shooting ducks with ghost rings

I've used them for shooting clays. made the job too simple...
hope that helps.
Payam

:eek: I thought it will be slow to aim instead of just looking down the rib for sight plane..............so may be its time to visit my smith for a drill and tap job:D or just have him install choke on my 590 and plug the mag. LOL
 
Wingshooting should be mostly instinctive, as soon as you add sights or even a bead you begin to lose some of the instinctiveness. If you can train yourself to ignore the site then you'll do fine. Shooting cripples will be easy with the site though.
 
im having a choke fitted to my 930 SPX .. we have alot of 'fudds' here, especially in the duck shooting community.. so ill catch flakk for it but i want to hunt with a sweet scattergun

If you want a "sweet scattergun" buy a Benelli or a Beretta.
 
i agree with that.. most of the best shots ive every taken have been raise the tube and bang, no thought, no real aiming going on.. just a reflex action. the front sight post has a high vis bead in it, so that will make it easier to ignore the ghost ring
 
by sweet i meant tacticlol .. ive already got a Fabarm H38 which is nicer ( with wood nickers on ) than all of the berettas and benellis that ive handled, and lighter

but a friend has shown interest in it at a very nice price and its time for a change for me
 
I have been using my Mossberg 590 as my primary tactical shotgun for matches, it has tritium ghost ring night sights made by Sage International. For tactical uses I can hit center mass all day long with 00Buck out to 50 yards and using slugs hits milk jugs offhand at 100yards is quite simple, I'm pretty effective using slugs offhand on milk jugs to about 140-150yards. I use 2 3/4" shells for tactical use, Winchesters for heavy practice, Federals with Flight control wads for best accuracy at all ranges.

I have been hunting ducks and geese with this combo for the last eight years, only modification is plugging the magazine to accomidate two shells, my comments for hunting:

-ghost ring sites make finding targets incredibly quick, and is very instictive for me to line them up and make hits out to 50-60yards on ducks and geese.

-because I am limited to a 20" barrel, I need to use 3inch magnum shells for hunting and a heavier shot, I usually use #2 steel shot for ducks and geese, allows me to reach out to about the same effective range as my buddy who shoots a 26" barrel with lighter shot.

-reliability has been unbelievable, the gun has been through rain, snow, mud, sun, heat, cold, everything. Always works.

Took up shooting sporting clays a few years ago with the same gun and sight setup, after all the laughs subside on the range when I start knocking pigeons down from every angle, especially the bouncers that everyone avoids. I'll call out a bunch in a row just to hush all the ney-sayers with their $3000 custom shotguns and huge barrels.

I really like shooting clays throughout the summer in addition to range work, keeps me finely tuned for the hunting season.
 
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I have been using my Mossberg 590 as my primary tactical shotgun for matches, it has tritium ghost ring night sights made by Sage International. For tactical uses I can hit center mass all day long with 00Buck out to 50 yards and using slugs hits milk jugs offhand at 100yards is quite simple, I'm pretty effective using slugs offhand on milk jugs to about 140-150yards. I use 2 3/4" shells for tactical use, Winchesters for heavy practice, Federals with Flight control wads for best accuracy at all ranges.

I have been hunting ducks and geese with this combo for the last eight years, only modification is plugging the magazine to accomidate two shells, my comments for hunting:

-ghost ring sites make finding targets incredibly quick, and is very instictive for me to line them up and make hits out to 50-60yards on ducks and geese.

-because I am limited to a 20" barrel, I need to use 3inch magnum shells for hunting and a heavier shot, I usually use #2 steel shot for ducks and geese, allows me to reach out to about the same effective range as my buddy who shoots a 26" barrel with lighter shot.

-reliability has been unbelievable, the gun has been through rain, snow, mud, sun, heat, cold, everything. Always works.

Took up shooting sporting clays a few years ago with the same gun and sight setup, after all the laughs subside on the range when I start knocking pigeons down from every angle, especially the bouncers that everyone avoids, I'll call out a bunch in a row just to hush all the ney-sayers with their $3000 custom shotguns and huge barrels.

Just because a fella is packing expensive iron diesen't mean he can shoot it.
Cat
 
Forgot to add that I've got a brand new Benelli M4 Super 90 sitting here ready to go one of these days when I decide to get off my butt and train myself off my 590 and onto the M4.

The Benelli M4's have 18.5" barrels with great factory ghost ring sights, when I feel I am competent enough to say something about it, I'll give a full range report.

So many guns, so little time........
 
I know it'd screw me up. Ive tried drawing on a flushed grouse with my rifled sighted barrel and just couldnt do it.

I dont even really see the sight when I wing shoot with a bead, its just so instinctive
 
I know it'd screw me up. Ive tried drawing on a flushed grouse with my rifled sighted barrel and just couldnt do it.

I dont even really see the sight when I wing shoot with a bead, its just so instinctive

You said it right there blasted saber!

Ghost rings are like a bead, the instinctively will line up when the gun is shouldered properly, it is really hard not to center the front dot inside a ghost ring and put it over a target, I hardly notice it at all when hunting too.

I use my ghost ring as a tool for moving targets, keep the duck or goose on the trailing edge of a centered ghost ring sight as you are moving with the target, slowly squeeze the trigger and the shot will be dead on each time. Works perfect! I perfer it to a bead only sight as I can get my proper lead each and every time. Perfect with no guesswork.

The only problem with this option is I am usually done hunting by quarter after 7. Sometimes I like to really choose my shots just to spend some good time in the field.
 
I just bought an M4 from Wolverine. I too, want to use it for Ducks. Anybody know if I can use a long, extra full choke to extend my range?
 
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