve ones skillset is entirely different.
Tdc
So because I said I clear my firearm before holstering during a ceasefire, you took that to mean that I don't run my firearm loaded to and from the holster. I guess you stopped reading there. *sigh* I also said, and I QUOTE "When range is active, guns can be loaded"
Personally, If I'm the RO I don't care if guns are loaded and in the holster during a ceasefire, but the guys I shoot with are more comfortable with mags out and gun cleared. So whatever makes them at ease, they're newer shooters.
Why don't you follow through with what you said and stop posting in this thread, or do your words have no meaning?
When I'm teaching someone to drive, I make sure the fuel tank is empty because they might be scared it will explode.
LOL I see your point, remember I'm on your side here.
These guys were a bunch of anti's before I got them to the range, so give me a break. I'm making progress.... albeit slowly. They're still fudly.![]()
So because I said I clear my firearm before holstering during a ceasefire, you took that to mean that I don't run my firearm loaded to and from the holster. I guess you stopped reading there. *sigh* I also said, and I QUOTE "When range is active, guns can be loaded"
Personally, If I'm the RO I don't care if guns are loaded and in the holster during a ceasefire, but the guys I shoot with are more comfortable with mags out and gun cleared. So whatever makes them at ease, they're newer shooters.
Straight ignorance right there. That kind of behavior breeds the double standard for safety. That kind of behavior is what leads to people being shot with an "unloaded" firearm. If your people aren't comfortable with a holstered firearm in their presence then they shouldn't be handling them at all. A holstered firearm is far safer than one in the hand, but I guess that kind of common sense and logic is lost on some.
Tdc
Let me ask you this, what is safer: Walking with a knife in your hand, or walking with a knife in its sheath on your belt?
Straight ignorance right there. That kind of behavior breeds the double standard for safety. That kind of behavior is what leads to people being shot with an "unloaded" firearm. If your people aren't comfortable with a holstered firearm in their presence then they shouldn't be handling them at all. A holstered firearm is far safer than one in the hand, but I guess that kind of common sense and logic is lost on some.
Tdc