The Sanford Lions Club returned to its regular weekly meeting schedule Thursday, Jan. 7, with President Richard Hendley presiding. Program Chairman Art Coleman delivered the invocation while Jimmy Bridges led members in the Pledge of Allegiance.
Hendley remembered all those on the sick list, asking members to keep them in their prayers, and he welcomed back three Lions, Don Dollar, Dale Hulsey and Preston Spence, out recently due to sickness.
Announcements included an important board of directors meeting planned for Jan. 25 and Hendley urged all members to attend. Dues for the first half of 2010 are now being collected and should be paid as soon as possible. Lions are urged to complete the annual sale of raffle tickets that benefits Camp Dogwood for the blind and sight impaired. The one dollar ticket gives the holder a chance to win a new Chrysler vehicle to be given away at the N.C. Lions State Convention on May 30.
Each Lion has thirty tickets to sell, so the public is urged to support this statewide fundraiser. Proceeds support the upkeep of this recreational facility for the blind located on Lake Norman at Sherrills Ford, N.C. Each summer hundreds of North Carolina blind and sight impaired citizens are sponsored by local Lions Clubs to spend a week at Camp Dogwood where they enjoy many outdoor activities.
The evening’s program was given by Bill Kempffer, owner of Deep River Sporting Clays, located north of Sanford on Cletus Hall Road. This 21-year-old sporting facility attracts shooting and gun enthusiasts from a wide area ranging from the Triangle to Pinehurst. The sport itself consists of a one-mile course containing 10 to 15 shooting stations. Teams of two to six people traverse the course keeping score of the accuracy of shots at moving clay targets. The targets are of various sizes and shapes to simulate various hunted game from birds to rabbits.
“It’s often referred to as golf with a shotgun,” Kempffer said with a laugh. Sporting clay courses came to America in the 1980’s from England and now are very popular here. “It provides the hunter with the skills and competitive challenges of hunting, but without the blood and guts of actually killing animals,” said Kempffer who is a senior shooting instructor at the business. Every spring the local firm hosts an internationally-known competition that attracts shooters and exhibitors from across the nation and around the world. The 2009 event hosted over 1,800 persons.
Anyone interested can call 919-774-7080 or go to www.deepriver.net. There are programs for both experienced shooters and beginners.
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