I got back yesterday after camping Friday and Saturday night. I attempted to shoot chunk and had a good time on the woodswalk on Saturday. I've gone to F'ship for several years, but never camped or shot. I found it was much more fun camping and shooting, even though I should have camped another night or two, so that I was in better shape to do more matches and/or be better at the ones I did -- it takes some time to adjust to sleeping on a rock, even with an air matress
. The campsites seemed pretty full on Saturday.
The elephant in the room is the demographic, but I actually saw some signs of hope. Yes, the average age is high, but there were several young families with two or three kids each in the campsites around us and the woodswalk seemed to attract a little younger crowd (which makes some sense). The shooting lines seemed a bit sparse compared to what I've observed in the past, but it could just be the schedule I was on. My observation firsthand and from talking to other people in the "less than 65" group is that you need to know/go with someone older several times to get full benefit of friendliness from many participants and most vendors (they are the worst for it, with several notable exceptions) -- my impression is that everyone under 60 is treated like a criminal until proven innocent or vouched for; maybe they do spend money on feeding and clothing their children rather than at your booth; if you treat them as cheap or shifty, they won't be back when they have money and time for what you are selling. My suggestion for that is for everyone to take a little time to guide the "youngsters" and try to make them feel welcome, not to treat them like they are breaking into some kind of exclusive club and soiling the carpet... Risky, yes, but I know that if I had not had the guidance of several F'ship experts, I likely wouldn't have even considered going back a second time. It simply isn't worth the hassle to go and buy stuff you can (for the most part) find on the internet, it needs to be an experience and learning opportunity, esp. for those of us with the most to learn...
PS. Totally unrelated. L&R has gone to forged springs on new production and the locks they had in their booth are looking a lot better than a few years ago -- seems like they are addressing past issues in an honest manner.