New to Trap/Skeet- Instruction?

peterbing

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I'm trying to find more information on where I can go in the Toronto area to learn how to shoot trap & skeet. Anyone know where I can try it out without having to join a club and get something out of it, other than 25 shots and a shotgun rental?

Thanks in advance!
 
Back in the day, way back, I asked the same question at one of the local firearms stores. The short answer was grab your shotgun and come out to the club on Wednesday after supper. So, I grabbed my shotgun, and some ammo and went to the local trap and skeet club. First off, Trap is not Skeet, two very separate games, about all that's similar is the ammunition, sort of. Trap is a game that imitates a pheasant rising up and flying away from you. 1 1/8 oz of 7 1/2 shot was a good load, some use #8. It is all 12 ga, and the shotgun is like your goose gun on steroids. A single shot or an O/U if you are shooting doubles.

Skeet is more like shooting chickens, going away, left to right or right to left, and at you. The birds are shot at shorter distance, the shotgun is usually an O/U as a few of the stages have doubles. It is a four gauge game, 12 ga, 20 ga, 28 ga and .410 cal. You don't need a 1 1/8 load. Here most use #9, but #8 and #7 1/2 are just as popular. You can get started with 1 shotgun, but in order to participate in a four gun shoot, you'll need at least 2, a .410 for .410 and 28 ga, and a 20 ga for 20 and 12. It was common to see shooters use a .410 for 28. Back in the day Browning and Winchester made 3 and 4 gun sets. The 3 gun was sweet, a set of .410 barrels, 28 ga barrels and 20 ga barrels on the small frame 20 ga shotgun.

I found out fairly quickly a large pail of money is handy to have, maybe several pails, as they tend to empty fairly quickly.

I've been out of the game for several decades, the information I gave you is old. I'm pretty sure the pail of money one still applies. the trap game is more expensive than the skeet game, but both will empty your pails. Trap just empties them faster.

Just for S&G I checked out the price of a new Perazzi shotgun, yep they are pricey, $20,000. If you are serious about trap, you'll need 2. There are other shotgun brands, but they're nothing like a Perazzi. If you want to shoot 100 straight fairly often, you'll need one.

Skeet is a bit easier on your wallet for shotguns, cut the chokes off any old O/U and go have some fun. Oh, the trap boys will snicker at you, but they're usually snobs, not people you'd want for friends anyways.

None of my reply was serious, although there is probably some truth to it.

I got out of the game while I still had 1 small pail of money left. Fun times.

Seriously, if you just want to have fun, and sharpen your shotgun skills, Sporting Clays is something to look into. Smaller pails, fewer snobs, and a bit more action.
 
I hear oshawa has a pretty nice range for clay sports. Has skeet, trap, 5 stand, and sporting Clay's

I have not been there yet even though I drive past the area pretty frequently. If you are asking about coaching and lessons, try searching for an instructors in your area on:

Mynssa.nssa-ncsa.org/instructors-2/level-1-instructors/
 
And I really disagree with nitro about the needing a 20,000 dollar perazzi to shoot 100's. Before they got popular people used to shoot skeet and trap with pumps
 
There are clubs in Oshawa (as mentioned above), Uxbridge and Toronto International is near Alliston. West of Toronto, Bridgeport and Galt. What is closest to you and I can probably connect you with someone at one of those clubs.

You can PM, if you want to come out to Woodstock.
 
Pay no attention to the naysayers. Find a club, go out and shoot. Any old pump gun will get you started and the "snobs" are few and far between. I have never met anyone who wasn't interested in introducing more shooters to trap or skeet. Once you have done a bit of shooting you can buy that 20,000.00 Perazzi and shoot hundred's all day. :d
 
In bench rest a handful of guys actually compete in it but hunters and internet barcode rifle experts spew nonsense.

The 3500$ second hand shotgun crowd has hurt more feelers and spread more BS on trap and skeet then anyone else and it also gets regurgitated on the internet constantly.
 
;) Some of us caught the dry humor.

Apparently not that many! I love dry humor. Unfortunately it is the least understood of all humors. Purveyors of dry humor are oft looked upon as being odd, and most don't seem to "get us".

Nitro.

PS: If any skeet shooter needs a Mu8, jugged choked O/U from back in the day when the USSR out-shot everyone at the Olympics, I think I know where there is one.
 
Advice and instruction on the internet is usually worth exactly what you paid for it. That said, based on my personal experience, there are more than a few CGN'rs that frequent this particular forum that know of what they speak.

At our club we invite anyone to try the clay sports with whatever gun they already have. If it's a 12" riot gun we usually offer to let them use something that's more appropriate. My experience has also been that the most snobbish of the clays crowd tend to be the people with a nice Browning or Beretta that look down at anyone with a K or P gun because "they're just showing off they have money".
 
Hey if you want to come down to the Mitchell area am more than willing to take you out and show you the ropes. My club shoots skeet all winter long and trap in the summer. Some of the best shooters come from small clubs so keep that in mind! Do not spend big money on your first gun as you might learn after the first 5000 rounds you hate the game. Ps I got a wonderful 1100 completion forsale and you are more than welcome to try it!
 
The snobs need to ask themselves why the sport is dying. I remember going out to the club as a kid with my dad. It’s now 40 years later and there are half the crowd there use to be although they say membership is full.
As for expensive guns, the last group I joined in, 5 of the 6 shooters had a Beretta DT11. Most were blue collar workers.
 
Our club welcomes new shooters with whatever shotgun they choose to bring, as long as the shotgun is safe to use, and the owner practices safe gun handling. I have asked someone to remove a shotgun from the field, after two delayed hangfires on the first station, and I have refused to throw doubles after a gun refused to cycle multiple times, and the owner refused offers of another gun to use, because I wasn't going to throw 40 targets for the person, because of the gun malfunctions. I have also asked someone to leave the field because they didn't know how to operate their gun, and were constantly delaying the squad, or because they were not handling the gun safely.
 
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