Range Report - Improving the Pistol Range
Posted: Sat Jun 20, 2026 5:03 pm
The pistol range setup I originally conceived hasn't worked as well as we had hoped. We used some steel L shaped corner posts for pipe fencing, popular in Texas and Oklahoma, and reinforced the spaces with Cattle Panels and then heavy Tarp thinking that would hold back the dirt long enough for it to take a set. I had orginally planned to put layers of tires in place to add to the stability, but didn't get a chance to pick up a trailer load before we started moving dirt, and then forgot.
Short memory. As you can see in the pic below, after a year or so, the settling dirt pushed thru the sides and back of the weak idea I had to retain the dirt berm and I knew I was going to have to come up with another plan.
Fate tossed a solution in my lap in the way of the rural electric co-op a couple months ago. They decided to replace the wooden poles in the area. Boom. Rather than haul all the old poles back to the lot in the main city about half hour away, I told them they could drop them in the ditch line beside my pasture and I'd use them on my range. There were FOUR on my road frontage. "We have a dozen in this area, how many do you want?"
"Ah, all you are willing to drop."
Over the next week, they dropped a dozen or so.
Hooked a chain to each pole and pulled it into the pasture and lined them up alongside a treeline to wait for time to redo the pistol range. I'd need someone to cut the poles to length. I would also need to remove the dirt, the cattle panels, and tarps from the frame.
A friend of my daughter wanted some kayaks we were selling and would trade the labor for the poles for the kayaks and trailer. Deal. We waited for her Ferrier work to die down. I needed to use the tractor to remove the dirt and prep the range.
Fate tossed a solution in my lap in the way of the rural electric co-op a couple months ago. They decided to replace the wooden poles in the area. Boom. Rather than haul all the old poles back to the lot in the main city about half hour away, I told them they could drop them in the ditch line beside my pasture and I'd use them on my range. There were FOUR on my road frontage. "We have a dozen in this area, how many do you want?"
"Ah, all you are willing to drop."
Over the next week, they dropped a dozen or so.
Hooked a chain to each pole and pulled it into the pasture and lined them up alongside a treeline to wait for time to redo the pistol range. I'd need someone to cut the poles to length. I would also need to remove the dirt, the cattle panels, and tarps from the frame.
A friend of my daughter wanted some kayaks we were selling and would trade the labor for the poles for the kayaks and trailer. Deal. We waited for her Ferrier work to die down. I needed to use the tractor to remove the dirt and prep the range.