I seen a guy, well known out in these parts shoot 300 straight registered with a remmy 870 with a hacked barrel. Made the hooti-tooti Kolar, Krieghoff princesses that usually prance around the field bragging about their guns look like the pussies they really are, it was priceless![]()
Pay no mind to those who are embittered that other people have nicer stuff than they do.And I never knew hooti-tooti Krieghoff and Kolar shooters were princesses and pussies? Hmmmm? Thank god I am a Rizzini shooter. We are not princesses or pussies but then we aren't Wingmaster material either. We are a little lower socially yet(insert sarcasm here)but working on it......
Claybuster; Nicely put, whereas target models are built for that purpose and in some cases priced accordingly, alot of us start off with a field gun, then eventually migrate to a target model. I have 4 shotguns; a .410 SXS that was my fathers(I do not shoot it well, I never saw him miss a grouse with it), a Baikal IJ-58M 12ga(M/F), an Akkar Churchill 206 Silver Hunter(my primary "target" gun) and a Benelli Nova. I shoot the Nova best, the Akkar nearly as well, the Baikal is my field gun. I will probably/may'be upgrade the Akkar is a few years should it cause me issues, but to date have seen no reason to do so. The Nova is the oddball, I don't shoot it in competition, but generally speaking in practice I'm up a target per round over the Akkar, when I shoot competition with the Akkar, I shoot the same average as I do with the Nova in practice. Figure it's psychological thing more than anything else. I have more fun shooting the Nova.
They dont gain an appreciation for those advantages till they start aquiring there own gear and try it without constant correction on form errors and suddenly they cant hit,
What I have noticed after introducing many people to skeet over the years, is that too much instruction and correction, often causes more issues tan it resolves.
I agree with you BCFred, I have started out many beginners by setting them up with my fully tuned equipment and loads and the best instructions I can manage, they shoot great. They dont gain an appreciation for those advantages till they start aquiring there own gear and try it without constant correction on form errors and suddenly they cant hit, but at least they know what is possible.
In shotgunning a gun that fits is a tremendous advantage, no matter the price tag on it. Price buys reliability and pretty, not fit, unless it is custom.
Interesting point. We had a lot of inexperienced visitors at home this year and the youngsters and a number of the adults all wanted to shoot. I found it helped with both groups if I found a some way of asking how much help they wanted. People are really different in how much help they will accept and find useful. Safety stuff isn't negotiable of course. It's important to watch when they put their finger on the trigger and how they control the muzzle of the gun with both groups and to build good habits right away in this regard. Usually I feed them shells one at a time while standing beside them until I'm sure there isn't a problem. Kids are particularly prone to impulsive movements, of course.
When asked for advice or help on the skeet field I try to keep it basic for beginners. I try to emphasize good stance based on left or right handed shooting, where to look for the target to emerge and give them the amount of lead required at each post. I tell them just practice good basic fundamentals and shoot until you are out of ammo! Lol