Cowboy Action?
“What gives?”, you asked. Well, here is a letter I sent to SASS a couple of years ago.
Dear Wild Bunch,
I was just going to let my membership lapse quietly but since you asked why, I'll tell you why. Although I didn't join SASS until recently, I have been shooting Cowboy matches with my kids since 1997. I do not like what SASS has turned into and I do not see it ever changing back. Possibly another organization will start up like IDPA did when USPSA kept ignoring calls for change.
The final match I attended was the last straw. The pistol targets were 5 paces away and the size of a big screen TV. The rifle targets were at 7 to 10 paces and the same size. They were either all in a row or some boring sequence like 1-2-1-2-1-2. Every stage was the same with some slight variation in the target engagement . It would be one thing if it were only one club but every Cowboy Match I have attended in the last year is the same old song. The Cowboy Chronicle even crows about various matches where “targets were real close and big so shooters could blaze away”. Big targets, up close, no movement except possibly 5 to 7 paces laterally, no test of shooting ability and boring, boring, boring. Cowboy Action? I don't think so.
When I see a 280 lb guy shooting a .38 Special with two hands and shooting pitty-pat loads to boot, I just cringe. I think back to some of the first years of Cowboy shooting. Most everyone shot .45 Colts, most shot one handed unless they had arthritis or some other ailment (or were women or children), and loads were pretty standard, 225 or 250 grain bullets at least 700 to 800 fps. Loads were predicated on the old axiom “it needs to take down a hostile or his horse at 100 yards” or if a cowboy is on foot will it take down a charging longhorn? We actually had some courses set up like USPSA where we changed positions with guns drawn and sometimes engaged targets “on the move” (Oh my God!). Rifle targets were small and at distances of 35 to 75 yards. You actually had to slow down and take careful aim and sometimes even kneel (just like you would in real life). These were fun, challenging courses and they improved your shooting and thinking skills.
Those type matches are a distant memory. A year or so ago, I went to back to basics, shooting Classic Cowboy, double dualist, .45 Colt, full charge black powder loads. Something, anything to capture some of the original enjoyment. Well, you can never go home again. The modern SASS courses of fire have killed any chance of that. SASS has become a costumed, social gathering with shooting involved.
I might shoot a Cowboy match every once in a while, just to see if anything has changed. But for regular monthly shooting, my sons and I have gone to IDPA. They've got good scenarios, challenging skill and speed standards, shooting on the move, scoot, reload and shoot some more. We might even do some three gun matches to keep rifle and shotgun skills sharp. So, thanks for the memories and I wish you well, but for me, it's “Adios, amigos”.
Never received an answer, of course. Bill