100-Yard Range

Covered Rifle Range

100-Yard Range

The club’s 100-yard range is the longest rifle range on the property, with covered shooting stations for long-distance rifle practice. Shooters fire from the pavilion across an open grassy field to targets downrange, with a wooded backstop beyond. The 50-yard and 25-yard ranges are nearby for shorter-distance shooting.

Covered firing line at the 100-yard range

The covered pavilion provides picnic tables and benches along the firing line, with lane markers and safety signage posted on the support posts. A small downrange building and low fencing are visible across the open field, with dense forest forming the backstop behind the target area.

Range Rules

All shooters must follow the club range rules. Summaries below are provided for convenience — the complete rules are in the Orientation Package and Rule Book on the Members Only page.

General Safety

  • No alcohol — do not use any range after consuming alcohol that day.
  • The first member on a range acts as Range Officer and must designate a replacement before leaving.
  • Ring the bell before using a range during hunting season.
  • Carry your membership card while on club property and any range.
  • Wear eye protection during all shooting activities; wear hearing protection when the line is hot.
  • Clean up brass, hulls, targets, and debris before you leave.
  • Members are responsible for guests (up to four guests without board approval).
  • Range hours: Monday–Saturday 8:00 AM to sunset; Sunday 9:00 AM to sunset.
  • Obey RANGE CLOSED signs on the main gate — no shooting until the sign is removed.
  • No fully automatic weapons or devices that simulate automatic fire (e.g., bump stocks).

Rifle and Pistol Ranges

  • When the line is cold, firearms stay unloaded with actions open and magazines removed.
  • Firearms may be loaded only after the Range Officer declares the line hot.
  • No firearm handling while anyone is downrange.
  • Use paper targets (or approved clays) placed at least one foot from posts; shoot only into the berm impact area.
  • No improvised targets such as cans, glass bottles, steel plates, or appliances.
  • No hip draw or draw-and-shoot; holstered handguns must be unloaded while holstered.