I'm setting up a small woods walk course on my property to use in the off-season. By small, I mean I'll setup about a dozen targets this year and maybe another 10 next year. I've got steel targets ranging from about 2" up to 10". There are plenty of hills, large stumps, etc. to use as safe backstops & no legal restrictions. This will only be for friends and family, not open to the public. Total space is about 80 acres of steep & rocky terrain. There is a mix of brushy, wooded and open areas. The timber is mostly all dead & slated to be cleared this year so I'm not worried about shooting into it. I was figuring the targets would range from about 15 yards for the small ones out to maybe 100 yards at most. I can go farther but this would be for hunting practice & open sights.
I'm familiar with 3D archery courses and have attended local shoots for the past several years. But I've never done a woods walk course and, to my knowledge, there aren't any around these parts. So for those of you who have done these, what are the key components of a good course? What are the typical distances & setups seen out there? Any particularly good ideas for course design? I'd like to make it challenging for me but easy enough for older kids to have some success with .22s & such. Are there any course maps available online for places you've attended? What safety precautions are used at events (other than safe backstops) to make sure that non-shooters aren't walking into the line of fire?
I'm familiar with 3D archery courses and have attended local shoots for the past several years. But I've never done a woods walk course and, to my knowledge, there aren't any around these parts. So for those of you who have done these, what are the key components of a good course? What are the typical distances & setups seen out there? Any particularly good ideas for course design? I'd like to make it challenging for me but easy enough for older kids to have some success with .22s & such. Are there any course maps available online for places you've attended? What safety precautions are used at events (other than safe backstops) to make sure that non-shooters aren't walking into the line of fire?