Merkel 47e 20 gauge |
A few years ago I had a discussion with a fellow hunter on what was best pre-season practice for wingshooting. He argued that sporting clays were the ideal game, while I argued that skeet was. At one time I would have agreed with him but it was my friend Mike who convinced me otherwise. When sporting clays was first developed, the goal was to mimic the flights of birds seen in the field. In time the sport became less about mimicking hunting shots and more about trying to deceive the shooter with optical illusions. Most sporting clay stations have less than realistic flight patterns that would never be seen in the field. Whereas skeet has every possible shot picture one would ever face while hunting, from going away shots, to left to right crossers, right to left crossers, to incoming shots, among others, are all represented. Another friend of mine once told me that skeet isn't realistic and that is why he only shoots live pigeons while dog training. Countering, I let him know that while skeet is not perfect it is there to make sure that your fundamentals and lead pictures are squared away. Much like a MLB player would go it a batting cage for batting practice. Batting cages are not the pitches a batter would see during a game but it lets him make sure his hand-eye coordination, his footwork and fundamentals are all solid before he faces "real" pitches. Skeet is much the same way. It is there so your fundamentals are solid before facing "real" birds.
I only shoot skeet and trap now for pre-season practice as they are the most realistic shots I'll see afield. Its been years since I've over on the sporting clay range. I shoot clays to get ready for the bird season so I'm not quite sure when I'll ever return to the sporting side of the range.
I only shoot skeet and trap now for pre-season practice as they are the most realistic shots I'll see afield. Its been years since I've over on the sporting clay range. I shoot clays to get ready for the bird season so I'm not quite sure when I'll ever return to the sporting side of the range.
My thoughts on the ideal practice for game bird hunting. Anything that involves a clay target is ok, but less than perfect because you are faced with the fundamental dilemma that clay targets staert fast then spend their whole journey slowing down... whereas flushed gamebirds start from scratch and only increase in pace... while decoying type species come in at variable pace and hit afterburners. I believe in alot of gun mounting and swinging practice, some should involve live birds (blackbirds etc, whatever flies around the neighbourhood). Besides I simply hate shooting clays. my thoughts for what they're worth.
ReplyDeleteAppreciate the comment, Snuffit and I don't necessarily disagree with you but in terms of the best clay game that will help your chances of downing a live bird, skeet is the best to help you accomplish that. Of course, for the reasons you mentioned, it, as all clay based shooting, is not without its shortcomings. But given the fact that shooting live birds is not always practical nor readily available, clays are the best alternative.
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