Scottish Shooters Visit California for American-Canadian Matches
A large contingent of the Scottish rifle team came to Sacramento, California last week for the 23rd Annual American-Canadian and Long Range matches. A great time was had by all. Members of the U.S. Long Range Rifle team say: “Thank you for making the journey over and we hope to see you all again this fall at Camp Perry and/or Canada Nationals.”
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Congratulations to Scottish Team member Ian Shaw for winning the American-Canadian Full Bore Match! Here is Ian celebrating his victory with his winning mug. We met with Ian in February after the Berger Southwest Nationals. At the Phoenix airport, this Editor shared a quick meal with Ian and two of his Team London-Scottish comrades before the trio jetted home across the Atlantic.
As we chatted, I quickly learned how serious and dedicated these guys are. It’s no surprise to me that Ian took the top prize at the American-Canadian match. During our airport interview, Ian talked about target rifle shooting in the UK, and he invited American full-bore shooters to attend the Queen’s Prize Match held each year during the Imperial Meeting at the Bisley Range. Ian said, “Tell your American readers to come. This is a big match every year, with 900 competitors, about 700 of whom are from the UK.” Here’s a video explaining the history of the Queen’s Prize Match.
History of the Queen’s Prize Match (BBC, 1986)
Photos from U.S. Long Range Rifle Team.H.M. The Queen’s Prize
The Queen’s Prize Match was first shot in 1860 when the Sovereign (Queen Victoria) gave a prize of £250 for the winner. This amount has remained unchanged to this day although in the original days, it was a considerable sum. The winner earns the right to have the initials ‘GM’ after his or her name. As detailed in the section below, there are three stages to the competition, the winners of the second stage earn the initials ‘SM’. The final stage is shot on the last Saturday of the NRA Imperial meeting held in July.
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Tags: American-Canadian, Canada, Full Bore, Ian Shaw, Palma, Sacramento, Scotland, UK
I think handguns are banned in Scotland. Glad they can still have rifles although I believe the rifles and ammo must be registered.
weapons and ammo must be registred through all European countries, with some countries like UK banning handguns, other (France and Italy) banning “military calibers” like .308, .223, 9×19, etc.
Military calibers were not really banned in France: you needed an administrative authorization to get them.
Since september 2013, restrictions remains for the pistol calibers, but all rifle calibers are now treated the same way (except for a handful of rifle calibers like .223, 5,45 and 7,62×39, .50 BMG…). It’s easier. Just took almost 75 years to convince or dear leaders…
Does anyone know what rifle/action that is? It is featured prominently throughout the video and looks to be the same action every time they show a close-up of it, specifically the one that the host uses to shoot at around 20:30 in and on when the host is shooting in the `laying on his back` position, if you will, lol(IDK what else to call it).
It almost looks like a old-school Barnard but I just cant tell, never seen that particular action before.
So does anyone know what brand/model action that is, on the rifle the host uses(and in many other close-ups in the vid)?
Thanks.
Blake.
The rifle you are referring to which is shot by David & Bill Richards is the Swing Rifle, the predessesor to the RPA which is now used by a large number if British rifle shooters.