Holster drills are best practiced using the holster you normally carry and use. Be mindful of re-holstering safely, including keeping the holster mouth clear of clothing. |
It seems that, for a moment, politics won't be drying up supplies of certain types of ammunition -- .22 LR and .22 Mag – and perhaps folks can stop stocking up on magazines and do a little range work.
I'd been working on the regular carry Glock 19, one that's been fighting a move into the rotation since 2012. It took that long to get sights on it and to get the sights more-or-less regulated to my eyes and grip. A Gen 4, it's different enough in handling that I've been struggling with that sighting issue. On top of that, the sights aren't "top edge" strike, being more regulated to "cover with color and press" – or something like that.
Working one-hand skills is vital. |
I opted to use some ammo and effort in part of the Tactical Professor's (Claude Werner) "Neutralize the Threat" Benchmark course, a variation on the FBI double-action revolver course. As I had the IALEFI-Q target posted – and that's the target he prefers for the course – I was ready to do the close stages.
Good news for me and the gun I chose to carry: at the closer ranges, both in times and hits I was in good shape. There was one trophy-grade trigger snatch that kept me from cleaning the five yard head shot stage, but I was all good in the slow fire "parrot" string (that's his term for the circle on the upper right side of the target – it's like the parrot on a pirate's left shoulder).
Using a double action revolver -- using the trigger to cock and fire the piece -- is ideal for trigger control exercises. The last string being a slow-fire precision string helps end a practices session on a positive note. |
The skills to work are trigger control, time to the first hit from the holster – both of which can be accomplished with dry practice – and making hits at distance. I believe the latter is more of a confidence issue than a shooting issue.
I finished up with one- and two hand shooting strings with a Smith & Wesson Model 63 Kit Gun. The last eight rounds were put in the circle on the IALEFI "patch" logo on the target. I put eight rounds in about an inch from seven yards – the best I ever shot that little gun with its fiber optic front sight.
More than sights, it's in the trigger. Be nice to the trigger and it'll be nice to you.
Finish every practice session with truly slow fire precision shooting. End with success.
-- Rich Grassi
