Jump to content

Cruel Hand Luke

Authorized Vendor
  • Posts

    2,194
  • Joined

  • Last visited

  • Days Won

    15
  • Feedback

    0%

Everything posted by Cruel Hand Luke

  1. Depending on the date I might be able to drop in too.
  2. SUAREZ INTERNATIONAL June 23/24, 2007 Close Range Gunfighting - (CRG) Chattanooga, TN This is our flagship course and goes as far as you can safely go on a square range with live-fire pistols. The dynamic curriculum surpasses the traditional handgun methods commonly taught in most institutions and focuses of the use of the pistol in aggressive close range applications likely in individual civilian street encounters. The class is instructed by Suarez International Staff Instructor Randy Harris. We begin with a tune-up of the fundamentals, then we progress quickly to new skills such as Proactive and Reactive Manipulations, Shooting While Moving Off The X, Reality-Based Multiple Hostiles Engagement, 360 degree CQB Movement, Danger-Close Fighting, Bilateral Shooting, 360 degree After Action Assessment Methods, and Integrating the Flashlight and Other Tools into the Firing Platform. This is the life-saving material that is often ignored in many other programs. In two days, you will receive more information than most armed professionals ever get! Suitable for BOTH civilian defenders and professional operators. We must point out that THIS COURSE IS NOT FOR THE NOVICE SHOOTER. If you have not received basic instruction in Defensive Pistol, or have a question about your skill level, please call us first. Price $285.00 Duration: 2 days Ammunition:Approximately 600 rounds (Minimum) Requirements:Pistol, Carry Holster, 3 Magazines and Magazine Pouch, Flashlight, Range Safety Gear Instructors:Randy Harris Location: Mystery Dog Ranch 975 Wooten Rd. Ringgold, Georgia (right over the border (closest major city is Chattanooga) (http://www.mysterydogranch.com) Directions I-75 to East Ridge Exit (#1) Go east on Hwy 41 (approx 2 Miles) turn left onto Wooten Rd. (look for left turn lane) Go 1 Mile to Mystery Dog Ranch on the left. Details on hotels and directions will be provided upon enrollment. Enroll at (http://www.Suarezinternational.com) or call Randy Harris at 423 827 9133 or email at Cruelhandluke2000@yahoo.com
  3. None that are digital. The NTI does not lend itself well to be able to take pics while it is going on.I can't really stop and take 'em in the scenarios and i can't really bring my "cameraman" in with me either.... Inside the shoot houses you are only in there with a safety officer or two. You are alone in the 360 degree range and in the village, it is just your group of 3 to 5 practitioners and the role players and judges. So my pics are all from the outside of the shoot houses,the snake that lives at the range, pics of presenters in the lectures and pics of Gettysburg battlefield and pic of our group at the ice cream stand....nothing really cool. I think Tom got a disc of pics that NTI's cameraman took. Check out the July newsletter at Rangemaster.com Tom said he'd print my review there too and add some pics.
  4. As far as equipment goes I used my Glock 34 I carry everyday with 19 rd mags.I carried it A-IWB in my Blade Tech Universal Fits All Glock holster.I used a Glock 26 with 12 rd mag carried in a Mitch Rosen pocket holster as my backup gun. You can only carry 1 spare mag if you have a hi cap pistol so between primary, backup and spare mag I carried a total of 52 rounds of CCI Gold Dot 124+P ammo. I also carried my Clinch Pick, Boston Leather Sap, Fox Labs OC, and my blow out kit(aren't cargo shorts wonderful?) and cell phone and Surefire G2. I never used the flashlight and never even had to draw the backup gun.For that matter, I never even fired a full mag. I did do a proactive reload at least once-just in case-, but didn't ever fire enough to empty a whole mag. Of course most of the scenarios had us unarmed and using picked up guns anyways. In the FOF scenarios I carried the J frame in a $7 nylon holster made by Double Triple brand I bought at a gun store in West Virginia we stopped to look in on the way.Tom suggested we get holsters for the FOF J frames so we would not have to just stick 'em in our pockets or waistbands. Beware those sneaky old bald guys.I carried the revolver A-IWB too. I carried the spare J frame ammo loose in my pocket. Frankly I just didn't think to bring a speed loader, but I didn't need it either. From what I remember John H. used a Sig 220St and a SW640, Tom used a Glock 35 and Khar arms 9mm, John J. used a 1911 and a Khar, Jeff B. used a Glock 35 and a Khar. I think the only one of us to pull the backup gun was John J. in the courthouse. He pulled it as a "tac load" (his single stack gun was running low) on his way out of the building, but never had to fire it. Now for some numbers. In FOF scenarios I fired 8 shots and scored 8 solid hits. I fired 5 shots in the restaurant all one handed using Alternative Indexing Methods. After all I was shooting reactively.I scored 5 hits on 3 targets in a dimly lit room in the span of about 3 seconds. In the courthouse in the team FOF I fired 3 CAREFULLY aimed shots as I was shooting proactively waiting for them to come to me. As I continuously say it is not either sights or alternative indexing it is all of the above! More importantly than shooting, I did not get killed in any of the FOF scenarios. I'm pretty happy with my performance for a first time participant. Did I make some dumb mistakes that I knew better of in the shoot houses? Yes. But I learned from them and didn't make them in the team FOF. But did my training carry me through when it was real live interaction? ABSOLUTELY.It is a big validation of our program when a first timer goes there and survives all the FOF and scores 100% hit ratio. I have to thank all the guys who's training has gotten me to where this was possible. Gabe Suarez , Southnarc, Tom Givens, William Aprill, Paul Gomez, Marc Denny , Tom Sotis, Henk Iverson and everyone else who has worked with me in local groups. And a big thanks to Tom for inviting me, and John J. John H. and Jeff B. for making this trip a great experience. Ice cream anyone?
  5. The next day we piled in the van and drove to the Gettysburg battlefield. I had of course seen it on TV before but until you are there it just doesn't have the same effect. We stood at the Confederate lines where on day two of the battle the Alabama troops finally arrived on the field. They had marched 25 miles that day to arrive at 4pm and their orders upon arrival were to take the steep hill called Little Round Top. The shear determination of those men and their will to fight must have been incredibly inspiring. We then stood on Little Round Top where Union officer Strong Vincent was mortally wounded by southern sharpshooters while rallying his men to drive back the Alabamans. Again the terrain of the field and steepness of the hill gives you a very different perspective and you see what these men faced. We then toured the confederate position at the base of Little Round top around the Devil's Den and saw just how far those sharpshooters were that took such a heavy toll on the union lines. Amazing. In an age of finely made technologically advanced military rifles, I question whether anyone now could be the match of those sharpshooters. We then went to Cemetary Ridge and the Angle and looked out over the vast expanse that Confederate general Pickett's men had to cross under withering rifle fire and cannon shot to close with and actually penetrate into the union lines before being repulsed in fierce hand to hand fighting with rifle butt and bayonets. We stood at the spot where General Lewis Armistead led his troops into the union lines and fell. There was a marker there surrounded by several small confederate flags that visitors had placed there at its base. I kind of get choked up now writing about it. I crossed over the low stone wall the union soldiers used for cover and walked barefoot in the field that some of the Army of Northern Virginia's bravest charged barefoot across trying to take that hill. Powerful stuff that frankly makes me marvel at their fortitude and question whether I could ever even come close to measuring up to that kind of bravery.........And then we retreated back to Harrisburg. That evening we heard John Holschen's lecture on "Terrorist Techniques and Tactics Update" and a lecture by another presenter who I'm not sure how much I should mention about on the "Evolution of Islamic Militancy." Doctor Glen Meyer also gave a short presentation on some interesting findings from a study on whether what type of gun used effects the sentencing in a bad shooting. Again, as we say all the time ...righteous shootings tend to not matter what gun was used. A good shoot is a good shoot. But then again we live in more reasonable jurisdictions than some. On Friday we lounged around and that evening there was the panel discussion about teaching people the skills they need versus the skills they think they need. It was a quandry over how to convince civilian students that what they need to know differs from what police and military use in their work. Also discussed was how to attract students to classes that teach them how to think, not just how to shoot.Then we went for our daily trip to Brewsters Ice Cream. Yes the ice cream stand was frequented every night by some steely eyed gunmen.What can we say ? We like our ice cream. Afterwards we retired to the pub for more story telling and camaraderie. Saturday brought the pairs force on force. John Hearne and I partnered up for this evolution.I was actually kind of worried that I would get John killed or otherwise let him down. It is one thing to screw up and get yourself killed but to screw up and get your buddy killed..... In the first scenario we were testifying in court(disarmed as usual ) when the defendant's girlfriend entered and tried to help him escape. I warned the bailiff that someone was coming up the hall, but the bailiff was shot before she could react. John jumped up and snatched the gun from the girlfriend as I leaped from the witness stand to assist. We were congratulated on solving it so quickly. John really gets all the credit there for his quick reaction. I was under the gun the whole time she came up the hallway and could only wait for him to make the first move.He didn't hesitate and we survived. Next was another trip to the school and the obligatory disarming. Do we see a pattern here for the week? I was told to stay with the security guard while the auditorium was prepped. John went to the restroom and then the explosion went off. The security guard called for backup and told me to stay put while he investigated. Of course he was shot immediately as he opened the door. With the school on lock down I could not escape through the door I came in so I picked up his revolver and took cover in that small outer room. Laying there wounded he warned me to not get involved. I gave him a tourniquet and told him to put it on to stop bleeding while I covered the door and waited for the reinforcements to arrive. I could hear the attackers yelling "kill them all". I did not yell to John as I knew if they knew we were there together they would tell me to come out or they'd execute him. I wasn't going to come out because then they would then execute BOTH of us. As I later told the judges, this was not going to be my Little Big Horn. I kept moving so that they would not know where in the room I was and each time they opened the door I would shoot one of them. Finally I think this took their attention off of John long enough for him to escape out the back and link up with the SWAT team. He informed them he is a federal law enforcement officer and asked for a backup gun to go back in, but he was told they were just holding perimeter. I continued to shoot whoever opened the door until the last bad guy and I exchanged shot and he missed and I didn't. The scenario was deemed over. The way they had envisioned it was that I would exit the room and get a gun from one of the terrorists and clear the building working my way to my friend. Of course my own plan was not what they expected and they were now reacting to me not the other way around.This broke down their OODA loop and gave us the advantage. I had learned my lesson in the courthouse on Wednesday. This time I would be the man in the closet. We not only survived but won the fights in both team FOF scenarios and retired to the hotel for the debriefing and then the banquet. After the debrief we added a new crewman to our merry little band. One of the Marines joined us as our world view more closely matched his own than some who were questioning his aggressiveness.But sometimes aggressive counter attack is all that works.After all it is hereditary. He's from South Louisiana ...Scots-Irish...a Marine....a new addition to Givens Khan's Mongoloid Horde! At the banquet John Farnam gave a moving speech on the importance of passing on what we learn to younger guys so the information is not lost and have to be relearned on some foreign battlefield. Skip Gochenour summarized the story of Beowulf and how a small group of righteous warriors is all it takes to defend society from evil. A big thanks to Skip and Hirsch and Jim and all the team members for a job well done. It is a LOT of work to put this event on. My hat is off to them.
  6. Next we went to the restaurant in the airport where I was to meet with the district attorney for lunch. Of course my quiet meal was interrupted in short order. The same two thugs from the mall entered yelling that I had sent them to jail. I played it like they had the wrong guy and tried to calm them down. The guy who had blocked my path in the mall now moved to block my exit from behind the table. I stood and told him to back off and not to put his hands on me.They both now were within touching distance and I had nowhere to go except to back further into the corner. I again said not to touch me. He did. I quickly drew my pistol and shot him twice from the #2 position, transitioned to his partner and shot him twice in the chest from a 1 handed #3 at which point I heard "BANG" and felt a hot pain in my neck and I spun and fired again, hitting my third assailant and the scenario was stopped. Fortunately the pain was referred pain from a hit I took in the arm and not a shot to the neck so I survived the shot. I also hit my gun wielding antagonist in the arm. She missed me with her second shot as I turned out of the way in an "inquartata" type movement. She later told me had she not gotten off the line of attack when she shot that the arm hit I delivered on her would have been a torso hit. Hmmm. Maybe getting off the X works? I then was asked to explain why I shot 2 "unarmed" guys. I replied that they were the ones who had already mugged me so I knew they were likely to be carrying weapons, I had testified against them and they were out for revenge, that the disparity of force issue between them and me made lethal force required and that I was acting also in defense of a third person too-the DA. I told the cop he might want to interview the DA and get his story. The DA did not appear to be interested in prosecuting the guy who saved his life so I was released and my time in the village came to an end. I went on to the pneumatic stage where again having been disarmed upon entry I picked up a fallen man's revolver ,loaded it and continued the fight. Some did not check to make sure the revolver was loaded. Some did not see the spare ammo. Some did not make sure the brass in the cylinder was in fact loaded ammo. I cleared the structure and saved my sister. Ammo management was an issue as some folks used to auto pistols fired 4 or 5 rounds into the first target and used up half their ammo on that one target. I reloaded the revolver as necessary , never running it dry. On the "Mystery Gun" stage I was in the doctors office and had to clear my way out of the structure using an exposed hammer double barrel shotgun, 5 rounds picked up off the ground, and a flashlight that should have been thrown away last year! When asked where I was shooting the targets because they fell quickly I told them." In the face". Not the answer they expected apparently, but it was effective.At short range room clearing distance you need to put the BGs down NOW. What better way than a load of 12 gauge shot in the eye? I also "tac loaded" the shotgun. That is I would fire 1 round and reload 1.That way if I had to fire 2 at any point I would be able to. Some were very uncomfortable with the gun. I was intimately familiar with it from all the time I have spent with "cowboy" guns. It is a good idea to have a working knowledge of more than just the equipment you carry on a regular basis.Interestingly some of the Marine contingent used the shotgun to butt stroke opponents. Gotta love the Marines! Next was the standards stage where you shoot several preordained courses of fire. This tests your ability to work your equipment. I will admit I was expecting to do well here, but gremlins reared their ugly heads. On the malfunction clearance my "Tap , Rack" was less than robust and I had to do it twice, eating up precious time. I had spent the prior weekend telling people in the class I taught to not be worried about hurting their guns. Manipulate them forcefully! Of course I then proceeded to not get a good grip on the slide and short stroked the rack. Talk about irony! On the next stage I was sent into the school set up on the 360 degree range to make a speech. As I waited for my guide to lead me to the gym all hell broke loose. With it being a school,I was unarmed of course before I was allowed entry. I grabbed my writing pen in a pikal grip and stabbed the first knife armed target in the jugular with the pen. I then got behind cover and found the security guard laying on the floor unresponsive. I took his Ruger P85 and checked to make sure it was loaded(it had 3 rounds), found his spare mag (half loaded) and proceeded to work my way through the problem. One issue with the "core" targets is the core only goes to the lower part of the face. So eye socket shots which are what we train for do no good. Unfortunately I ate up a lot of my ammo discovering that. The range officer who monitors the stage through video and communicates with us through a head set tried to tell me to stop, but that headset mutes out when gunshots are going off. So now I have an empty gun and 1 target left to engage around a corner. I went back and got the knife from the guy I stabbed with the pen and crouched at the corner. I then leaped out hurling the P85 at the bad guy hitting him squarely in the head and knocking him down. I then pounced on him stabbing him in the carotid artery and ran out the door. The next stage was the courthouse where I fully expected to be disarmed again. My pepper spray and knives and sap were secured and as I put my spare magazine in the gun box an explosion rocked the courthouse. Oh joy! I got to use my own gun! I used a combination of slow pieing and dynamic movement to clear the building and find my niece who was there to hear me testify.I got the key card from the wounded security officer and called 911 for him. Unfortunately I did not thoroughly check the closet I pulled my niece out of. I missed the guy deep in the closet. My otherwise stellar run was ruined by that blunder. Better to learn this hard lesson here than on the street.Sometimes you just need to take a deep breath and stay focused instead of getting caught up in the events unfolding. Lesson learned. The final stage was an airport scenario where you are being picked up by your sister. All of your firearms are in locked cases per TSA regulations. You are also in possession of a Stag Arms left handed AR15 you are supposed to evaluate. I will tell you that there is just really no quick way to get cased unloaded guns that are separate from their ammo up and running . We were confronted by several AK armed terrorists at distances from 15 to 150 yards. You also needed to drag your wounded sister to cover and get her to the medic. I was preparing to put a tourniquet on her when the medic told me to bring her to him. In the heat of things I forgot about the core of the target not going to the ocular window and directed 4 rounds through the head of a target with the AR15 before I remembered they have to be body hits to knock 'em down. This left me using my pistol on the far targets, one at about 100 yards and one at about 150 up on a hill. I hit the far one, but never could dial in on the 100 yard one but I caused him worry and consternation with my near misses. He "ran off" and the stage was over. That evening we retired to the conference room to hear Tom Givens' presentation on 7 shootings involving his students in Memphis. As always quick violent counter attack launched without hesitation or mercy wins the day and did in these cases as well. Also there was no time to go get a gun. CARRY YOUR GUN ON YOU! Next up was John Hearne's lecture on the culture and experience of the criminals we are likely to face on the street. He postulates (correctly in my humble estimation) that they are in fact a different species and have different life experiences and often much more experience with violence than good people do.
  7. I have just returned from my first trip to The National Tactical Invitational in Harrisburg Pa. For those not familiar with it the NTI is learning experience that combines interactive force on force in the " Village" with building clearing exercises in the Pneumatic house, the mystery gun stage, the "L" house, and the 360degree range. There is also a "standards" stage and another stage that often requires shots at both close range and 100 yards and farther. It is a true test of skill, equipment and how well the practitioner can run that equipment. The following is my in depth review.I will warn you ..... It is lengthy. I had read about the NTI since its inception 17 years ago. Like many I wondered how well I could do in such an environment. But really, if you cannot do well there, how well do you really expect to do on the street when it is real? Tom Givens of Rangemaster talked me into signing up and going this year with him his crew and I am very glad I did. Actually he kind of shamed me into going by telling me that every serious gunman should go at least once. He is right.And as I said I am very glad I went. I have always looked at Tom as a mentor, but after this trip I look at him as my friend. I met up with Tom and the gang in Knoxville en route to Pennsylvania. There were 4 of us in the van so there was plenty of room. It is also quite a long drive so it gave us plenty of time to discuss all manner of things from Southern culture to Scots-Irish heritage, what long guns we would like to try out, gunmen of old and past NTIs. But with such good company it seemed like the time just flew by. Also along on the trip was John Justice, John Hearne and Jeff Boardman both of whom are instructors for Rangemaster.Since three of us are from Tennessee, one from Alabama and one from Mississippi, all armed with multiple pistols, and heading toward Gettysburg, we became the "Confederate Cavalry".The northern invasion was on! Did I mention it was a fun trip? We arrived on Tuesday and checked into the hotel and got lunch at the Elephant and Castle English Pub located in the host hotel. How appropriate for a meeting place! That evening we got the overview of the week ahead at the orientation.The three rules of NTI are 1. NO WHINING. 2. NO STUPID GUNHANDLING and 3. NO BOORISH BEHAVIOR. The storyline for the exercise was that you were an expert witness retained to testify in a trial. You would be picked up at the airport, go to your hotel, give a speech in the local school, and testify in court, go to the mall ,have dinner with the district attorney and go to the doctor. All of this took place in the "Village". In there you would interact with other practitioners and role players and act and react accordingly to what situations ensued. The regular shooting stages somewhat mirrored these force on force stages, they just used voices provided by the safety officers and targets provided by either pneumatic targets that appear and disappear or by stationary targets made of Tactical Ted targets with a thin solid "core" that had to be hit squarely to knock them down. I have to admit that I was somewhat relieved to be in the first group to shoot. I had been playing "what if" in my head for so long that I was frankly glad to finally get it over with and be thrown into the fire. The first group was given the safety briefing and given our safety equipment (did I mention we use Simmunitions rounds in the village?) and off we went. I elected to wear no extra padding other than the collar they issued and the eye protection and grinders mask used to protect your face. I figure I'd get more out of it by dressing as I normally do and if being shot REALLY hurt. As Tom and I picked up our bags from baggage claim in the village airport we ducked into the restroom to find our pistols and arm ourselves before hitting the street. Unfortunately the village deputy sheriff ducked into the bathroom and we were detained until the sheriff arrived we could explain why we were pulling guns out of our luggage in a public bathroom. Since our permits were in order we were let go. We rearmed with our J frames and our 10 rounds of sims ammo and went to the hotel. A better tactic would be the one John Hearne employed. He went out and struck up a conversation with the cop while the others armed up in the bathroom. The hotel acts as a staging area where the practitioners and their individual judges wait until all is clear for the scenarios to begin.But if you left your gun behind in the hotel you might find it stolen when you got back. We went immediately to the local school to give a speech. Upon arrival we were confronted with the sheriff who promptly disarmed us. No guns allowed in school so we were disarmed and we entered the school. A short time later during the speech two thuggish individuals entered one with a gas can and one with a lighter. We immediately set to herding the locals out the door and I grabbed a ball bat as I exited in case the thugs decided on assault instead of arson.I intentionally did not attack the gas man with the bat for fear of being shot by the sheriff who I thought was still outside. Of course there was no law enforcement there when you needed them........We debriefed, explained our actions got our guns back, checked to make sure they were loaded and all were led off in separate directions.In the debrief on Saturday we were told that some wandered around with empty guns having never checked to make sure they were loaded after they got them back and yet others forget to get their guns back at all! Next I was taken to the courthouse where I was again disarmed and seated in front of the gallery. As I sat there a rather large intoxicated man sitting next to me with a bottle of booze tried to strike up a conversation. I asked the bailiff if the man was supposed to be drinking in court. About this time a disturbed individual entered the room and promptly shot the bailiff. I got down on the floor and noticed the bailiff had dropped his SW 5906 service pistol when he fell. But I also noticed the safety was on, figured there was no round in the chamber and that it was a glorified paper weight. I knew I'd likely get shot in the head if I reached for it.Instead I stayed low and waited until the gunman came closer and I sprang off the floor performing a disarm on him to end the scenario. This is where that work with William Aprill at the Warrior Talk Symposiums and with Southnarc in his classes and with Gabe on disarms came in handy. I asked some others why they didn't do the same in their turn in that scenario and they said frankly they didn't have that skill set. I was certainly glad I did. Next up was a trip to the mall. I'll admit that I was a little apprehensive to enter the mall, and I was right to have been. As I walked down the corridor I was confronted by a large man who blocked my path. I said "Excuse me Sir" and tried to slip past, but he stepped to block it again. Now a note on rules here. The practitioners cannot physically "rough up" the role players. So for those of us who have a bag of hand to hand skills to draw from, that was pretty much negated.Also for those of us who carry impact weapons, that was also a no-no. I attempted to use "pepper spray" but the BG was having none of it and kept advancing. By this time his partner had closed the gap on my other side and this narrow hallway became even tighter and BG #1 was now holding a pistol in a retention position. I offered my card wallet and credit card but they wanted to check my other pockets and ordered me to my knees firing a shot into the floor to let me know they meant business. I feigned compliance, told them I had a bad back and slowly got down on one knee keeping my left foot on the ground. Bad guy #1 checked my left pockets and finding nothing started to move behind me from left to right. I took this opportunity to hook him with my left arm and spin quickly to my left and around pushing him into his partner ( tying up his gun and his partner) and drawing my own pistol and preparing to start feeding bullets into them when the judge yelled "STOP!!". We debriefed. I was told I could have done a better job of getting by him, but frankly I was perplexed at the pepper spray having no effect at all and I was still not sure just how much contact I would be allowed to use to move someone so I did kind of just stall out for a few seconds. The judge explained how much physical force was OK,and commended me for not getting rattled and using the time I had to formulate a plan, not to panic. He also commented on my quick draw (appendix carry works people!) and said all in all it worked out well for me. The shots were not needed and it was called to a halt for safety purposes. They try to avoid near contact shots on the role players and practitioners if they can. Part of my "calmness" was that I knew I could get the gun in play and make accurate hits. All that work on the range pays off and allows you to worry about solving the problems not worry whether you can get the gun out an make it run. Taking the fight to them when the opening presents itself works well too.There is time to talk and time to fight and they rarely overlap.
  8. Isn't the Postal Operations Manual the "employee handbook" for the PO? The law that I find says only that armed robbery of a post office is bad and that is what is posted on the doors. IT IS NOT POSTED that no guns are allowed. In the law it refers to UNLAWFUL carry of firearms. I have a permit. My carry is lawful.
  9. I'm in Chattanooga. I am a Suarez International staff instructor and Tennessee state certified handgun instructor. I teach the TN CCW classes and the Defensive Pistol Skills, Defensive Rifle Skills, Defensive Shotgun Skills, Close Range Gunfighting and Foce on Force classes for SI at a range here in Chattanooga. I offer classes the 4th weekend of every month and do private lessons whenever is convenient for the students. You can see my schedule and sign up at Suarezinternational.com or contact me at Cruelhandluke2000@yahoo.com I'm teaching a DPS class this weekend and CRG in June. Let me know if I can be of any assistance to you. Good Luck!
  10. For those in the area, this class has had 2 cancellations at the last minute and there are 2 spots available in this otherwise full class. If you are interested please Email me at Cruelhandluke2000@yahoo.com about payment and registration. Class description...... SUAREZ INTERNATIONAL May 26-27, 2007 DEFENSIVE PISTOL SKILLS - (DPS) Chattanooga, TN All training must begin with fundamentals. This fundamentals class is designed to prep you for the more advanced courses such as Close Range Gunfighting. Through a carefully designed and detailed curriculum we are able to bring you up to a level of skill in a short two day class that previously would take over 4 or 5 days to achieve at other schools. This class is taught by Suarez International Staff Instructor - Randy Harris. You will learn a complete presentation of the modern combative technique of the pistol which will put you in good standing for any defensive situations you may encounter in the real world. No experience or prior training is needed to attend this class and it is specially suitable for beginners. Price $265.00 Duration: 2 days Ammunition: Approximately 300 rounds (Minimum) Requirements: Pistol, Holster, 3 Magazines, Safety Gear * Instructors: Randy Harris Location: MYSTERY DOG RANCH 975 Wooten Road Ringgold, GA 30736 Directions I-75 to East Ridge Exit (#1) Go east on Hwy 41 (approx 2 Miles) turn left onto Wooten Rd. (look for left turn lane) Go 1 Mile to Mystery Dog Ranch on the left. *Yes it is technically GA, but using Chattanooga as a starting point is easier. *Please bring what you carry. Any caliber or action type will do fine here - Revolvers Are Welcome!! Enroll by calling Randy Harris at 423 827 9133 or email at Cruelhandluke2000@yahoo.com
  11. I carry a SW 342 and use the Cor Bon DPX. But it is +p NOT standard pressure any more. They found they worked more reliably at +p velocity and upped them to +p. Recoil is not bad at all. It recoils less than the +p 135 Gold Dot which is important for me since I carry that gun to be accessed with my weak hand.
  12. Not much to report, the Chattanooga Rifle Club's match on Mother's Day was pretty small. We had 7 participants and we shot 3 stages. One was a plate rack, 5 plates , 4 individual runs. Stage 2 was 3 targets at 7 yards and 3 more at 17 - 20yards. 2 to the body on each 12 rounds . Six from point A , mandatory reload 6 from point B. Stage 3 same stage setup, but all head shots.
  13. "Secrets Of Reality Based Gunfighting" and "Combative Perspective" by Gabe Suarez. And I really enjoyed Phil Elmore's "Short Hand Empty Hand" book also. And something on a "cultural" mindset wavelength "Born Fighting-How the Scots-Irish Shaped America" by James Webb. Lots of us in Tennessee!
  14. I'd take you guys up on it, but I'm teaching a Defensive Pistol Skills class here in Chattanooga that weekend . Anyone here who is not signing up for this TGO class REALLY needs to reconsider. I'd definitely be there if I could. Actually I'll be stopping in on the 18th on my way to Tom's place(Rangemaster) for Combative Pistol II. See you guys then.
  15. I'm new here so I'll wade into the murky water..... What I use, recommend and teach is what we refer to as the "sighting continuum". It goes from shooting from retention as you are fending off a contact attack all the way out to using a picture perfect sight picture for making hits on distant targets at 50, 75 even 100 yards and farther. It also refers to everything in between. Do I need to have ANY sight picture at 3 feet ? No. I don't even have to see the gun. I shoot from the #2 position of the draw stroke with my shooting hand elbow cranked up so my rounds impact the target in the lower abdomen/pelvic area as I use my off hand to protect my head/neck and strike the BG. This is exactly what Southnarc teaches and if you use the reference points properly you can shoot in physical contact with someone and still protect yourself and not have your gun malfunction and not shoot yourself in your fending arm. Do I NEED to have a perfect sight picture at 3 yards to shoot you in the chest? NO. Really all I NEED is to get the gun in my visual center line, project it straight at the target and MAYBE square my pelvis to the target, but that is a story for another time. I can even shoot from the #3 position of the draw (where your hands come together in the drawstroke-what we call compressed ready) and get excellent hits out to 4 or maybe 5 yards. Do I NEED to have a perfect sight picture at 5 to 7 yards? No. I just look for the outline of the gun in my peripheral vision surrounded by the target and work the trigger. Do I NEED to have a perfect sight picture to get good COM hits at 7 yards? NO. I just focus on the target looking OVER the gun, seeing the top of the slide somewhat peripherally. Do I NEED to have a perfect sight picture at 7 to 10 yards? No I can just look for the front sight like a shotgun bead and work the trigger. Do I NEED to have a perfect sight picture at 10-15 yards? Well here things start to get a little more dicey. At this distance I will usually shoot "out of the notch" looking for the front sight on top of the rear. Do I need to have a perfect sight picture past 15 yards? Depends on the size of target, but this IS the distance where I DEFINITELY want a GOOD sight picture. All this is easily accomplished if you grip the pistol CORRECTLY and get it lined up with the bones in your arm and project the pistol at the target in your visual centerline. This is accomplished by getting all the grip you are gonna get on it while it is in the holster, not monkeying with it as you project it. The gun muzzle goes where your eyes see and if you have the time by all means LOOK FOR THE SIGHTS. But if not, you can still make hits. If you can throw a punch and hit what you are throwing it at, you can throw a punch with a pistol in your hand and fire the shot at the extension and get EXCELLENT hits at 5 yards or less.BUT it is all dependent on your draw stroke being properly done. Up close perfect sight pictures are not mandatory. But sometimes if we only have a small target exposed, the 5 to 7 yard shots may REQUIRE using the sights. Think about shooting at someone behind cover.Things are complex and there is not a 2 second "bumper sticker " answer to these questions. It really isn't a ONE AND ONLY TRUE WAY kind of deal. It is not EITHER sights OR point shooting/threat focused shooting/instinctive shooting. It is "all of the above". And most of us know this. I'm a big boy so fire away.
  16. Two semesters of ROTC:D. Just kidding. I never served in the military.
  17. Since 2005. Gabe was just beginning to expand the operation and I talked to him about it. He told me to come to his Ultimate Combat Skills Week class in Atlanta and after the class he said, "You're in if you want in". I had been teaching CCW classes for better part of 10 years, but really didn't feel that was enough to be teaching folks about interpersonal conflict. I took a "medical care under fire" course and all the gun knife and stick stuff I could fit in and Tom Givens's instructor development course (I did 13 classes in 13 months at one point) all so I would be able to better help the students understand how things all fit together in context. I don't teach people how to win IDPA matches (though I can if that is what interests them) I teach them to win fights. The person is the weapon, the gun is just an efficient accessory. But still just an accessory. And there are circumstances related to distance where the gun is NOT the best choice. That is how I see it anyways. Mindset then tactics then skill THEN equipment. But know how to use all the equipment-empty hands,stick,knife,pistol ,rifle, shotgun,(SMG,belt fed MG:devil:) and even improvised weapons. Just because I can't carry a weapon into somewhere doesn't mean I am totally unarmed. It is the Warrior mindset, not the shooter mindset.A warrior will fight with any tool he can lay hands on. A shooter only learns the gun...... Probably a longer answer than you were looking for, but I'm feeling long winded today:D.
  18. I generally shoot my carry gun in SSP and ESP. Glock 34 with Trijicon sights. Use Blade Tech IWB holster and Blade tech single mag pouches with Tek Lok. If I shoot CDP I use my Wilson 1996A2 (essentially a CQB) with Wilson "Night Eyes" sights. I shoot matches dressed just like I dress for work. Untucked polo shirt or untucked button down shirt, pistol, spare mag, knife, windlass tourniquet in my back pocket, cell phone. I can't really remember the last time I shot a match with an OWB holster and a vest.I just don't wear that stuff on a daily basis so I'd rather practice with what I DO wear. I'm real big on streamlining practice/training. I don't like to use "match guns" and wear "match clothes" or "school clothes". I shoot what I carry, how I actually carry it. NOT that there is anything wrong with OWBs and vests, I just choose not to use them since I don't wear them anywhere else.
  19. Thanks guys! I don't really know how "expert" my opinions are, but I'm not bashful about sharing them.
  20. Hey guys. My name is Randy Harris. I am a staff instructor for Suarez International and state certified ccw instructor at Sportsman's Supply in Chattanooga. I shoot IDPA, 3 gun, Cowboy action, Subgun, and about any kind of "action shooting" match I can find in this area. I work for a shooting sports wholesaler and spend most of my free time reading history,biographies,lifting weights and training in knife, gun, stick and combatives and hanging out with my wife. I have trained with Gabe Suarez, Southnarc and Paul Gomez, Tom Givens, Tom Sotis, Marc Denny,Ian Mcdevitt (medic skills class) , Henk Iverson and William Aprill. I look forward to hanging out here and keeping up with what is going on around the state. Glad to be here!
  21. I teach classes for Suarez International offering them in Chattanooga. I teach The Defensive Pistol Skills, Close Range Gunfighting, Defensive Rifle Skills, and Shotgun Gunfighting classes. Class descriptions and sign up info available at www.suarezinternational.com I am also hosting Tom Givens from Rangemaster for his Dynamic Marksmanship class June 30/July1 (sign up through www.rangemaster.com) and Sonny Puzikas is coming in October to do the Kalashnikov Gunfighting class on Oct 6 and 7. I use a private range just across the border in Ringgold Ga. It has 6 side by side shooting bays 30 yards deep by 20 yards across divided by berms on the sides and a berm downrange. I also teach the Tennessee CCW class at Sportsman's Supply in Hixson Tn.

TRADING POST NOTICE

Before engaging in any transaction of goods or services on TGO, all parties involved must know and follow the local, state and Federal laws regarding those transactions.

TGO makes no claims, guarantees or assurances regarding any such transactions.

THE FINE PRINT

Tennessee Gun Owners (TNGunOwners.com) is the premier Community and Discussion Forum for gun owners, firearm enthusiasts, sportsmen and Second Amendment proponents in the state of Tennessee and surrounding region.

TNGunOwners.com (TGO) is a presentation of Enthusiast Productions. The TGO state flag logo and the TGO tri-hole "icon" logo are trademarks of Tennessee Gun Owners. The TGO logos and all content presented on this site may not be reproduced in any form without express written permission. The opinions expressed on TGO are those of their authors and do not necessarily reflect those of the site's owners or staff.

TNGunOwners.com (TGO) is not a lobbying organization and has no affiliation with any lobbying organizations.  Beware of scammers using the Tennessee Gun Owners name, purporting to be Pro-2A lobbying organizations!

×
×
  • Create New...

Important Information

By using this site, you agree to the following.
Terms of Use | Privacy Policy | Guidelines
 
We have placed cookies on your device to help make this website better. You can adjust your cookie settings, otherwise we'll assume you're okay to continue.