We really enjoyed meeting you, competing against you, and making friends with you, Al. I appreciate the tip on the Panda, too.

I got started in short range benchrest many years ago, in the rimfire game. My amazing father got invited to a match, and before long I was joining him. Over the years, went through the normal gear progression (rifles, rests, bags, flags), and learning from so many accomplished competitors. It helped also to have two uncles who were gifted competitive shooters, too. One of them "loaned" me a customized rimfire benchrest rifle, with which I (finally) never felt behind the curve equipment-wise. Also, upgraded my rest from an inexpensive aluminum rest to a full-blown hand-made custom rest (I needed something with a 3" front bag and with more precise adjustments). Learned a lot and had so much fun.
At my gun club, there were a few benchrest shooters who tried to get me into centerfire. I always begged off, as I had two young children, a great but time-consuming career, and lots of responsibilities. I thought I'd never have the time to master the centerfire game.
Fast forward a few more years. I got invited to a local club match, and, since I had a really accurate (mostly) factory .223, figured why not? "Really accurate" - ha! I had ZERO idea at the time what "really accurate" was. Past that was a PRS rifle, and while I did better in the club matches, I was still hovering in the bottom half most of the time (finishing in the top half was so exciting!). A factory 6PPC got me into the middle of the pack, sometimes the upper third or even in a "top 3" finish. Finally, a buddy at the match made me an offer on a custom 6PPC that I could not say no too (plus, I was getting tired of being competitive, but not winning). More equipment, better flags, as budget and time allowed. Starting winning a few matches, and some distances, and having fun and seeing some positive results.
Finally got a 30BR (another offer I could not refuse), even more equipment, loading supplies, more scopes, etc. Oh, and big-time committment to this sport. Michelle and I are loving competing, supporting each other, and continually learning and having so much fun.
Taking my story of how I got into short range centerfire benchrest shooting, perhaps there are some lessons:
1. Invite shooters to matches, especially local club matches
2. Be supportive of new competitors
3. If you have some extra gear on-hand, consider selling it to new competitors and also providing instruction/information/advice
These ideas and lessons aren't unique to me/my experience. Again, while organizations can do things to encourage more participation in our sport, we as competitiors can also lend a helping hand in growing short-range benchrest.