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	<title>Girls Guide to Guns &#187; girls and guns</title>
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	<link>https://girlsguidetoguns.com</link>
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		<title>WY Radio Station Honors Girls and Their Guns</title>
		<link>https://girlsguidetoguns.com/2011/10/04/wy-radio-station-honors-girls-and-their-guns/</link>
		<comments>https://girlsguidetoguns.com/2011/10/04/wy-radio-station-honors-girls-and-their-guns/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Tue, 04 Oct 2011 17:53:03 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Natalie</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Events]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[breast cancer awareness]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[girls and gun photos]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[girls and guns]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[photos of women with their guns]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">https://girlsguide.skyrocket.me/?p=4024</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[<p>A Casper, WY radio station is holding a contest for girls who love their guns in honor of Breast Cancer Awareness Month.</p><p>You just finished reading <a href="/2011/10/04/wy-radio-station-honors-girls-and-their-guns/">WY Radio Station Honors Girls and Their Guns</a> on <a href="/">Girls Guide to Guns</a>. Please consider leaving a comment!</p>]]></description>
				<content:encoded><![CDATA[<h4>Check out the contest that a <a href="https://mycountry955.com/my-country-95-5s-girls-and-their-guns-photo-contest/" target="_blank">Casper, WY radio station </a>is sponsoring in honor of Breast Cancer Awareness Month:</h4>
<p><a href="/files/2011/10/Picture-26.jpg"><img class="alignleft size-full wp-image-4025" src="/files/2011/10/Picture-26.jpg" alt="" width="599" height="401" /></a></p>
<p>This is the ad from their website:</p>
<p>Ladies &#8212; we know that here in Wyoming, more women know their way around a firearm than in most places. So, we’re celebrating <strong>Girls and Their Guns</strong> with our friends at <a href="https://local.yahoo.com/info-19784403-rocky-mountain-discount-sports-casper">Rocky Mountain Discount Sports</a>! Some lucky lady is going to win a <a href="https://www.taurususa.com/product-details.cfm?id=717&amp;category=Pistol&amp;toggle=&amp;breadcrumbseries=">pink Taurus 738 TCP</a> &#8212; the lightest semi-automatic Taurus pistol ever created.</p>
<p>All you have to do is submit a photo of yourself with your favorite firearm! We’ll take photos through October 16th, and then put it to a public vote at <a href="https://vip.mycountry955.com/">mycountry955.com</a> from October 17th through October 30th. The winner gets announced and awarded the pistol on October 31. It’s also <a href="https://mycountry955.com/tags/breast-cancer-awareness-month/">Breast Cancer Awareness</a> month &#8212; and the folks at Rocky Mountain Discount Sports have a huge selection of everything you need to go pink &#8212; from hats &amp; snow gear, to pink camo, knives, guns, even pink shotgun shells and self-defense items! Get directions <a href="https://local.yahoo.com/info-19784403-rocky-mountain-discount-sports-casper">here</a>.</p>
<h2>What are you waiting for? Get over there and submit your favorite photo! Click this link:</h2>
<p><a href="https://mycountry955.com/my-country-95-5s-girls-and-their-guns-photo-contest/" target="_blank">https://mycountry955.com/my-country-95-5s-girls-and-their-guns-photo-contest/</a></p>
<p>You just finished reading <a href="/2011/10/04/wy-radio-station-honors-girls-and-their-guns/">WY Radio Station Honors Girls and Their Guns</a> on <a href="/">Girls Guide to Guns</a>. Please consider leaving a comment!</p>]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>A look at Lindsay McCrum&#8217;s &#8220;Chicks With Guns&#8221;</title>
		<link>https://girlsguidetoguns.com/2011/10/03/a-look-at-lindsay-mccrums-chicks-with-guns/</link>
		<comments>https://girlsguidetoguns.com/2011/10/03/a-look-at-lindsay-mccrums-chicks-with-guns/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Mon, 03 Oct 2011 22:33:41 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Natalie</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Books]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[In Words]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[chicks with guns book]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[girls and guns]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[lindsay mccrum]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">https://girlsguide.skyrocket.me/?p=4010</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[<p>Guest Blogger Shari Spivack shares her first impressions about Lindsay McCrum's new book, "Chicks with Guns"</p><p>You just finished reading <a href="/2011/10/03/a-look-at-lindsay-mccrums-chicks-with-guns/">A look at Lindsay McCrum&#8217;s &#8220;Chicks With Guns&#8221;</a> on <a href="/">Girls Guide to Guns</a>. Please consider leaving a comment!</p>]]></description>
				<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>By Shari Spivack</p>
<p>&nbsp;</p>
<p><a href="../files/2011/10/Picture-1.jpg"><img class="alignleft size-full wp-image-4011" src="../files/2011/10/Picture-1.jpg" alt="" width="423" height="548" /></a>When I first came upon the opportunity to preorder the book <a href="https://www.chickswithgunsbook.com/#a=0&amp;at=0&amp;mi=2&amp;pt=1&amp;pi=10000&amp;s=0&amp;p=0" target="_blank">Chicks with Guns by Lindsay McCrum</a>, which was released this month, I wasn’t sure what exactly to expect. I am always beyond excitement to see a book that portrays women gun owners in a positive way and gives me information about my fellow female gun enthusiasts across the country. Do not be fooled by the playful title of this coffee table book however, it contains portraits of 78 women gun owners from around the country. The women portrayed are as diverse as the guns they favor. The range of ages presented runs from the very young to women who have enjoyed decades of shooting &#8212; each with deep connections to gun ownership that began as early as the cradle and as late as mid-life.</p>
<p>There are fifteen to twenty million women gun owners in this country and, as the forward to the book states, photographing females with “ostensibly deadly weapons” challenges our preconceptions of the feminine or maternal role. The book breaks the masculine versus feminine barrier of gun ownership and showcases how commonplace and integral a connection to guns can be for many women across America. It is noted that when McCrum began the project, she began with mainly hunters and competitive shooters, however, the end product shows that there is a vast and varied population of women who own guns for pleasure, sport and defense &#8212; something woman gun owners already know. The photographer did not exploit the story that each photograph would tell about its subject. Each woman is artistically presented, with her gun, in an elegant manner, one that reflects the personality and gun culture that each woman is connected to. A short biography of a few paragraphs accompanies each photograph, in which the women detail in their own words such things as how they became involved with guns, some of their favorite guns to own, and in some cases, how they view the female relationship to gun ownership. It is a politically neutral presentation of gun ownership, the goal is biographical, not advocacy.</p>
<p>Many of the women gracing the pages grew up around guns. They were fortunate to learn to shoot from their fathers and experience the joys of hunting and nature with their mothers and sisters. Several women stated that they met their boyfriends and future husbands though gun competitions and events. If this is your goal then they proved in their own words that Annie Oakley was wrong when she said “You can’t get a man with a gun.”</p>
<p>There were several women who did not learn about guns from a male influence but developed their own connections to firearms&#8211; some who went on to work in police and military service and others who simply own guns for recreation or protection. A few women stand out in my mind: the woman who loves participating in Wild West style shooting competitions for the love of the sport <a href="/files/2011/10/Picture-11.jpg"><img class="size-full wp-image-4012 alignright" src="/files/2011/10/Picture-11.jpg" alt="" width="348" height="465" /></a>and states there is nothing is like the thrill of a bullet hitting the target. Or another who imagines there is nothing better than “a day outdoors in camo with a rifle” (I am totally with you here, although my choice of venue is a bit different). One woman grew up in England as a very girly girl, in an atmosphere where girls did not learn to shoot. Her father taught her to shoot game anyway and it became a way of life for her, but she notes she is still a girly girl who enjoys shooting in a skirt.</p>
<p>A few women spoke about empowerment and how they love to introduce other women to the joys of shooting. This is absolutely one of my own personal goals, to bring as many women to the range as possible, so this especially hit home for me. I also enjoyed reading about the community of women gun owners in Virginia who formed a club for women called GRITS &#8212; Girls Really Into Shooting &#8211; to provide a comfortable place for women to learn to shoot who don’t feel confident enough to try it alone. I think this woman’s story in particular sums up what is important about women and guns. It portrays just how women, by their different nature, are able to make a male dominated environment such as gun ownership their own. Women support each other in different ways then men, so it rings true that we should create our own environments for education and self expression with firearms as many of the women in this book (and across the country) have done.</p>
<p>The book does a fairly good job of representing the vast range of women who own guns across America. There is a strong focus on women who grew up in families that owned guns and passed down a gun culture that includes hunting and outdoor recreation. There is a respectable representation of women who own guns for self protection and several who have chosen professions where they use their firearms to serve and protect. This may very well reflect the numbers within the larger population.</p>
<p>Lindsay McCrum’s artistic talents in Chicks with Guns, offer an aesthetically pleasing pictorial record of female gun owners and delivers a good account of the passion and seriousness women across the country have for their guns.</p>
<p><em>About Shari Spivack: I am a wife, mother and firearms instructor who has my own passion for shooting, teaching and continuing to educate myself with all types of firearms in a safe and responsible manner. It is always my pleasure to talk to other women gun owners &#8211; please feel free to email me at Shari@shootstraightnj.com.</em></p>
<p>You just finished reading <a href="/2011/10/03/a-look-at-lindsay-mccrums-chicks-with-guns/">A look at Lindsay McCrum&#8217;s &#8220;Chicks With Guns&#8221;</a> on <a href="/">Girls Guide to Guns</a>. Please consider leaving a comment!</p>]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>Guest Blog: Women &amp; Their Guns</title>
		<link>https://girlsguidetoguns.com/2011/07/31/guest-blog-women-their-guns/</link>
		<comments>https://girlsguidetoguns.com/2011/07/31/guest-blog-women-their-guns/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Sun, 31 Jul 2011 17:31:21 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Natalie</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[In Words]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[empowering]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[empowering women]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[firearm instructors]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[firearms]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[girls and guns]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[guest blog]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[maggie]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[mossberg]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[women]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[women and guns]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">https://girlsguide.skyrocket.me/?p=3541</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[<p>Maggie steps in again with her own perspective on the reasons every girl should try shooting.</p><p>You just finished reading <a href="/2011/07/31/guest-blog-women-their-guns/">Guest Blog: Women &amp; Their Guns</a> on <a href="/">Girls Guide to Guns</a>. Please consider leaving a comment!</p>]]></description>
				<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><em>Guest Blogger Maggie chimes in once again with the reasons she thinks women should get in to shooting. We couldn&#8217;t agree more!</em></p>
<p>I’m always so excited when I get to pick up a new gun. I look at my new purchase in awe thinking, “Wow, this is MINE”. This time the newest member of the family was a <a href="https://www.mossberg.com/products/default.asp?id=41">Mossberg 510 mini shotgun</a>. It’s my first shotgun and it will be perfect for me and to teach my kids with as well. As I look at it, all I can think about is taking it to the range, but it’s about ten o’clock at night now and the range won’t be open until 10 am tomorrow.</p>
<p>It’s exactly this feeling that I want to see other female firearms owners experience. What I have seen after taking women to the range and speaking with others is that some women have a tendency to hold back on how they feel about owning and shooting guns (at least in this part of the USA). It’s almost like they feel they don’t have the right to really own one or a place in that world &#8212; I don’t know why, but I imagine that it has something to do with shooting not being a “feminine” activity. That it’s not OK to express an interest in things that are loud and make really big holes in the target. But after speaking with the women who have come shooting with me, I learned they quickly realize how empowering and fun it can be, too.</p>
<p>The days of the quiet, polite female who takes a back seat in a man’s world are long since gone, but society’s stereotypes die hard and there are still those who might view certain sports and activities as masculine. I wasn’t raised this way, in fact, in my family all the kids were treated equally regardless of gender. My brother took his turn washing the dishes and cooking dinner, and my sisters and I put in our time mowing the lawn and helping my father with projects in the garage. My parents always told my four sisters and me that we could do anything we wanted, and they stood behind us all the way. I never would have thought I couldn’t own, handle, or even build guns if I put my mind to it and wanted it badly enough. It took me a while to realize that not everyone is as fortunate as we were.</p>
<p>I find it interesting to read about strong women who stand out and do things that are not considered “ladylike”. For example, on July 4th, I read the story of Sonya Thomas, who at 5 feet and 105 pounds has become a competitive eating champion. She gets up in front of crowds of spectators and beats her male competitors time and time again, often to the jeers of the audience and sometimes with a barrage of garbage raining down on her. Say what you will about the gross out factor of competitive eating, the fact that Sonya walked into a stadium full of Philly fans to compete in the 2005 Wing Bowl where she was touted by the crowd as the “feminist villain” shows that she has a confidence that is admirable. This past July 4th she won the annual Nathan’s hotdog eating contest in the newly created women’s division.</p>
<p>And then you have someone like Bonnie, a 70 year old grandmother who found a man had broken into her New Hampshire home undressed, and was sitting at her kitchen table eating a meal from her refrigerator. She was rightly concerned about the safety of her grandson asleep upstairs and grabbed a bat and starting beating the man until he left the house. Bonnie told the media, “I don’t want anyone to ever think they can hurt my family and get away with it. You have got to take care of yourself,” she says, “You’re not weak, be strong. There’s always a way to protect yourself. Use it.” Exactly. Now that is a woman who has confidence in herself, and it showcases that no one should ever feel the need to hold back when protecting themselves &#8212; male or female.</p>
<p>These are two different women, who feel comfortable enough with themselves to act outside what can be considered acceptable for women in our society. They are two women who are not afraid to draw on the confidence they feel inside themselves and do what feels right for them. I understand it can be hard to walk into male dominated environments, like a gun shop or shooting range, especially alone. This is one of the reasons I decided to become a firearms instructor. I enjoy introducing students, and especially women, to the world of firearms.</p>
<p>Once women make the decision to go for it and enter the range, I find many are afraid to handle the gun because of a fear they might break it. So they handle it gently, like it’s fragile or irreplaceable. Don’t be afraid to handle your gun roughly ladies! (By this I mean don’t pick it up like you would a newborn infant). A 9mm handgun can withstand twenty five thousand pounds of blow back pressure (psi) when you pull the trigger; believe me, even if you are at the gym every day, you can’t duplicate that kind of power. It’s actually better not to assist or baby your gun when chambering a round. Rack the slide and let it fly forward. Really get to know your firearm, touch everything on it and know how it works! Please be safe though and follow all safe gun handling rules including making sure it’s unloaded first. The gun is just a tool to get the job done, it’s no different than many other tools you will use on a daily basis. And it’s your tool. Whether your goal is to send some rounds down range at a piece of paper for fun or to gain some experience in order to keep a gun for self defense, like any other tool you own, knowing intimately how it works will allow it to work best for you.</p>
<p>It doesn’t matter if you want to shoot in pink earmuffs, or you buy a rifle <a href="https://www.duracoat-firearm-finishes.com/">DuraCoat</a>ed in a purple camouflage pattern &#8212; in fact, bedazzle your gun case if you like, because it only matters how you feel inside about shooting your gun. You are just as capable and probably more responsible, than the guy in the next port. Don’t assume he knows any more than you do. Don’t misunderstand; my goal is only to encourage women to have confidence in their own ability to handle a gun. I have been the recipient of much encouragement and support of male instructors and gun owners.</p>
<p>I look at shooting as my time to relax so I often enjoy shooting alone. It’s at least as good as <a href="/2010/11/21/shooting-range-the-new-spa/" target="_blank">a visit to the spa</a>. I have to clear my mind and turn off my phone to concentrate on what I am doing, especially if I want to shoot well. But I know that sometimes it’s easier to go with a friend.</p>
<p>My favorite experience was taking a friend to shoot who was sure she just would not be able to do it. Yes, of course she thought it was great that I could but there was no reasoning with her. It was too complicated, too much recoil, too much unfounded fear that she could never protect herself &#8212; that it wasn’t her job, her right, her responsibility to do so. After she fired the handguns, and very well I might add, I convinced her to shoot the AR-15. After the first round, she just paused and then looked at me. “Wow,” she said, “that felt great. I can do this. I feel so empowered.” Hello, and welcome to my world. Remember ladies, it’s your gun, don’t be afraid of it. Own it.</p>
<p>You just finished reading <a href="/2011/07/31/guest-blog-women-their-guns/">Guest Blog: Women &amp; Their Guns</a> on <a href="/">Girls Guide to Guns</a>. Please consider leaving a comment!</p>]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>Guest Blog: Little &#8220;Monsters&#8221;</title>
		<link>https://girlsguidetoguns.com/2011/07/18/guest-blog-little-monsters/</link>
		<comments>https://girlsguidetoguns.com/2011/07/18/guest-blog-little-monsters/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Mon, 18 Jul 2011 11:53:19 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Katie</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[In Words]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[bonding]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[ccw]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[daughters]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[first time shooting]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[girls and guns]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[guest blog]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[guns]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[in words]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[mother daughter]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[mother daughter bonding]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[New York City]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[nra]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[pistol]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[rifle]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[shooting]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[women]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[women and guns]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">https://girlsguidetoguns.com/?p=3203</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[<p>Guest writer Annette is back &#38; shares what it was like introducing her daughters to guns.</p><p>You just finished reading <a href="/2011/07/18/guest-blog-little-monsters/">Guest Blog: Little &#8220;Monsters&#8221;</a> on <a href="/">Girls Guide to Guns</a>. Please consider leaving a comment!</p>]]></description>
				<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><em>Guest blogger Annette is back and this time she&#8217;s showing her daughters all the right (and safe) moves on the gun range.  We think this is a great way for both moms and dads to bond with their children and instill in them a respect for firearms that will stick with them as they grow older.<br />
</em></p>
<p>Watch out Lady GaGa, there are new “Little Monsters,” and they’re all mine!   Yes, I’ve turned my two daughters into little monsters&#8230; shooting monsters that is!  Shooting isn’t something that kids do in our neck of the woods. We live in a suburb of New York City, and firearms are, for the most part, a taboo subject.</p>
<p>When my husband and I applied for our pistol permits back in 2008, I think my girls may have been a little freaked out.  In our county, pretty much all you can apply for is a “Sportsman Residence” license which allows you to target shoot, hike and hunt.  CCW’s are rarely granted because the judges who issue them make you prove “need.”  Yes, it’s a violation of my 2nd Amendment Rights, and I am preparing to petition the Judge assigned to my license for conversion to a CCW, but I digress&#8230; that will be a whole other blog entry down the road.</p>
<p>Back to my girls! It all started a few years ago when we went with friends up to a cabin in Upstate New York for a day of shooting. My husband, who had shot competitively on the New York State Junior Rifle team when he was young, hadn’t shot in years after losing the end of his trigger finger in a lawn mower accident when he was 14. (Yeah, I know.) My friend&#8217;s dad, who owned the cabin, was a World War II hero, Army 82nd Airborne, retired from the Sheriff&#8217;s Department, worked for the FBI, Firearm Instructor&#8230; I could go on and on about “Pop” but first and foremost, he taught us about firearms and safety that day, and what a blast we all had.  My girls at the time were 10 and 12, and with his guidance, they shot several types and calibers of rifles and revolvers.  It was a great foundation for us all, and the beginning of what has become a passion of mine!</p>
<p>My 14½ year-old daughter had the opportunity to join me at the range <a href="/2011/06/20/guest-blog-a-newbies-first-competitive-shoot/" target="_blank">when I earned my ProMarksman NRA rating</a>.  School was still in session, but winding down, and she had an afternoon full of nothing at school, so I took her out early, deciding that not every lesson in life was learned in the classroom.</p>
<div id="attachment_3206" class="wp-caption alignright" style="width: 140px"><a href="/files/2011/04/AD06-11.jpg"><img class="size-full wp-image-3206" src="/files/2011/04/AD06-11.jpg" alt="" width="130" height="98" /></a><p class="wp-caption-text">Me and my Browning.</p></div>
<p>We were joined at the range my buddy Bob, who usually emailed me before heading to the range because he knows I’m not yet comfortable being there by myself.  Bob has lots and lots of “toys” and usually brings quite a nice assortment of firearms for us to “play” with!  I brought along my Browning Buck Mark Camper .22 pistol, and my newly acquired Savage Mark II (NRA limited edition!) .22 rifle that I purchased from the widow of a club member who passed away last year.</p>
<p>This would be Beth’s second time to the range. She participated last Fall in our Club’s annual Turkey Shoot, where she was the hit of the group going from member to member trying out their .22 rifles &#8211; seems everybody wanted Beth to try their rifle.</p>
<div id="attachment_3204" class="wp-caption alignleft" style="width: 310px"><a href="/files/2011/04/IMG00772-20110526-1208.jpg"><img class="size-medium wp-image-3204" src="/files/2011/04/IMG00772-20110526-1208-300x225.jpg" alt="" width="300" height="225" /></a><p class="wp-caption-text">Beth takes aim.</p></div>
<p>She had a blast, and it was her first time shooting since she was 10. Bob is an excellent instructor and he’s great with kids. He’ll likely head up our newly formed Jr. Club, since we now have “juniors” who are interested!  Beth shot everything from both of my firearms, to a .38 carbine rifle, to a .357 Magnum, (he loaded the first 2 chambers with .38s so she’d get a feel for it, then the rest with .357s, she did great and loved every second.) She spent the next few weeks of school pleading for me to take her out early, so we could go shooting! Yes&#8230; Monster #1 created.</p>
<p>Kristen, my 16-year-old, had all her hard classes in the afternoon, so there was no early dismissal for her. She had to wait until school was done and testing was over, but we found an opportunity last week when she had a day free of testing. We’ve tried to take her to the range before, but something always got in the way. When I got a call from another club member, Mike, letting me know he was going down to the range, we loaded the truck and headed out.</p>
<p>I started her on the .22 rifle since Mike was practicing for the upcoming Bulls-Eye shoot from 25 yards.  I figured rifle might be the better option and placed her targets at about 15 yards. She got used to the scope quickly, and had some nice groupings for her first day. (Obviously, she takes after me.) When Mike was done, we moved outside and she played with my Buck Mark a bit.</p>
<div id="attachment_3205" class="wp-caption alignright" style="width: 140px"><a href="/files/2011/04/KD06-11.jpg"><img class="size-full wp-image-3205" src="/files/2011/04/KD06-11.jpg" alt="" width="130" height="97" /></a><p class="wp-caption-text">Kristen&#039;s turn.</p></div>
<p>She couldn’t decide whether she liked the pistol or the rifle better, so she shot both. I didn’t get a lot of practice in, because she was just having too darned much fun! After a while, Mike left and it was just her and me.  She was much more relaxed having just me watching her, and she really began to shine.  I took her in close to the target and showed her some basic tactical shooting&#8230; well, clearly this was her favorite, and she did well. Yes, Monster #2&#8230; created!</p>
<p>As of Thursday, the girls testing will be finished and another school year will be successfully in the books. This frees us up for a summer at the range, which we’re all looking forward to! Being self employed, I have the flexibility to work when convenient; if it’s a beautiful day, I can up and leave my home office and hit the range for a while. (I call it “group therapy.”) One of these times, we’ll even let my husband play&#8230; poor guy is stuck at work all day (hey, somebody has to pay for the new toys, right??!!).</p>
<p>On a serious note, I believe teaching my girls to shoot will be one of the most important things they learn. Besides actual shooting, this sport involves <a href="/2010/11/21/shooting-range-the-new-spa/" target="_blank">safety, patience, responsibility and self confidence</a>. And lastly, as a mother of two beautiful daughters, I hope that the boys they eventually date have seen their Facebook profile pictures of them shooting big scoped rifles.</p>
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		<title>Interview with Doreen Garrett of OTIS Tech</title>
		<link>https://girlsguidetoguns.com/2011/06/28/interview-with-doreen-garrett-of-otis-tech/</link>
		<comments>https://girlsguidetoguns.com/2011/06/28/interview-with-doreen-garrett-of-otis-tech/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Tue, 28 Jun 2011 15:26:06 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Natalie</dc:creator>
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		<guid isPermaLink="false">https://girlsguide.skyrocket.me/?p=3196</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[<p>OTIS founder and owner Doreen Garrett is chats with Natalie about her life, her unbeatable product, and wearing stilettos to work. </p><p>You just finished reading <a href="/2011/06/28/interview-with-doreen-garrett-of-otis-tech/">Interview with Doreen Garrett of OTIS Tech</a> on <a href="/">Girls Guide to Guns</a>. Please consider leaving a comment!</p>]]></description>
				<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><em>We discovered <a href="https://www.otisgun.com/default.asp">OTIS</a> at <a href="/2011/01/21/post-shot-show-wrap-up/" target="_blank">SHOT Show 2011</a>. To tell the truth, you couldn&#8217;t really miss them. They had more amazing signs than any other company and by far the best booth at the show. I remember thinking, &#8220;Wow, that company must be doing pretty well.&#8221; When I learned that the founder and owner of OTIS was female, I was even more intrigued. Doreen Garrett generously took some time out of her busy schedule to chat with me about the history of her company and what firearms and hunting mean to her. As you&#8217;ll see below, I got much more than I bargained for.  To say that Doreen is an inspiring and innovative lady doesn&#8217;t do her justice. Check out her story below:</em></p>
<p><strong>Natalie Foster:</strong> Tell me how you got involved in the world of firearms.</p>
<p><strong>Doreen Garrett: </strong>Well, I&#8217;m the oldest of four children and my dad would take me hunting with him. I think my mom just wanted to get me out of the house as a teenager {laughs}. We hunt in northern New York and the snow is usually pretty deep and I had my great grandmother&#8217;s firearm, actually. I was hunting with my dad out in the Tug Hill Plateau and I&#8217;m short and I fell in the mud and snow and I had all this junk in the end of my barrel. I had nothing with me there to get it out so I had to walk all the way back to hunting camp in my nice electric socks because I&#8217;m kind of a fair weather hunter {laughs}. I was upset that I had to walk back to the hunting camp and there was nothing there. My father came back and I said, &#8220;How do you get this stuff out of the gun?&#8221; I, of course, did something really stupid and put a stick up the end of the barrel because I thought I could dig it out. That was probably not the smartest thing to do. I ended up going home and looking through some gun junk, so to speak, that my mother had inherited from my grandfather. He was in WWII <a href="https://www.mscd.edu/history/camphale/tmd_001.html">10th Mountain Division</a> and they were always in the snow. I&#8217;ve done a lot of research on it now, but they had a device called a &#8216;thong&#8217; and it was a chain with a weight on the end of it that they carried around in the field. They&#8217;d drop that down from the breech out the end of the barrel to take out obstructions. So I started carrying that in a shoe polish tin when I was hunting. My dad&#8217;s buddies were all like, &#8220;Wow, that&#8217; s kind of a cool thing &#8211; something to take with you.&#8221; I was a junior in high school at the time. I loved engineering. I wanted to be a draftsman. My dad had a company that had a woman draftsman at it and I would apprentice under her during the summers and that summer I designed components that would mimic what that drop-through chain with the weight on it would do. I asked my dad to take me to the <a href="https://www.shotshow.org/">SHOT Show</a> in 1985 &#8211; he was going to look for business for his company because he made little widgets for the archery industry and different things. I talked him in to letting me go and do some market research and see if my concept was viable.  I got a 10 x 10 booth at the 1985 SHOT Show and I got to the door and they wouldn&#8217;t let me in {laughs} because I was not 18. I was 16 at the time and I remember them stopping me and going, &#8220;Where are you going little lady?&#8221; And I said, &#8220;Um, to my booth,&#8221; and they said, &#8220;No you&#8217;re not, you have to be 18 to get in the show.&#8221; So my mother came to the rescue and we went back up to the hotel room and &#8211; it was the 80s &#8211; the hair went higher and the heels went on and there was lots of makeup and I walked back in to the show. So that was my first SHOT Show in 1985 &#8211; I had 8 prototypes at that show and ended up with two orders from two of the worlds largest distributors at the time. They each ordered 500 units, I think. My dad came back to the booth and said, &#8220;How ya doing?&#8221; I said, &#8220;We&#8217;ve gotta make these things!&#8221; {laughs} I went home and hired two or three friends from my high school and we started making gun cleaning kits on the kitchen table. That was 27 years ago now, so it&#8217;s been an interesting road. It was challenging being young in a male dominated industry. I think more so age, now, than gender, as the industry has grown and there are more women now playing roles in our industry. It&#8217;s kind of refreshing; and I&#8217;ve had the opportunity over the last 27 years to see and witness that change. But for me it&#8217;s always been an age thing: &#8220;Oh, when I turn 25 they&#8217;ll listen to me or when I turn 30 they&#8217;ll take me seriously.&#8221; Then when I hit 40 and realized that sometimes maybe it wasn&#8217;t about age and that it might be about gender {laughs}. But I was very fortunate, too, to have parents that always told me and my siblings that there&#8217;s nothing that you can not do. So I think sometimes, you know, having that motivation is important.</p>
<p><strong>NF: </strong>That story is incredible! It&#8217;s so inspiring! It also speaks so much to what women can do when they put their minds to it.  So when did OTIS become the OTIS of today?</p>
<p><strong><a href="/files/2011/06/Picture-133.jpg"><img class="alignleft size-medium wp-image-3232" src="/files/2011/06/Picture-133-224x300.jpg" alt="" width="224" height="300" /></a>DG: </strong>{laughs} Over 27 years of hard work it became the OTIS of today.  I did develop the mission statement that the company still lives by back in 1985. It&#8217;s just about setting goals and making a quality product that you can stand behind and that doesn&#8217;t fail in the field. The product &#8211; the quality and the customer service and everything that our mission statement stands for -  is what has allowed our company to grow to what it is today. We&#8217;ve been very blessed in growing this company. Sometimes little quirky things happen that you would not want to go through, but if you don&#8217;t go through those challenges growing a business then you don&#8217;t become the business person that you are.   Take every learning experience as, &#8220;Well, okay, we won&#8217;t do that again.&#8221; And go forward. I would say the change really came when we started doing military shows back in the late &#8217;90s because some of the Marines were buying our kits from <a href="https://www.llbean.com/?qs=3009633_pmd_google">LL Bean</a>. We private labeled for LL Bean back early on for their high quality gun cleaning kits  that were compact enough. At one of the shows, the Marines came to us and said, &#8220;We would like for OTIS to develop cleaning kits for each specific weapon.&#8221; So we did that and we were being used by the Special Ops and the Marines. And then when 2001 came around and we went into theater and people in NATO and the US Army saw what <a href="https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Special_operations">Special Op</a>s had there was a snowball effect on our military contracting and our long term contracts. That really has bolstered the growth of the company over the last 10 years as being a defense contractor. And I&#8217;m proud to say that next week we&#8217;ll be going to Columbus to receive the Gold Award for 100 percent on-time delivery and quality for the US Military, which is not achieved by many vendors. We&#8217;re proud to be on the front lines with the men and women. We have <a href="https://www.drum.army.mil/Pages/index.aspx">Ft. Drum</a> right here in our back yard &#8211; our 10th Mountain Division where the President of the United States is visiting as we speak. And we have a lot of guys that will come back and visit the assembly line and the factory and thank the women for making the high quality product that may have saved their life. It gets very emotional but I think it&#8217;s also what drives us to come to work every day because we know that that product going out the door might save a soldier&#8217;s life. And it might be someone&#8217;s father or brother or mother that is going to depend on that product working. So the value proposition in that market is very very strong and we take it very seriously. And then all of our other markets like law enforcement and border patrol and our commercial market receive that same benefit because that product is of the same quality.</p>
<p>NF: Wow. I&#8217;m in awe. Your stories are so amazing and it&#8217;s incredible, too, to hear how you care so much about your products and how they really do affect people&#8217;s lives &#8211; and literally save some in some cases. It&#8217;s pretty profound, I think.</p>
<p>DG: It is and it always amazes me now how many lives we&#8217;ve touched and how many people I meet out and about who thank the company and the family for doing what we do. You know, that&#8217;s all we do &#8211; gun cleaning. And we take it very seriously. I think if you have a niche and you do something better than anyone else can&#8230; not that you can guarantee success&#8230; but you have that niche and you build upon it.</p>
<p>NF: You started out with your grandmother&#8217;s gun &#8211; that&#8217;s not something a whole lot of women can say. So were guns kind of a legacy in your family?</p>
<p>DG: You know, I didn&#8217;t think of it back then or even now, but I guess I was always around when my dad would bring the guns back from hunting and he would clean them.  People invest in guns today because they know they can hand them down to their children and in some instances it won&#8217;t disappear like money in the bank. They do appreciate and become valuable. I think the maintenance aspect of taking care of those heritage-type items, to be able to hand them down to the next generation, is sometimes just as important because I think for most people, at least for a lot of people in the industry, their fondest memories are hunting with their grandfather or dad. So any time they pull that gun out of the safe they&#8217;re reminiscing about those times, so the gun becomes something special. It was a unique experience to have my grandmother&#8217;s gun to be able to hunt and, you know, maybe she was looking over me that day. {laughs}</p>
<p>NF: So do you remember your first time shooting? Who taught you?</p>
<p>DG: My dad. Yep, I remember because my father is very adamant about safety and learning experiences and so the first time I shot a gun it was at a watermelon. We all shot a watermelon off a fence post. And it was made to be very scary because he wanted us to know that guns can be dangerous if not used properly. Just like you would teach your kid to drive a car and tell them that a car can be dangerous if not used properly. So we shot the watermelon and it blew up and he said, &#8220;That&#8217;s what happens to someone&#8217;s head if you shoot them.&#8221; So you get that fear and that respect for what that tool does. We&#8217;re very adamant and have taught hundreds of kids through the Eddie Eagle program: &#8220;Stop, don&#8217;t touch, leave the area, tell an adult.&#8221; I think safety is one of the aspects that is almost incorporated in to <a href="https://otisgun.com/">OTIS</a>&#8216;s products because you have to clean breech to muzzle so you are always opening the receiver. You&#8217;re never able to clean a loaded firearm, so there&#8217;s a lot of built-in safety to our cleaning kit.  And with the bore reflector, you know, you teach someone that they should always have the <a href="https://answers.yahoo.com/question/index?qid=20090317213149AAfeY0R">bore reflector</a> in so when you&#8217;re at a distance you have a visual that the gun is safe, it&#8217;s unloaded, you don&#8217;t have to guess. There&#8217;s just a lot of different safety aspects that I think are very important for shooters in general. And sometimes the people that become the most confident are the most dangerous.</p>
<p>NF: You referenced the soldiers thanking the ladies. What percentage of the employees at OTIS is female?</p>
<p>DG: We are at 75% female.</p>
<p>NF: Wow- I&#8217;ve never heard of any company, especially a firearms company, being 75% female. That&#8217;s really fantastic.</p>
<p>DG: Yeah, well, we obviously hire based on skill but we also have assembly workers that dominate our work force. We also have a <a href="https://www.otisgun.com/Company/Daycare.asp">corporate day care</a>, so many of the teachers in the day care are women.</p>
<p>NF: OTIS sounds like a pretty cool company to work for. Now, I know that you sponsor lots of different shooters, namely, of course, our friend<a href="/2011/03/17/video-kim-rhode-gives-shotgun-tips/"> Kim Rhode</a>. How did all of that come about and why did you choose her?</p>
<p>DG: It&#8217;s an interesting story and it goes way back to me getting <a href="/2010/05/18/when-shotgun-superstar-kim-rhode-gets-bored/">Kim&#8217;s</a> autograph at an NRA show when she was 14 and just starting the sport, and looking at her as being able to be the face of female shooters who are young in our industry. At the time I felt like I was kind of alone out there, so when she won that gold medal it was just kind of a reiteration of, &#8220;We&#8217;re here and we&#8217;re ready to make our mark.&#8221; So we have a lot in common. We&#8217;ve talked about it before &#8211; about being so young when we started in this industry and how that affects how you work almost harder at something because you&#8217;re there to prove the world wrong. That it can be done. But, yeah, it&#8217;s just great. And when we had the opportunity to sponsor her and the means to do it, it was a no-brainer. I love being able to shoot with her and she&#8217;s just a great mentor and she just has all the same qualities culturally that OTIS has. You know, just being humble, and she&#8217;s just a great great role model for the shooting industry, and we&#8217;re very proud to be able to sponsor her. We, of course, wish her much luck in the 2012 games. I&#8217;m so impressed that she&#8217;s already qualified. It&#8217;s just really really cool and I&#8217;m proud to say that I&#8217;m a friend of hers.</p>
<p>NF: She really is an impressive person. Okay, so it&#8217;s probably been a little bit difficult to keep things girlie in the gun world. Do you find that that&#8217;s the case or do you do your own thing?<a href="/files/2011/06/Picture-91.jpg"><img class="alignleft size-medium wp-image-3238" src="/files/2011/06/Picture-91-300x224.jpg" alt="" width="300" height="224" /></a></p>
<p>DF: I do my own thing. I love wearing my stilettos to work. I love pink guns. I like to find camo that fits. I love the opportunity to have something in common with my husband that we can do together after our kids are long gone out of the nest. I just have so many great memories and experiences around hunting. Whether it&#8217;s a successful harvest or not &#8211; just being outdoors in general. And I love being a girl, too. I love being girlie. I think you can have the best of both worlds and I&#8217;ve met a lot of women over time that are just, you know, you would never think they would be proficient at shooting or hunting and they&#8217;re some of the best. And you know, you can walk out in an evening gown at night and feel just as comfortable and confident walking out in your camo the next morning. I think it&#8217;s important to have those different roles because as women, you know, we do have to multitask. We are, you know, mothers, wives, sisters&#8230; we have our jobs. And to be able to go in and out of those roles and feel comfortable &#8211; each one is important to a person as a whole. So, you know, I don&#8217;t feel bad about putting on red lipstick when I go out to hunt. {laughs} You know, it&#8217;s just being who you are.</p>
<p>NF: I think that&#8217;s fantastic. It&#8217;s so important not to lose that sense of being girlie and feminine and it&#8217;s so great to hear such a leader in the industry express that. It&#8217;s amazing. You&#8217;re really paving the way. It&#8217;s inspiring for me, too, you know. Sometimes you do feel like it&#8217;s completely taken over by the guys and we&#8217;re here to make women feel more comfortable getting involved.</p>
<p>Lastly, what advice would you give women who have never shot before? They might be just dabbling their toes in the water or thinking about it &#8211; what would you say?</p>
<p>DG: To get a good mentor or join a woman that is involved.  There are a lot of great organizations out there &#8211; Babes with Bullets is a great one for pistol shooting. We run our employees through it and offer it to them. It&#8217;s just, you know, not only empowering and educating, but even if you never want to shoot again at least you know how to handle a firearm because it is the lack of education and the fear of it that is what makes it scary.  And you know, for most people who get into it, be careful because you will have a new addiction. {laughs} Beware because you&#8217;re gonna be spending some money and you&#8217;re gonna get in to it. Women do that, when we get into something we need to learn everything about it and we want all the gear.  And we&#8217;re very good at shooting and any shooter out there will tell you that. There&#8217;s just so much you can do, like the Cowboy Action, and there are so many fun things you can do other than hunting. And at OTIS we really have to remember that because when you are at a trade show there are a lot of shooters out there who don&#8217;t necessarily hunt. So whether it be extreme shooting or something like skeet like Kim would do. Or like Cowboy Action &#8211; you can still have fun with a gun and not hunt. You have to remember that you can be anti-hunting but still love to shoot guns and do target shooting. I think that&#8217;s somewhat of a misnomer out there &#8211; that if you have guns then you must kill stuff. No {laughs}. You know, I love to shoot first and foremost. Hunting is a passion of mine, but even if I never hunted a day in my life, I would shoot.</p>
<p>You just finished reading <a href="/2011/06/28/interview-with-doreen-garrett-of-otis-tech/">Interview with Doreen Garrett of OTIS Tech</a> on <a href="/">Girls Guide to Guns</a>. Please consider leaving a comment!</p>]]></content:encoded>
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