Not sure what kind of idiot did the animated picture, but NOBODY holds a shotgun like that. And the painting is 70s, not 60s.... look at the car. Looks like she's shooting either an 1100 or an 11-87 Remington.
You and me both. Sporting clays as well..............
I still start my mount about the same as the young lady in the drawing, trying to still replicate hunting, if only a little, rather than the clinched shoulder mount formal trap shooting.
When I shoot Skeet, it's generally International and you have to have a contrasting line at the waist that the butt of the shotgun has to touch and cannot move until the bird is released. It's double tough.You and me both. Sporting clays as well.
Ever shoot FITASC? Humbling, to say the least.When I shoot Skeet, it's generally International and you have to have a contrasting line at the waist that the butt of the shotgun has to touch and cannot move until the bird is released. It's double tough.
American skeet shooters come once and never come back.
Frighteningly Intense Tough Ass Sporting Clays?Ever shoot FITASC? Humbling, to say the least.
Hold your ears...Funny …. I watched an old Andy Griffith Show this week and Andy took a girl out shooting not knowing she was a competition shooter ….. a lesson about men assuming the "weaker sex" couldn't do "men things".
You just gonna have to quit that kind of talk & you know what I mean .If I go skeet shooting I will be like on The Beverly Hillbillies, I even have a double barreled slingshot like Ellie May!
Set at 40?Now back to regular programming... I see that International Skeet the birds are traveling 65mph vs. 50mph for American skeet. The club I shoot at a few times a year has said their birds are more like 40.
To what gnappi said, most don't come back to an International range, point taken. But think I might be back with a whole new game face,,,, for a while. But at least I'd try. But my eye/hand coordination has never been top notch, & I'd just have to see how bad I could be at it.