HayesGreener
Ronin
I have been a firearms instructor for 55 years and have trained countless military, LE, and civilians. Have attended many instructor courses over the years.
I retired from two agencies, then retired from the hay business to start a firearms training company, mostly focusing on security and investigation agencies for their state license training. I did that for 8 years and ran about 850 students through my program. COVID killed that business when security and investigation firms stopped sending people for training, and we couldn't get ammo, so I closed the business and focused on building furniture and cabinets in my wood shop.
I kept my instructor tickets up and did a few CCW and basic pistol and shotgun classes for family and friends. Recently though, I have been getting more requests from young people for CCW training. I see it as a sign of the times, as young folks, especially young women, become more concerned with safety and security.
The fundamentals of shooting have not changed since about 1100 A.D., but training techniques and gun technology, and what we know of how people learn, have evolved continuously. Every time I do a class, I learn something new. I am open to thoughts and suggestions from the collective.
I have a CCW course of 6 college age young women scheduled for May 30. We're going to use SIG P365's, P320's, and Glock 9mm pistols for the course and maybe a Hellcat if I can lay hands on one
I retired from two agencies, then retired from the hay business to start a firearms training company, mostly focusing on security and investigation agencies for their state license training. I did that for 8 years and ran about 850 students through my program. COVID killed that business when security and investigation firms stopped sending people for training, and we couldn't get ammo, so I closed the business and focused on building furniture and cabinets in my wood shop.
I kept my instructor tickets up and did a few CCW and basic pistol and shotgun classes for family and friends. Recently though, I have been getting more requests from young people for CCW training. I see it as a sign of the times, as young folks, especially young women, become more concerned with safety and security.
The fundamentals of shooting have not changed since about 1100 A.D., but training techniques and gun technology, and what we know of how people learn, have evolved continuously. Every time I do a class, I learn something new. I am open to thoughts and suggestions from the collective.
I have a CCW course of 6 college age young women scheduled for May 30. We're going to use SIG P365's, P320's, and Glock 9mm pistols for the course and maybe a Hellcat if I can lay hands on one