Backwoods Home Magazine

Subscribe to Backwoods Home Magazine
Or call us at
1-800-835-2418

Change of Address

Meet Dave Duffy, Annie Tuttle, and Sam Duffy at the Colorado Springs, Colorado Self Reliance Expo.

Find Backwoods Home Magazine on Facebook

Features
 Home Page
 Current Issue
 Article Index
 Author Index
 Previous Issues
 Newsletter
 Letters
 Humor
 Free Stuff
 Feedback
 Recipes
 Tell-A-Friend
 Print Classifieds
 Radio Show

General Store
 Ordering Info
 Subscriptions
 Anthologies
 T-Shirts
 Books
 Back Issues
 Help Yourself
 All Specials
 Classified Ad

Advertise
 Web Site Ads
 Magazine Ads

BHM Blogs
 Behind The Scenes
 Massad Ayoob
 Ask Jackie Clay
 Claire Wolfe
 Where We Live
 Oliver Del Signore
 Bramblestitches
Retired Blogs
 David Lee
 Energy Questions

Quick Links
 Home Energy Info
 Jackie Clay
 Ask Jackie Online
 Dave Duffy
 Massad Ayoob
 John Silveira
 Claire Wolfe

Forum / Chat
 Forum/Chat Info
 Enter Forum
 Lost Password

More Features
 Links
 Country Moments
 Meet The Staff
 Contact Us/
 Change of Address
 Write For BHM
 Privacy Policy

News/Politics
 Dave Duffy
 John Silveira
 Columnists





Weapons training for winter nights
Movie review

By Claire Wolfe
  


During the dreary winter months our shooting skills may get so rusty they creak.

Paladin Press, famous purveyor of books on weaponry and combat, provides another form of skill builder for days when snow covers the targets at the range: Instructional DVDs and VHS tapes. This winter we can do some studying and even a bit of hands-on learning indoors using two Paladin DVDs.

The first, Combative Pistol: Jim Grover’s Guide to Extreme Close-Quarters Shooting, is for well-skilled shooters who might find themselves up close and personal with an attacker.

The second could be used by anyone from novices to experienced shooters who ever need to defend home or homestead. That one is The Combat Shotgun with Louis Awerbuck: Concepts, Skills, and Tactics for Employing Shotguns in Personal Combat.

Up close and personal with a pistol

When Jim Grover says “extreme close quarters,” you better believe it. The shooting techniques in this 60-minute video are adapted from, and could be used in response to, extremely dirty forms of street and prison knife attacks. This is gun-fighting literally in body contact with your attacker. Combative Pistol

A lot of us assume that if we have a gun, no attacker would ever get that close. But according to the video, half of all law enforcement officers killed in the line of duty are within one to five feet of their attackers. I’ve seen demo videos in which a knife-wielding attacker charges across a room in roughly one second to overpower his victim. (On certain drugs or with a certain mindset, an attacker would charge a well-armed homeowner.)

Paladin’s blurb for this video calls Grover’s techniques “frighteningly effective.” Grover (aka Kelly McCann), an on-site security specialist, trainer of special forces, and long-time columnist for Guns & Ammo, is the real deal, highly praised by the toughest of the tough. The combat simulations here hardly look simulated. They’re lightning fast (but very well-explained), ultra-realistic, and they frankly scared me with the amount of damage that could be inflicted in a blurred second or two.

This production is directed at police officers and is definitely only for experienced pistol shooters. But even to me, it served as a wake-up call about the speed and savagery with which an attack can come.

The DVD is divided into segments that could enable you and a friend to conveniently study and (carefully and safely, please) practice the techniques shown here.

The production has only one major flaw, but it’s a distracting one: Crazy camera work. The image quality is crisp, clear, and professional.

But the hand-held camera is in constant motion, as if the videographer were standing on a ship rocking side-to-side and back-and-forth. If you can get past that, this is a unique and useful video.

Combative Pistol
Jim Grover’s Guide to Extreme Close-Quarters Shooting
DVD 60 minutes
$59.95
Paladin Press

Shotgun self-defense

In The Combat Shotgun, world-famed firearms trainer Louis Awerbuck gives a good overview defensive shotgunning.

He tells:

  • Which types of shotguns (pump action and semi-auto) are best and why
  • Which accessories are essential for self-defense and which you don’t need
  • The Combat Shotgun

  • What type of ammo to use
  • How to shoulder the gun so that its recoil won’t overwhelm you
  • How to reload under stress conditions
  • How to use an attached light in encounters that take place in darkness
  • How to stand for best control

In the most interesting segments, Awerbuck runs an inexperienced shooter through drills using different types of targets and ammo. Everything here is presented slowly. The student shooter is never rushed or pressured; the emphasis is on building skills and control of the firearm.

In the pages of BHM, Massad Ayoob gives excellent advice about home defense weapons. Awerbuck’s emphasis is more on technique, and it’s extremely helpful to actually see the shotgun in action.

As with the Grover DVD, this video also has its faults. Some of the taping was done under breezy conditions, which you can hear on the soundtrack. The first two segments—gear and ammo selection—are the driest. Information in those portions isn’t well-organized or well-presented and might lead a newbie to feel overwhelmed. But persevere. Or use the menus to take each segment as a separate info-bite. It gets better.

And...well, if you’re of the female persuasion, you might simply enjoy looking at the trim, compactly muscular Mr. Awerbuck and listening to his alluring South African accent as he explains the basics of shotgun defense.

The Combat Shotgun with Louis Awerbuck
Concepts, Skills, and Tactics for Employing Shotguns in Personal Combat
DVD or VHS 75 minutes
$39.95
Paladin Press

Tapes and DVDs can be obtained from:

Paladin Press
Gunbarrel Tech Center
7077 Winchester Circle
Boulder, Colorado 80301
Customer Service: 1-303-443-7250
Credit Card Orders: 1-800-392-2400
Email: service@paladin-press.com
Website: www.paladin-press.com



Read More by Claire Wolfe


Comments regarding Claire Wolfe's articles may be addressed to clairew@backwoodshome.com. Comments may appear online in "Feedback" or in the "Letters" section of Backwoods Home Magazine. Although every email is read, her busy schedule does not permit a personal response to each one.











 
www.backwoodshome.com designed and maintained by Oliver Del Signore
© Copyright 1998 - Present by Backwoods Home Magazine