



Teaching gun safety and training skills with the convenience
and privacy of flexible locations for the optimal learning exerience....
your home, office, classroom, and shooting range!!!
Supporting the right of responsible firearm ownership as a
means of self protection and recreation!
Offering:
Lessons
Private courses
Small Public courses
Test-fire my various handguns
Permit to carry courses for the new 2011 Iowa application
Permit renewal re-qualifying, refresher course or range re-qual
*Everything you need for training is provided!!!
INCLUDES A VARIETY OF FIREARMS!!!
*Please Note: MEN and YOUTH are also welcome!
Include those you know that are also interested in developing their skills and knowledge!
FE4W, LLC
Lori Ahern
NRA Certified Pistol Instructor
Shooting Sports Competitor
1200 Valley West Drive, Suite 403-10
West Des Moines, Iowa 50266
515-250-2353
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"Guns Save Lives" Website articles:
http://gunssavelives.net/blog/trends-in-self-defense-part-1-guns-as-a-force-equalizer/
http://gunssavelives.net/blog/trends-in-self-defense-part-2-the-mighty-22lr/
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Lindsay McCrum’s book--
‘Chicks with Guns’: Some 15 million US women pack heat
Photographer Lindsay McCrum explores unexpected aspects of gun ownership in new book
Pop quiz: Name one accessory that grandmothers, moms, girls, wealthy socialites, middle-class females and low-income women might be likely to own — and cherish — all across America.
If you answered “a gun,” you’d be correct.
Based on polling research and gun-sale statistics, an estimated 15 million to 20 million women in the United States own their own firearms. Dozens of those heat-packing women are documented in “Chicks with Guns,” a new book by photographer Lindsay McCrum that is sure to challenge almost anyone’s assumptions about gun ownership.
“Their numbers are really high but their profile is actually really low,” said McCrum, who spent three and a half years capturing artistic and arresting portraits of women with their weapons of choice.
“I was so surprised by the variety and breadth and diversity of these women,” McCrum said. “There are so many stereotypes about guns, mostly derived from popular culture, but the reality is so much more complex and varied than you can imagine.”
“Chicks with Guns” reveals just how true that is. The book features nearly 80 portraits and captions in which women describe the role of guns in their lives in their own words. It quickly becomes apparent that rich women, poor women, young women, old women, athletic women, sedentary women and a fair number of confident girls possess guns for reasons that are peculiarly their own.
“I learned two main lessons while working on this book,” said McCrum, who divides her time between New York City and California when she isn’t traveling for work. “One is that on the subject of guns, nobody is neutral. And the other is that when you get outside of the blue-state cities, everybody has a gun.”
By Laura T. Coffey

‘A very special world’
Lindsay McCrum’s book “Chicks with Guns” explores issues of self-image and gender through photographs that are both beautiful and unexpected. Here are images and caption excerpts from the book.
Lee
Ridgeland, S.C.
Boss 20-gauge side-by-side
“Hunting and shooting are the foundations of a complete and very special world ... Once you’ve held the work of art that is a best-grade London side-by-side in your hands – especially if made in the 1930s (the golden age of English gun making) – you will never forget that miracle of balance and weight. It seems so natural to swing and hit the bird that you’re endlessly surprised when you miss.”



