My dad is looking into shooting cowboy action, but neither of us know if you need to be holster certified for it..
Anyone know?
Yes, I know. SASS is the governing body of Cowboy Action throughout the world. If your club or match you wish to attend is a SASS affiliate holding a SASS match you will be holster certified at the beginning of the match just like every other shooter whether you've shot 100 matches or 5, everyone must go through the same process at the beginning of every match. If a club wishes to be SASS affiliate this is how it is. Some clubs are not affiliated, but call themselves cowboy, they may require you to get one from PPC or IDPA. They don't recommend the IPSC one since you never move with a loaded gun in your hand in cowboy anyway. That being said, I hear it is a great shooting course and may open doors to other shooting sports for you.
If you are brand new to shooting, you will stage your handguns on the table until you have a level of engrained safety, which comes with practice and time. We take this very seriously, since any violation of our sport puts at risk the sport at all the clubs in all the disciplines. So... if you have to ask if you need certification, that means that you will likely need some practice time to gain a good level of safety intuitively.
As a SASS member, you are expected to read and understand all the things in your membership manual. This includes all aspects of holster safety, and gun handling requirements in general as well. But like I say, all the important things are gone over in the safety meeting that happens before every match.
If you want to come out to a match, you and your Dad, PM me. I am a SASS RO and can answer all your questions and get you taken care of. If your Dad is serious, he should log on to sassnet and join.
That would of course indicate that an individual has been through a course of study that indicates they are proficient in the use of a holster in conjunction with a firearm and the practical implications of same.
In answer to the OP the answer is yes and no.
a) In playing cowboy often the guns are benched.
Some clubs require a course for holsters and they are "in house" for the most part.
b) I know that some organizations are working towards a unified course but I have yet to see it in action.
c) That said...........I have also seen people get their IPSC BB or IDPA certifications to prove profinciency.
Stormy is quite correct for the most part. a) A "newbie" would stage handguns on a table. long guns are always staged on a table, rack, or stage specific prop. There are many checks and balances that I won't go through here, PM if you want, but a loaded gun is never on a person or on a table. By that I mean a round in the chamber under a hammer.
b) This would be like having Cat's dating Dog's with a minage with a bunny. The only one that I know of are the ones like the shooting edge does for its members. It's like a 2 or 3 hour one to make sure you don't have your finger on the trigger when you holster the gun. I remember when the CSSA was having a coronary with the IDPA course, them not wanting to accept it for CDP even though it was the same course exactly. I would just like to see the opportunity for people to give some disciplines a try first before they have to run out and take a bunch of courses. I would hate to take a course only to discover after all that, that I don't like the game.
c) a lot of people do take the PPC one (rarer now) or the IDPA one (have to join IDPA to take it even if you don't want to shoot it, same with the BB).
What ever you need, I can get you and your Dad into Cowboy shooting safely and so you will have fun and want to grow with the discipline.
That would be more range specific, would it not?
In so far as if the range is SASS affiliated or not. They don't give up their governing status. If the range insists that someone have the IDPA course for example, I don't believe SASS will allow them to affiliate because this puts a constraint on competitors. Every SASS member must be free to compete in any SASS event worldwide. I technically, once I got all the paperwork, could show up in New Zealand out of the blue for a SASS match.