There's a stuffed fox guarding the entrance and guns and ammo hanging on nearly every inch of the walls at Bill's Gun Shop and Range in Circle Pines. In the background, there's the regular "pop-pop" sound of a gun firing.
Mark Steiger sits near the front door with his fingers clasped together in front of him, wearing a Golden Gophers shirt. He wants a friendly face to greet any of the lesbian, gay, bisexual or transgender men and women he's invited who might not immediately feel the gun range is a safe space for them.
"Going to a range can be daunting for someone who is gay," Steiger said. "We do have some people that come to our group that don't feel comfortable going alone to a range, but they do feel comfortable coming for us."
Steiger is president of the Pink Pistols, an LGBT gun rights group with chapters in dozens of cities. It's been around in Minnesota for nearly two decades, hosting meetings at the gun range roughly once a month. There's no sign-up sheet and there are no fees. Anywhere from two to more than a dozen people show up each month. Members don't have to be experienced shooters or even own a gun.
In fact, many people who show up have never shot a gun before — they come to learn how.
"Our slogan is: 'Armed gays don't get bashed,' " Steiger said. "In light of the increased crimes against gays, we do try to do training and just get people interested in the basics of gun safety."
That's why Eric Inman has been coming to Pink Pistols for the past five years. He's an NRA-certified pistol instructor who also spent five years specializing in search and rescue in Alaska. "The bears are big there," he laughed. "Like, really big."
He's comfortable around firearms and wants to teach newcomers how to feel comfortable too. Sporting a long red beard and a Punisher T-shirt, Inman starts orientation for newbies with a fake gun, showing them how to position their fingers safely, widen their stance, hunch their shoulders, aim and fire.