Day 1
I caught the first flight of the day and arrived in Maui at 7am, got my rental car, stopped for supplies, and arrived at Ukumehame at 8am for the 8:30am class. I went with the minimalist setup - stock Glock 48 with a EPS carry dot, and We the People IWB holster along with using pockets for my magazines. This combination was the cheapest, slowest and least accurate setup there. Half of the students had IPSC belts and guns. Other half had AIWB setups with PDPs, VP9, 229. Someone had a Glock 45 and CZ - not sure what model. Jedi is sponsored by Walther so he had a modified PDP.

Jedi went over the different types of red dots with Trijicon at the high end, the COA is a good sight but unavailable, and Holosun being a good cheaper alternative. A 2 to 4 MOA dot is preferable and he doesn't recommend the large 30 MOA outercircle sights due to it cluttering up the image. A larger window is preferred over smaller windows like the EPS Carry which I use.
His shooting methods is different from most other schools and he goes into a lot of detail on the stance, sighting, press, and especially grip. For sighting, we use a target focused approach like looking through the windshield at the road ahead when driving. We used a thumbs high grip with the support thumb lightly touching the slide in order to get more support hand higher on the gun while rotating the support hand into place for a tight fit. He teaches better fit instead of a firmer grip to allow for better trigger control. He also teaches bent elbows instead of locking them up to get a better grip on the gun Then we practiced the draw, bringing the dot on target from the 6 or 12 oclock position. This helped me with acquiring the dot versus just punching out and hoping my dot is on target.
He teaches several different sighting methods and trigger presses that can be used in combination depending on the difficulty of the target. Up close, you line up the backplate or glass on target and do a full trigger slap. Moderate targets, you put a controlled or violent dot streak on target and do a controlled trigger slap (remove the pretravel and slap). For farther shots, keep the dot static and fully prep the trigger by getting to the last "wall" then pressing. Different DA/DAO guns have several points of resistance, "walls" during the trigger press and you need to know which is the last one before the gun fires. Helps with the crappy Glock triggers. This gets you a bit more accuracy. I was able to overlap holes at 5 yards using this technique, but it'd be very difficult to do under stress. Other schools teach "remove the pretravel and apply pressure on the trigger until it fires" technique which is easier to do under pressure.



A simple exercise was to aim and shoot multiple rounds into the backstop. This allowed us to clearly see how the dot moved on recoil and how different grips affect the dot movement. I was able to find a grip that kept the dot in my tiny EPS Carry window on recoil. A helpful exercise.
Ukumehame is a nice range. Air conditioned classrooms and a big shooting bay. It was quite hot and I drank 3/4ths gallon of water. Jedi was a good instructor and explained everything in detail that was easy to follow. His background is martial arts and IDPA/IPSC competition. Some people are put off by his personality but it was fine for me and the other students enjoyed the class.