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Kali

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Posts posted by Kali

  1. I live in Melbourne, grew up in Brevard County.  From Cape Canaveral down to Sebastian Inlet it's only an hour apart, so you could hit multiple beaches along A1A in one visit, including Cocoa Beach and Melbourne beach.  Some notable stops, the Pier and Ron Jons in Cocoa Beach, Quite Flight surf shop, Natural art surf shop, Patrick AFB (Picnic tables, officers club, 2nd light), Indialantic Boardwalk, 5th Avenue,  Longboard House, Spanish House/Sea Grapes between 5th Avenue and Sebastian Inlet (if you like to surf), Sebastian.  there are also a lot of Pubic Parks that have beach access along A1A.

  2. Between Universal Shooting Academy in Frostproof and Extreme GM at Volusia there should be some local matches going on the weekend before and after those dates.  Volusia has 3 different clubs hosting USPSA the first, third and fourth Saturdays. They also have USPSA every Thursday. Universals local USPSA is every second Sunday (but I heard Jan is a classifer match).  There is also OK Corral, Port Malabar and Central Florida within driving distance,  their matches are on the second Saturday/Sunday.

  3. Was about to order one of these. Is there a reason to get the barrel support that they sale for this holster? What would be the reason if any?

    A little extra security that prevents the muzzle from bumping up while the holster is unlocked. Like starting from a seated position, muzzle might push into the chair or your leg, dislodging the gun. I wouldn't buy one though. Easy enough to make one. I made this with parts laying around my garage to see if I liked it.

    IMG_3896.jpg

    photo sharing websites

  4. People develop skills differently. While advice from the Pros is insightful, you have to make it work for you. For me, I had the concepts of the "non-shooting" skills fairly well developed as a B shooter. While not perfect, my draw, reload, movement skills were above my ranking, and my shooting skills were just average. Those non-shooting skills are much easier and quicker to develop and ingrain than the pure shooting skills which takes time. As I got better, I started spending more time with the shooting skills and only practiced the non-shooting skills as maintanance. Having a foundation of draws, reloads and movement that I could do without thought, allowed me to focus on the shooting. I made GM this year, my draws/reloads/movement is not much better as I was as a B, the gain was in the shooting. In the higher rankings your going to have to do it all anyways, so it doesn't really matter which one you develop first.

  5. I beat most open (A) shooters with my production rig.

    I can tell you here in the 2 years where I shoot no Production shooter has ever beaten a real A class open shooter ...

    I've been shooting Limited the last couple years but in 2012 at the Steel Nationals I shot my Production gun. Guy right below me was an Open M, a couple more below him was another Open M and I'm sure a few A Open shooters. I'm not going to check everyones classification, but you get the idea.

    As far as front sight or target focus, basic definition of calling your shot is "knowing". Vision is the primary intuit for that...but not the only one. Some shooters have the ability to shoot by kinesthetical awareness. Think Taran Butler cleaning a plate rack from the hip.

  6. Probably not as much as I should. Got to GM dry firing 30 min a day, 4 days a week, live fire practice maybe once every two weeks, and shot local matches every weekend, sometimes 2 per weekend. Started cutting back on locals for more live fire practice this year but I'm not sure its any better than just shooting the matches.

  7. There are examples in sports of not so talented players being at the top. Tom Kite was a pro golfer in the lat 80s who was top 10 for the longest time, known most for his mental toughness than his talent. His mental game was so strong he was able to maximize what talent and skill he had, beating more talented players during his time. But usually the top of the sport has visible talent above others. Same or more drive and determination PLUS the talent. Guys like Michael Jordan. It would take some convincing to prove to me he has no talent when I've seen him do things very few other players can do.

    I've found that people that want to do well, who may be lacking in talent compared to others, usually say talent has nothing to do with it, its all about "hard work." While people that have some level of talent may acknowledge it takes hard work but wouldn't be willing to give-up what talent they have for anything else.

    Look at the 3 key things that are arguably required to be a top player... Skill (attainable through training) / Mental toughness (attainable through training) / Talent (Your born with it or your not).
    Developing mental toughness, stimulating your drive or learning to be a competitor is something that can be conditioned and learned. Talent is impossible to acquire if you don't already have it.
    I think the "talent" thing is de-emphasized because theres really not much you can do about it. The ones that don't have it won't get it, the ones that have it can't teach it. Dedication and work is something you have control over. If you went to a shooting class with a top GM do you think he's going to say, "first you need talent...." I'm guessing not, he is going to address things that he can teach you, and things that you have power to change.
    In addition, boasting about talent is usually looked at as a negative, where attributing success to hard work is viewed as positive. Think about an interview with a top player. If asked the question "what do you attribute your success to?" you might view him differently if he said "I have more talent then everyone else" vs "I worked so hard to get where I am."
  8. It's the analytical process you go thru during training.

    IMO you need the analytical thinking mind to refine your technique and plot your course, but there are points in the training where you are simply burning in good repetition. This is where you are transferring theory and thought into meditative action and "get lost" in the training. To me, this is the most rewarding and why I enjoy the training.

  9. If you are practicing a specific technique that might be technically wrong, you are training yourself to do that wrong technique very well. It would be better not to practice. I think it was Saul Kirsch who related it to ruts in a road. If you drive over a path over and over, you create a rut that is hard to get out of. This is great if its the correct rut, but if its the wrong rut.... Or something like that. Its important to burn in good repetitions, thats why everyone suggests taking a class with a good instructor, to set you in the right direction before you start burning it in.

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