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Shooting ranges give gun owners a place to enjoy their sport

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Doctors, lawyers, active-duty and retired soldiers, college students and corporate groups on team-building exercises come from Raleigh, Cary, Apex, Pinehurst and elsewhere to play the course, usually in groups of two to six people. It takes about an hour and a half to go all the way around. Safety is constantly stressed.

There’s also trap shooting and a pistol-shooting range, as well as safety and shooting courses taught by certified instructors, and a pro shop offering outdoor clothing and firearms.

Bill Kempffer grew up in South Carolina and Missouri and learned to handle guns as a young boy hunting and shooting clay with his father. Mary came to the sport later in life. Both left successful jobs to start the seven-day-a-week business, which they saw as both an opportunity both for self-employment and a form of ministry.

“From the start, we saw this as family entertainment, something kids and their parents can do together,” said Bill. “What we offer is an opportunity to be outside, to exercise and to socialize. And it’s a sport that anyone can do. We offer a Carolina outdoor experience.”

Ranges across the state

There are nearly 100 shooting ranges across the state, most of them privately owned, according to a list on the N.C. Wildlife Resources Commission’s website. In Wake, Durham, Harnett, Lee, Cumberland, Granville and Franklin counties, shooters have their choice of at least 14 facilities. Some charge membership fees and annual dues, while others charge by activity or event. Some rent firearms for use on the range or course; others require shooters to bring their own.

Shooters can be as casual or as competitive as they want. While some don’t keep score, others join national shooting associations and attend matches where their scores are tracked and reported for comparison as shooters work their way up from novice to marksman to sharpshooter, expert, master and distinguished master.

“I’m an expert in one gun and a sharpshooter in some others,” said Franklin Glover, a former police officer who started The Range in Oxford because he and some friends who competed needed another place to shoot.

Now, he runs training sessions for law enforcement officers, and he’s got a match of some type just about every weekend. He just finished the Zombie Shooters Association of America’s All Gun Match.

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