stealthylizard said:
Many moons ago..... When I was a cadet we trained with the FNC1A1. Then they took those away and gave us the Lee Enfield No. 7 (chambered for a .22 round). Last I heard, less many moons ago, my old corp had switched to pellet guns for range practice.
When I was a cadet, we trained up on the No. 7 using the indoor range in our armoury. The Grey and Simcoe Foresters ran a course for senior cadets to use the FNs and we did range weekends in Borden before it was deemed that shooting large bore was an army cadet thing and air cadets weren't allowed to any more.
Because approved indoor ranges - and ranges in general - available to cadets are rarer than hen's teeth we now train them on basic marksmanship with pellet rifles. The ones we use top out at 495 fps so they aren't firearms under the Act and we can set up a range pretty much anywhere there's room. I'll admit that pellet rifles have a stigma attached but I can run a range day pretty much any time I want with 10-12 cadets firing
each relay with the air rifles on the main floor of the armoury vs the dozen-ish cadets
per night using .22s on the 3 person indoor range we used to have. When we do get to put a .22 in their hands for biathlon (or the army cadets who get an opportunity to fire the C7s), they have some basic skills when they begin training.
Mind you, I'll take .22s, C7s or even .303s over pellet rifles every day of the week but, as it stands, using the air rifles, my cadets shoot 10 times more often in a year than I ever did when I was a cadet shooting the .22.
If thousands of Lee-Enfields suddenly get freed up, we could start putting them in the hands of cadets as DPs - which are becoming hard to come by in our supply system - or, better still, expanding the big-bore shooting program.