The fine art of getting along with your neighbors with airguns

Monday, April 22, 2013

First of all, let’s hold a few truths to be self-evident: the folks who read this blog are possessed of keen wit, superior intelligence, and fine judgment. After all, you are voluntarily, of your own free will, reading this blog, so that proves my point; the defense calls no further witnesses. To borrow a notion from Lake Woebegone, among the readers of this blog, all the women are pretty, all the men are good looking, and all the children are above average. So the topic of this blog is specifically not addressed at my regular readers.

Nevertheless, because evil, stupid, criminal, chemically deranged, or mentally ill people occasionally do horrific things with guns, and then the media waxes on excessively about the Evils of Guns (notice that they do not wax on excessively about the problem of evil, stupid, criminal, chemical deranged or mentally ill people, as if somehow the inanimate guns rather than the people who actually commit the acts were responsible), in the United States we live in a culture where some folks who are unfamiliar with projectile launchers can get pretty twitchy about them.

As I write this, two incidents come to mind, both of which I personally witnessed. The first I offer as evidence of some folks’ mental state when it comes to guns. I was shooting in the side yard, testing an airgun, when some college kids in a car, apparently lost, came up our dead-end road. As they pulled into a neighbor’s driveway to turn around, I heard one of the young women say, “Oooh, he has a gun!” in a tone that suggested she was concerned. I continued shooting, made no reaction, and they drove off. But I was mildly offended. Did she think that because I had an airgun I was somehow a threat to her safety? If I were trimming limbs with a chainsaw, would she be equally concerned? (Hey, hasn’t she seen The Texas Chainsaw Massacre? Be afraid, be very afraid!)

The second I offer as evidence that some folks’ attitudes about guns are based on ignorance. A few years ago, the good folks at www.airgunsofarizona.com were kind enough to fly me to Phoenix to attend the NRA show there. It was a wonderful show, and in a large room there, a collection of airgun vendors had set up an airgun shooting venue with tables, chairs, and guns on one side of the room, and pellet traps and targets on the other side. It was an excellent setup, well organized and well run. As I was visiting the room, a family arrived with perhaps at 10-year-old girl. One of the parents asked, “Would you like to try shooting an airgun?” No, said the girl emphatically, I don’t like guns. Then, if I recall correctly, one of the guys from Airguns of Arizona said, “Why you just try a couple of shots, and if you don’t like it, you can just quit?” The girl agreed, and in a twinkling of an eye, the next problem they had was that she didn’t want to stop shooting. She had gone through two or three magazines of pellets, and was holding up the line! The point being that some people think they don’t like guns, but that is simply a cultural attitude and not based on real experience.

So, by now I bet you are wondering where I am going with all this. Okay, here’s the point: every once in a while I will notice on one of the forums that an airgunner has gotten into a problem with one of his or her neighbors over shooting the back yard. What follows are Uncle Jock’s tips for getting along with the neighbors with your airguns. Note well: all of this is predicated on the notion that your relations with your neighbors are positive or at least neutral. If you have already had a really negative interaction with your neighbor over some issue, all bets are off.

First, know where you stand legally. Make a phone call to the police or sheriff and ask, “What’s the status of shooting airguns in (name of place where you live)?” You may find out that it is perfectly legal, or that it is forbidden, or that it is legal under certain circumstances. The point is that you need to know, for certain, where you stand; ignorance is not your friend.

Second, have some positive interaction with your neighbor ahead of time. Say hi. Rescue their garbage can from the street. Welcome them to the neighborhood. Chitchat at the mailbox. Show that you are a good guy (or gal).

Third, approach them at some time about your shooting. (Do NOT take the gun with you.) Some might say something like this: “I’m planning on shooting an airgun in the backyard, so if you see me out there with a gun, that’s what I am doing. I am very concerned about safety, so I will be shooting into a pellet trap. I always make sure that the shooting lane is clear, so that if your cat (or dog or child) should wander into my yard, I’ll stop shooting until they are clear. Do you have any questions?” Depending on their reaction, you might offer to show the gun to them or even invite them to shoot.

Fourth, be considerate of when you shoot. If the neighbor works the night shift and he needs to sleep until noon or if the baby naps every afternoon, that would be a poor time to be banging away with your airgun. When you speak to the neighbor you might say, “My airguns are pretty quiet, but is there any time that I should avoid disturbing you?”

Finally, you may have a neighbor who is just inalterably against guns and doesn’t want to see, hear, or know about them. In that case, my advice is to hide your shooting. The basement is a popular venue for many airgunners, and I know of one targeteer who in an urban backyard from an enclosed back porch into a pellet trap hidden in a garden shed.

Til next time, aim true and shoot straight.

–          Jock Elliott

 

 

6 Comments

  1. Sean says:

    4 years ago my neighbor across the street was shooting a semi-auto power-burner. It honestly scared me a bit seeing this so close to the street. I approached them because it made me and my family very uncomfortable and asked them to stop — which they did.
    Last year I started hunting and took the required gun safety course. Now, I look back at that moment and admit that I was ignorant. I’ll also say that if they had approached me in the way that you described that I probably would have changed my stance.
    A lot of people are scared of what they don’t know and it’s up to us to nicely and politely educate them, especially when there are so many shouting uneducated points of view.

    1. Jock Elliott says:

      Sean,

      Thanks for sharing your experience and your insight.

  2. brian says:

    Mr Elliot,

    I believe that with minimal imagination that there is a “stealth” solution to airgunning and target practice at almost anyones residence. Such as the scenario related to your friend shooting from an enclosed patio into the door opening of a outdoor utility shed.
    I would like to simply remind others that such improvised and especially of the stealth type of shooting lane requires a ever greater heightened awareness of your surroundings! Often times a long hallway indoors or shooting from one room into another is employed. Whenever one shoots through a doorway outdoors or indoors… Please be cautious of any possible bystander crossing into the pathway!!! Ideally one needs to make certain that the whole pathway or area is fully secured. Just remember anyone could step into the path and you would not see them until too late. ESPECIALLY IF YOU ARE BEING STEALTH.

    1. Jock Elliott says:

      Brian,

      I agree 100%. Safety is priority number one!

    2. Jock Elliott says:

      Brian,

      I couldn’t agree more. Safety comes first. Murphy’s Law says if anything can go wrong it will; the first corollary to Murphy’s Law says even if anything can’t go wrong, it still will. The second corollary says it will go wrong at the worst possible time. The final corollary says “Murphy was an optimist.” You are completely right: the entire pathway must be fully secured.

  3. jon says:

    I had a beautiful setup shooting from a small window in the warmth of my house to a nice target in the cold or rain. One night I was shooting, scope went black. It was my cat asking for dinner on the window shelf outside.I bought a lighter rifle & shoot smaller targets in my garage. Its just as fun. Shoot safe & be happy. Jon

Leave a Reply

This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your comment data is processed.