Stradawhovious wrote:Each one of those adults (espically in the case of these kids being so young) needs to be within arms reach of each one of these kids ESPECIALLY when the line is hot. This does two things. It provides a "buddy system" of sorts, so none of the children are hiding behind bushes and the like, and it will allow the adults to keep the children from doing anything stupid with or around a loaded firearm.
My take on firearm safety is process-oriented. I don't find advice like "be more careful" to be of much use. "Be more careful" won't prevent you from putting a round through the family room wall, because you got interrupted by a phone call, and only remember that you'd cleared the gun and checked the chamber.
What will is process - you pick up the gun, drop the magazine, pull back the slide, and check the chamber, as a single, uninterrupted process. If you get interrupted, you've aborted the process. When you've dealt with the interruption, you start at the beginning, regardless of what you might remember having done before.
There's simply no way to take a herd of kids out for an afternoon of family fun, and to keep everyone maintaining the necessary level of alertness for the entire time. The shooting should be restricted to a period, with specified stopping and ending times, during which you maintain the heightened alertness necessary for safety.
If people want to shoot more, start the process over from the beginning.
The guns stay cased, the ammo stays boxed, until you've got everything set up, the toddlers corralled, the shooting line cleared, and everybody is alert and aware that shooting is going on. That means you have someone sitting on the rambunctious four-year-old who likes to run all over everywhere.
And since folks can't maintain the necessary heightened sense of alertness, permanently, before the alertness is lost you should cease fire, unload and case the weapons, and let everyone relax.