- Location
- Edmonton, AB
Uhh... You don't need formal training for IDPA, at least when I was shooting it. As long as a shooter's gear falls within the rulebook, and they've got more than just lower and mid-brain mental function, it's FINE.
Still lots of PMs but no solid plan. Some insist on formal training from everyone looking to try it out before proceeding. I think this will squash the majority of interest... Canadian shooters can be pretty uptight it's sort of sad. I remember getting a taste of various disciplines at RDSSA with no qualifications whatsoever. If it weren't for a few douchebags I'd probably have plenty of competetive experience by now...
I'd just like this to be succsessful. New shooters will be watched closely and helped to shoot as safely as possible while still having lots of fun.
I do have a problem with turning one thing into another.
B, don't let the man get you down... your all going to be new to the sport when it starts, arrange an SO instructer to come up and teach your SO's, have a main group of 6-8 SO's and you will have enough to make your life easy.
use your practice nights as "educational" nights, keep your COF simple while everyone is warming up to the sport, what we did locally was every night we would have a briefingthat would include some reading from the rule book and then the cof for the night would stress that rule.

B, don't let the man get you down... your all going to be new to the sport when it starts, arrange an SO instructer to come up and teach your SO's, have a main group of 6-8 SO's and you will have enough to make your life easy.
use your practice nights as "educational" nights, keep your COF simple while everyone is warming up to the sport, what we did locally was every night we would have a briefingthat would include some reading from the rule book and then the cof for the night would stress that rule.




























