July 15, 2003
Serving Western Deschutes County
Sisters, Oregon








Search this site for:


The on-line Nugget does not feature all the stories of our print edition. For all the news, subscribe here.








© 2002
The Nugget Newspaper
Sisters, Oregon
All rights reserved

Send us an email

Display Advertising
This is a PDF file. View with Adobe Acrobat Reader

The contents of the on-line edition of The Nugget represent a selection among the stories that appear in the weekly print edition.

Editorial

Slob shooters damage sport

Shot-up road signs, empty shotgun shells and cartridge brass littering the sagebrush, ricochets screaming over the heads of hikers and cyclists out on the trails.

Nobody likes to see the wreckage left behind by irresponsible shooters (see Jim Anderson's column, The Nugget, July 9, page 25). Perhaps the most offended are other shooters.

The slobs make all shooters look bad. Many people have only negative feelings about guns and seeing a blasted road sign or a littered landscape only confirms their prejudices.

Right now, target shooters can set up just about anywhere in the National Forest. With that right comes responsibilities: to choose a safe backstop, where stray bullets won't pose a danger to other folks out enjoying the woods, and to clean up after yourself when you are done.

As more and more people move into the forest lands, there will be more and more pressure to confine shooting to designated areas, such as local cinder pits. Then, if those places turn into dangerous dumping grounds, they'll be closed and only private, fee-charging shooting ranges will be allowed.

It has happened in California and it can happen here. If shooters want to avoid that, it's up to them.

A local man is organizing a clean-up at the cinder pit used for target practice in Camp Sherman. He is also creating flyers depicting several of the mangled signs in the area, announcing to sign-shooters that "people like you ruin shooting sports for the rest of us."

Several local folks have taken it upon themselves to clean up the popular cinder pit shooting area at Zimmerman Butte.

Such efforts are to be commended. They show respect for the land and they send a positive message to the non-shooting public: Target shooting can be safe, clean fun.

J.C.

Back to front page

Failed to execute CGI : Win32 Error Code = 3
Failed to execute CGI : Win32 Error Code = 3
Failed to execute CGI : Win32 Error Code = 3
Failed to execute CGI : Win32 Error Code = 3
Failed to execute CGI : Win32 Error Code = 3