This year marks the 25th Anniversary of the nation’s longest-running NRA Youth Shooting Camp!  Darnall’s GunWorks and Ranges hosts the event on the last weekend in July each year on the grounds of their facility.  They have room for another two dozen or so registrations.  Sign up today and I’ll tell you why:  Enrollees have about a one in four chance of winning a gun!

The camp accepts registrations from young people ages 9ish to 16.  Boys and girls.  Sexes camp in different parts of the property and there is adult supervision/chaperones at all times.

Showers are available.  Ditto for (free) camping for the adult staff and volunteers.

Tuition is $125 for the weekend.  It covers everything.  All the kids need is their camping gear (tent, sleeping bag, etc.), personal hygiene stuff (toothbrush) and that’s about it.  Might send them with a spare set of shoes in case of rain.  

Food, ammunition, snacks, drinks, and loads of entertainment and fun are all provided.

Registration is available at the Darnall’s website here.

 

Here’s an excerpt from what I wrote last year at The Truth About Guns

 

Scenes From Nation’s Longest-Running NRA Youth Shooting Camp – Day One

The smiles keep me coming back to help at America’s longest-running NRA Youth Shooting Camp in Bloomington, Ilinois. Darnall’s GunWorks and Ranges hosts the kids each year for a four-day, three night gun camp on their property. This year marks the 24th year for the event.

It’s also probably the only National Rifle Association summer camp sponsored in part by the City of Chicago’s gun buyback program. We know Mayor Rahm Emanuel will sleep better knowing that Chicago taxpayer money helped fund this worthwhile program to introduce young people to the fun and excitement of shooting.

 

The facility’s owners, Ron and Sue Darnall, shut down the place to paying customers to host the camp. It stands as yet another concrete example of their dedication to America’s longstanding gun culture. Award-winning support, too. Sue, pictured above, received the Marion Hammer Women of Distinction Award in 2007 for her work promoting freedom.

Both of them personify the gun culture that Michael Bloomberg, Chuck Schumer and Nancy Pelosi would dearly love to extinguish in this country.

In total, about 100 young people aged 8-16 enjoyed trigger time all day Friday. This isn’t 3-gun or high-speed, low-drag operations. The camp stresses introducing the fundamental shooting skills to these kids, along with a heaping helping of fun. Oh yes, and plenty of firearm safety, too.  Lots of emphasis on firearm safety.

What’s more, Saturday and Sunday hold a whole lot more shooting in still more shooting disciplines. The first full day’s shooting stations included trap, black powder, Ruger Steel Challenge and air pistol.

 

The camp continues Saturday and Sunday. For the last few years, my fellow GSL Defense Training instructors and I supervise the pistol shooting station. We make it fun for participants with lots of shade, fans, music and a great time for all.

At the same time, we turn up the cool factor to 11 by letting the top shooters in each relay shoot some neat center-fire “pistols.” This year, those pistols will include a couple of SIG-braced “pistols,” a braced CZ Scorpion and more.

Years ago, the kids nicknamed the Kel-Tec PLR-16 pistol “The Giggler” because it makes grown men giggle when fired.  In addition, we make available more traditional handguns: 1911s, Beretta 92’s, S&W .357 Magnums, GLOCKS and more.

For young people, shooting these center-fire handguns for the first time brings big smiles to faces. Even better, it inspires them to take the marksmanship element of shooting the pistols seriously.

At other stations, they’ll learn about and shoot rifles, Cowboy Action, air rifles and archery.

I have participated at the camp for almost twenty years now. Today, I see a second generation of young people coming through. It’s something when a parent comes up to you to tell you how they remember you helping them years ago when they attended camp as a kid.

Here is more from TTAG from the couple of days we as GSL Defense Training ran the pistol line.

While TTAG’s Luis Valdez spent Saturday at the Big Gun Rights Rally in Florida, I spent the weekend in Illinois teaching kids how to shoot pistols. We made memories for the kids on that pistol line.  Not only that, but we made sure these young men and women stayed safe while having fun and learning life skills.

Darnall’s GunWorks and Ranges hosts the kids each year for a four-day, three night gun camp on their property just west of Bloomington. This year marks the 24th year for the event.  Both young people and adults arrived Thursday evening setting up camp and taking in a safety briefing.

Friday morning marked the beginning of trigger time. We covered it earlier.

Not only is this the longest-running National Rifle Association summer camp, but it also holds the likely distinction as the only such camp sponsored in part by the City of Chicago’s gun buyback program.

That’s right.  Mayor Rahm Emanuel, known to the locals as “Tiny Dancer” for his short stature and ballet school studies, funds a tiny segment of this camp. How so? By intrepid members of Guns Save Life trading broken down junk for perfectly good Chicago taxpayer cash.

Somehow, I don’t think Rahm funds that buyback to buy big smiles like these.

Or these…

Or this one…

On Saturday and Sunday, camp participants toured five shooting stations. Archery, rifles, air rifles, Cowboy Action and our station, pistols.

On the pistol line, my fellow GSL Defense Training instructors and I introduced the kids to isosceles shooting stance.   Why? Because we prefer to teach life skills to these kids. And knowing how to hold and operate a handgun might someday save the life of one of these young adults.

Given how 83% of young Americans will have a brush with violent crime at least once in their lives, it seems a skill worth teaching. After all, while God made man and woman, Sam Colt made them equal. Or so the saying goes.

Over the years, we have settled on each of the campers firing about fifty to sixty rounds from the .22s. Instructors work to ensure safety and correct major mistakes. Our goal is to shrink their group size to defensive accuracy or better. All did far better than minute-of-bad guy. Most shot fist-sized groups at 5 yards.  Even many of the 8- and 9-year-olds did almost as well.

For the last ten rounds, campers shoot for score.

Then we let the group leaders keep busy scoring targets.

The best five shooters in each relay earned their chance to fire some neat center-fire handguns. And aside from the pop music on the PA system and fun instructors, the kids LOVE any chance to shoot neat guns that make big booms and bigger fireballs. At the same time, we show even the smaller kids how they can safely and effectively handle defensive 9mm and .38 Special handguns.

Decisions, decisions.  And while a couple asked to shoot it, the Shockwave (lower right) came along only for our instructor crew to play with.

Meanwhile, the Keltec PLR-15 and its well-deserved nickname “The Giggler” has earned legendary status among both the kids and the adult staff members. Why do they call it “The Giggler”?  Because it makes grown men giggle when they see it fire.

Yes, when the Keltec pistol fires, the fireball gives bystanders a suntan, the concussion washes over everyone and the noise makes some people hold their earmuffs just a little tighter. Simultaneously, it burns that exciting experience into the minds of everyone present.

 

Yes, even young women love shooting The Giggler. Don’t tell Joe Biden though.

 

Obviously, the Sig AR-15 “pistol” proved every bit as popular as The Giggler.  Again, don’t tell Uncle Joe Biden.

Yes, women seem to prefer the AR-platform to a 12-gauge. And even young women can manage to use them quite effectively and have a great time doing so.

The campers took the shooting very seriously, as evidenced by this photo below of Zori.  They all wanted a chance to shoot the big guns.

After she missed the target with a few of her first ten rounds, she looked at me with a sad face. “I don’t think I’m going to make the top five,” she said dejectedly.

“We’re not done yet, young lady,” I told her.

I worked with young Zori on the fundamentals. By teaching her not to flinch or slap the trigger, Zori started pounding her shots into the black bullseye. Pretty soon, she earned her way to a chance to shoot with the big dogs. And sure enough…

Then she shot a quarter-sized group with the AR that looked almost as big as her. Yeah, Zori will remember that experience for years to come. You don’t find those fond memories at gun control rallies.

Or those big, warm smiles.

For those intimidated a little by the muzzle blast of the AR, the CZ Scorpion pistol proved popular.

 

Yes, shooting it in real life proved a whole lot more exciting than shooting one in a video game.  Even if this young guy needed a little assistance holding it. No doubt Shannon Watts would have the vapors if she saw this photo.

And then more traditional handguns also served up some big smiles and hoots and hollers from bystanders.

 

 

This 14-year-old named Garrett shoots a Colt 1911 Government Model. If you noticed his good form, you get a prize. This young man, at 13, won last fall’s DeWitt County Sportsman’s Club Zombie Shoot outside Clinton, IL. Not only did he have the best Juniors time on the rifle side, but he also beat the adult times as well. How did he do it? He executed the fundamentals well and didn’t make stupid mistakes.

Richard Wright from Armscor and Rock Island Arms introduced himself and brought some prototype pistols with him, along with some .22 TCM ammunition. He graciously offered them to our top shooters as part of the center-fire pool of guns. The guns included both 1911-style pistols and a Glock conversion kit that fires a slightly modified .22 TCM cartridge (the 9R?).

The lack of recoil, coupled with a fearsome muzzle blast and fireball made it very popular with some.

Her expression tells you everything you need to know about this young woman’s experience shooting the .22 TCM.

The kids love the NRA Youth Shooting Camp a whole lot. My travels have taken me to Scout Camps, camps for kids with disabilities and medical conditions and even church camps. I have to say, I don’t think any of those make memories like these four days at gun camp.

What’s more, these long-term memories will stay with these kids into adulthood. And someday, most of these kids will become gun owners too.

In any event, it’s a pretty safe bet none of them will become champions of gun control or followers of @ShannonWatts.