Free: Contests & Raffles.
I assume that you are right handed and right eye dominant. Check to make sure which is your dominant eye. I’m assuming that you are Right and right eyed . Mount the gun and open both eyes. You will see 2 sights one clear and one a little fuzzy. Now close your left (non dominant) eye. Most likely the clearer sight (the one that was most left) will be the only one you see. Repeat this 1000 time till there is no confusion. When target shooting, your focus (hard intense focus) will be on the leading edge of the target. You will see your sight in the peripheral. Learn how not to measure the lead; it will come instinctive over time. I’m glad you are looking to buy that book. Read it several times. Also look at a lot of sporting clay videos on line and you will see you scores start to climb. Sounds like you need some serious adjustments for that gun
Quote from: wildweeds on January 19, 2012, 04:53:07 PM For a great time and a lesson might I suggest Chuck Dryke at Sunneydell shooting grounds,he's got a pretty impressive little bag of tricks that you'll wonder "What the heck,I thought this was a shooting lesson" .......it turns into a shooting lesson that if you pay attention will improve your performance by at least 70%(my buddy went for a lesson and the transformation from misser to hitter was impressive).There is also a gunsmith on site at Sunneydell for fitting.x2 on taking a lesson from Chuck. i took a one day lesson from him its was as fun as it was informative. i took his course even after winning some major trophies and i can honestly say that my scores improved and were more consistant.if youre looking for some books id highly reccomend "An Insight to Sports; Featuring Trapshooting" i forget the author's name but i know its Dr. something, its all about how to see things and how to make your eyes work better for you. also check out "The Little Book of Trapshooting" by Frank Little. Frank was a highly decorated ATA shooter and i believe he was a member of several All-American teams. Good read with lots of usefull info
For a great time and a lesson might I suggest Chuck Dryke at Sunneydell shooting grounds,he's got a pretty impressive little bag of tricks that you'll wonder "What the heck,I thought this was a shooting lesson" .......it turns into a shooting lesson that if you pay attention will improve your performance by at least 70%(my buddy went for a lesson and the transformation from misser to hitter was impressive).There is also a gunsmith on site at Sunneydell for fitting.
Yup that's the one great book I refer back to it often. Franks book can be found at franklittleshooting.com it has a yellow cover with a picture of frank kneeling titled the little trapshooting book cost $20 off his sight. Keeping track of scores and progress isn't a bad thing just don't count your misses during the round focus on breaking each bird one at a time it's a lot easier to win 25 games of 1 instead of 1 game of 25. I never know for sure what I shot until after the the round is over and I check the score sheet. Take it one target at a time
I have a little graph I keep in my case and I keep track of everything, the date, the game, the range, the score, shots fired, chokes, and any other pertinent info like which card I shot, weather, etc, etc. I started it when I got the new gun for the purpose of keeping track of exactly how many rounds I fired thru and expanded it from there. So I can see my scores and how they trend - I guess I should get rid of that if you are saying stop focusing on scores! I guess I could still track only shots fired? I dont know why it matters to me, just thought it would be interesting to know how many I've shot thru it, especially if something broke I would know how long it lasted!
Thanks sako - I have tried shooting with both eyes open but I seem to do worse. I see two beads and never know which one to 'aim' from. What do you mean by passing or sustained lead? I am usually coming from behind the bird (on 5 stand) since I am pointed at where its coming from vs where I plan to shoot it at. It is fun thats for sure, but I hate when I miss birds I think I should have hit!D-Rock - yeah I've thought the same thing. I'd love to have one fitted to me to but I dont know where to have that done at. Can you have a production gun like a Browning custom fit to you or do you have to have a custom gun made? Either way it sounds expensive!
Oh and I was looking down the barrel with both eyes open too but I see 2 sights (or 4 if you count both sights) I'm not sure which 2 to put on the target?! And what does superposed mean wild?