I have been asked by the local Kiwanis club to come up with an idea to have our club team to do a shooting oriented game at a Kiwanis sponsored Pumpkin Fest.
I figure whatever we do, it should be safe for children ages 6 and up.
Any ideas?
I should add... we are a precision rifle team.
Fun/Carnival shooting games for public events?
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Fun/Carnival shooting games for public events?
Last edited by bdutton on Tue Sep 24, 2013 11:58 am, edited 1 time in total.
- Freepistol
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Gamo Targetrs
Our boy scout troop this year has run two fundraisers at hunting/fishing shows. We used gamo knockdown targets (field target) and crosman co2 rifles on bulk fill/ tethered to a co2 tank.
The plink plink plink attracted lots of attention. We charged a small fee for each loaded magazine. Boys raised about $50 an hour using 1 air rifle.
CO2 power factor allowed us to use crosman portable indoor range. In another setup we used double layers of packing blankets (5 dollars each) hung behind the targets for a backstop. A cheap shag carpet/rug hung behind for a backstop might also work well. Just test everything for safety concerns like rebound, ricochet etc. Use only light wadcutters that flatten out easily.
The plink plink plink attracted lots of attention. We charged a small fee for each loaded magazine. Boys raised about $50 an hour using 1 air rifle.
CO2 power factor allowed us to use crosman portable indoor range. In another setup we used double layers of packing blankets (5 dollars each) hung behind the targets for a backstop. A cheap shag carpet/rug hung behind for a backstop might also work well. Just test everything for safety concerns like rebound, ricochet etc. Use only light wadcutters that flatten out easily.
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- Joined: Fri Jul 05, 2013 4:30 am
Re: Fun/Carnival shooting games for public events?
Um, maybe you could shoot pumpkins? I'll bet they make a great "splat" sound.bdutton wrote:a shooting oriented game at a Kiwanis sponsored Pumpkin Fest.
Many decades ago, our Explorer Post set up a "target shooting" booth at the local Boy Scout Scout-a-rama (where units display their special interests). A couple of our talented Explorers made target-rifle style rubber band guns, with a 1407-style stock that looked great and shot extra-large rubber bands. It was a lot of fun, different, and a non-firearm intro to target shooting for a general audience. Targets were plastic cut out of milk jugs, and 35mm film canisters (remember them?!). We got the idea from the rubber band rifles that were sold at souvenir shops like Stuckeys (remember THEM?!).