EDEN VALLEY, MINN. – Rick and Tammy Kirkpatrick woke up one day and discovered their house was going to be on the target end of a gun range.
They haven't always slept well since.
"We've had such a nice, peaceful life," Rick Kirkpatrick said of the home where they've lived for 32 years, on a gravel road among farm fields about 2 miles outside this central Minnesota town. "Nobody bothers me here."
That may be changing. The Eden Valley Sportsman's Club is ready to open a full-service shooting range across the road from the Kirkpatricks' home. It includes a pistol range as well as trapshooting.
But it's the rifle range that has the couple upset. Their house is only about 125 yards from the end of the range.
It's not directly in line with the 300-yard rifle range, which terminates in a 10-foot-high earthen berm designed to absorb the shooters' bullets. But it's close enough, Rick Kirkpatrick said, that off-target shots could hit their home.
"I'm not a ballistics expert, but I've hunted all my life," said Kirkpatrick, explaining that a small error in aim could translate into a much wider miss downrange. He added that bullets from high-powered guns, such as .30-06 or .50-caliber weapons, could fly over the berm and hit traffic on a county road about a half-mile away.
After an inspection last fall, the county gave permission for the range to operate, but no shots have been fired yet as the Kirkpatricks and about a dozen neighbors challenge the county permit.