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Shooting ranges give gun owners a place to enjoy their sport

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(MCT) — RALEIGH, N.C. — While the renewed arguments over gun control have focused on the use of firearms in violent crime, many gun owners are more like Judy Hughes of Raleigh.

All she expects to kill with her guns is time.

For more than a decade, Hughes has been a regular at several local shooting clubs and ranges, where she has developed considerable skill shooting still and moving targets with pistols and shot guns. Just as she might like to swing a golf club or a tennis racket, Hughes and countless thousands in and around the Research Triangle Park area like firing at clay disks and metal silhouettes. The only difference, they say, is that the tools of their sport are potentially lethal devices whose ownership is protected by the Second Amendment to the U.S. Constitution.

People such as Hughes practice their skills in the midst of a high-intensity national debate on gun control that has many shooters afraid that the government will eventually take away their sporting firearms. Even strict gun-control advocates say that’s not the goal, but the perceived threat is in the background every time recreational shooters go to the range.

“There is such camaraderie, just like in any other sport,” Hughes said. “There is the enjoyment in being in the out of doors. There’s the challenge. And I enjoy the success that comes from being able to break one of those clay pigeons or hit a bulls-eye on a paper target.

“The first day I tried it, I was able to hit the targets,” Hughes said. “I didn’t hit every single one of them, but I hit enough of those targets to say, ‘Wow. This is fun.’”

One of the places Hughes likes to shoot is at Deep River Sporting Clays and Shooting School just north of Sanford. Mary and Bill Kempffer started the business in 1989 on 65 acres of pine timberland. Bill Kempffer, who was working at a brokerage at the time, saw something called “sporting clays” began to take the place of game hunting in Great Britain.

The Kempffers started with a clubhouse and a 1.25-mile course through the woods with 13 stations. Shooters stop at the stations and try to hit clay discs being fired across clearings at various speeds and trajectories.

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