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Unread 09-11-2012, 03:35 PM   #1
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Originally Posted by Paul Harm View Post
Steve, I have a couple of friends who shoot a "swing through" method. Now I'm not one to say what method to use be it pull away, swing through, intercept, or maintain lead; but when they tire a bit they start missing. Their timing isn't the same. A heavier gun keeps moving after the shot, a lighter gun is easier to start moving. So many things to consider - quess that's why we're not all master class shooters.
Hi Paul:

Muzzle swinging through the bird is an issue with me hitting the crossing birds when shooting skeet. I have a tendency to stop and then shoot on birds from the high house. I don't have as much trouble hitting birds from the low house, (I'm right handed.) The reason is obvious. When unwinding to place the gun before calling for the low house bird it is natural to swing back left and less so, (at least for me) to follow the bird from the high house where I have to wind up to chase the bird.

I have been shooting a very light Browning Gold Fusion and as I tire I note that it takes me longer to find the bird after its launch with this whippy gun.

It is a work in progress. I haven't received my RST shells yet, so I'll shoot my Sterlingworth this Thursday at clays. Looking forward to it. This will be my first Clays outting.

Someone here said that I should forget worrying about choke, so I'm going to follow his advice and shoot the F and M gun at clays. As soon as my RST loads arrive I'll shoot my Parker GH F and F. That will be fun!

Since I shoot my SC at trap I want to shoot my GH at clays and maybe try it with spreaders, at skeet. I'd like to be known as the "Parker Guy" at my club. Might as well.

Neither of my Parkers are prestine, but both are in excellent condition with shinny bores, good springs and have been cleaned out inside of all of that ancient gunk. So they are excellent shooters. No one else in the club shoots a Parker....so I'm the guy. Even if I miss, I'm at the top of the Parker heep!
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Unread 09-11-2012, 05:44 PM   #2
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blowem out of the sky steve...shoot one for me... charlie
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Unread 09-11-2012, 07:33 PM   #3
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blowem out of the sky steve...shoot one for me... charlie
Will do.

I see that some of the Clays shooters don't bother to keep score. I'll probably try to do so in my head. We don't have a guy calling out "loss", etc.

My club is an excellent one, it has new equipment and dedicated members and the Clays range is new. I've watch'em shoot Clays a few times and am looking forward to trying it out. It certainly adds a new dimention to the Clay bird game.

However, live pigeon shooting must have been great shooting! Did they mount the gun when the bird took off, or before? I guess we call "pull" because they did too, to tell the guy to pull the string that opened the "trap" that held the bird.

I think they still do live pigeon shooting somewhere. Maybe in Mexico. I'm not going down there tho. Not in your life!
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Unread 09-11-2012, 08:27 PM   #4
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I don't keep score when I shoot clays of any kind.
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Unread 09-11-2012, 08:42 PM   #5
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My wife and I shoot all the time and our main rule is . . . no keeping score
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Unread 09-12-2012, 08:11 PM   #6
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Steve, really good shooters don't worry about chokes, but anyone wanting to hit more than miss might want to pay attention - at least when shooting skeet. It's a real handicap to shoot full chokes at skeet ranges. We do have bragging rights at my club and we play "skins" - buck a station. I don't like to pay too much money so most my guns are choked skeet in/skeet out [ or light mod.]. We have a pigeon ring - you can't see where the bird is going and the trap throws in a 360 degree circle. The damn thing was my idea, I put it in, and I CAN'T hit squat at it. Now that SxS has mod/ imp mod for chokes - the birds are sometimes a bit farther out. For a right hander shooting skeet - you always face the low house except station 7 and high 8. That will put you in the netural position so you can turn either way. Finding the bird really has nothing to do with the weight of the gun. Because I learned to shoot "gun down " I can look back at the house and find the bird. It's something you'll have to work out. Good luck.
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Unread 09-12-2012, 09:49 PM   #7
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I shoot low gun, and when I call for the target I don't pick up the gun till I see the target..
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Unread 09-13-2012, 05:25 PM   #8
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I shoot low gun, and when I call for the target I don't pick up the gun till I see the target..
I think that is the best way to do it. It takes time to find the bird as they are coming from all around.
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Unread 09-13-2012, 10:49 AM   #9
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Chris, that's the way a lot of us at my club shoot. We also shoot International or Doubles skeet. At Doubles in the winter if both birds are hit with one shot we count it - us old guys don't like to stay out any longer than necessary. International is fun with gun down, no movement till you see the bird, and up to a 3 second time delay. The birds are also thrown differently. A high house and double on 1, 2, and 3. A low house and double on 5 and 6. Just a double on 7. On 4 a single high and low and two doubles. High first, then low first. Shoot 8 as usual. Eight is hard with low gun and a time delay. I'm getting too old for that one.
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Unread 09-13-2012, 10:54 AM   #10
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That sound like a lot of fun Paul. I try to shoot clays the way I hunt. I keep the stock under my arm till the bird takes off.
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