He lifted the gun, setting it firmly into his shoulder. Even with shaking fingers, he was ready. He had been waiting for this moment and he wasn't
going to fail.
As the clay pigeon flew up, he raised his gun and fired. The excitement in his body spiked as he watched the clay pigeon blow into pieces.
Senior Karter Quarnberg had finally won his first belt buckle.
This moment at a skeet shooting club competition is one of Quarnberg’s favorite memories of being in the local club. The club, Trigger Therapy,
allows members to participate in events such as trap shooting and sporting plays.
Trap shooting is an event in which shooters stay in one spot and the clay pigeon (bird) flies in front of them and they shoot it. Sporting plays are like
golf, where shooters move around to different stations and shoot two clay pigeons at each. They get scored by their hits and misses, if they hit one then that's one point and if they miss one then they don't get any points.
This club got started around eight or nine years ago by the main coach and his friends. They started it just to have some fun, but then they expanded
the club by starting a youth program so the kids could get the same opportunity they had.
In this club there is one head coach, Richard Neilson, and parents or others can volunteer to be an assistant coach. This year they only have ten
shooters participating, but the members of this club still practice two days a week as a group.
Shooters can't be good overnight though, as this club takes lots of practice. Shooting this much can become costly, and members have to buy their
own bullets.
“I probably shoot an average of about 100, 200 rounds every week just for practice,” senior Carter Copple said. “It definitely is not a cheap sport,
unfortunately.”
Even though guns are the foundation of this club, nobody has ever got hurt being a part of the Trigger Therapy group. They practice gun safety and
enforce that you must treat your gun like it’s always loaded.
This sport, like any, can get mentally and even physically hard. These shooters can have a bunch of pressure that builds when they have been
successful at a competition.
“When I'm in a competition, I feel like I have to do really good or else there wasn't any point in me even coming out there,” Quarnberg said.
While it can be stressful, the club builds skills that could also help members with occupations and hobbies.
“Maybe you're interested in hunting or joining law enforcement or the military and this can definitely help with your marksmanship,” Copple said.
There are many ups and downs to skeet shooting but one thing is for sure. Everyone likes to hang out with their friends and make new friends
along the way.
“Everyone there was just a great person, great person to be around,” Copple said.
With a good environment, the club is hoping to expand its membership. Quarnberg believes that if you are interested in joining, give it a try to
boost club numbers.
“There's no harm in it, if you don't like it, you don't have to do it,” Quarnberg said.

