Jump to content

Do I need my gun fitted


Blackpowder
 Share

Recommended Posts

I have just finished filleting the breasts from five of the seven pigeons I shot at roosting tonight. Now I fired thirty shots for these seven birds and one rook so this post is not a boast on markmanship. Of these five birds only one had a pellet in the breast meat, two had been brought down with broken right wings, of the other three no visible sign of pellet penetration. During the pheasant season I marked two brace of birds from our club shoot, and made sure I took these when the birds were handed out. Again from these four pheasants only one had a pellet in the breast , in fact the one shot behind the stand and picked as a runner. So I am hitting an occasional bird, breaking the right wing of on coming pigeons and now wondering would a session at the plate with a try gun inprove markmanship.

 

Blackpowder

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Personaly I'd say lessons, lots of practise on clays, then consider getting custom gun fitted... In that order. Btw it amazes me how few pellets I find in birds shot at proper height with correct choke. I put it down to the fact that only 4 numbers six pellets will kill a pheasant and the shot is in a column so there aren't that many in the kill zone if that makes sense?

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Wouldn't bother getting the gun altered unless it's far too low. Get some practice and a lesson or two. If your shooting them At reasonable range you may find your side by side is too open and you need to have a bit more choke to get enough pellets on target for a hard kill. Look at learning to point it in the right place first though.

 

Wouldn't bother getting the gun altered unless it's far too low. Get some practice and a lesson or two. If your shooting them At reasonable range you may find your side by side is too open and you need to have a bit more choke to get enough pellets on target for a hard kill. Look at learning to point it in the right place first though.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Hi, good fit is important but most shooters contort themselves around it. Only 30 percent of guns 'off the peg' fit, the other 70 per cent don't! There is nothing like having a gun that shoots where you are looking! If you own an auto or a pump action most likely you can vary cast and drop with wedge shaped shims inserted between the stock and receiver. An over and under is not so easy, an adjustable comb costs about 200 Quid to get fitted. it may be you just need a comb raiser, just a stick on piece of rubber. Definitely a 2 hour session with a coach will identify any problems you have with the gun you use and maybe your technique, mounting etc. Good luck and better shooting.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Roost shooting pigeons is not the easiest shooting .Many of the pigeons you shoot at are wood bound (as we say in Norfolk ) that is behind branches and twigs when you pull on to them . I would agree a lesson or two with a good coach would help you ,as it would all of us .

 

Harnser

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Roost shooting pigeons is not the easiest shooting .Many of the pigeons you shoot at are wood bound (as we say in Norfolk ) that is behind branches and twigs when you pull on to them . I would agree a lesson or two with a good coach would help you ,as it would all of us .

 

Harnser

Thanks to all other replies. Hi Hanser the wood in question is tricky to shoot, mature but never thinned and much to dense to stand within. Therefore hide is on the fence line, I have shot it the last two times with a good west wind, the birds come beating across the field towards the wood, sometimes just skimming the ground, then when they get into the shelter of the wood they whip up , and now they have been shot at a few times give a jink and you find you have pulled the trigger on an empty space. I find that in a wood where you just have time to see and mount that roost shooting results are at their best, at least where kills to cartridge ratio is concerned. I should also have said that I am shooting with a recently aquired gun.

 

Blackpowder

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Thanks to all other replies. Hi Hanser the wood in question is tricky to shoot, mature but never thinned and much to dense to stand within. Therefore hide is on the fence line, I have shot it the last two times with a good west wind, the birds come beating across the field towards the wood, sometimes just skimming the ground, then when they get into the shelter of the wood they whip up , and now they have been shot at a few times give a jink and you find you have pulled the trigger on an empty space. I find that in a wood where you just have time to see and mount that roost shooting results are at their best, at least where kills to cartridge ratio is concerned. I should also have said that I am shooting with a recently aquired gun.

 

Blackpowder

 

 

Roost shooting pigeons is allways very testing . I can remember one roost shoot a few years back when 12 guns stood in 450 acres of woodland and shot over 600 cartridges for 150 odd birds and one gun accounted for 35 of them . Kill to cartridge ratio wasent very good ,but the thrill factor was 100% .

 

Harnser .

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Phew! glad it's not just me! I been struggling and my few birds don't have many holes too.

 

I was getting hung up on it too but started analysing each shot. Chinking abd branches were screwing the shot up good.

 

Next I realised I was giving to much lead alot of the time (a hang over from years of muzzleloading!).

 

Next I patterened the two shells I was using and one was a little blotchy over the other so switched to the better.

 

Did all this help? Bloody hell no! :lol:

 

So I came to the conclusions that a; I am a lousy shot gotten and b; they are slippy little *******!

 

I did however do better once I got in the right spot, under the birds line they were favouring. If the wind was wrong and this could not be achieved I do poor!

 

Good luck.

 

U.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Join the conversation

You can post now and register later. If you have an account, sign in now to post with your account.
Note: Your post will require moderator approval before it will be visible.

Guest
Reply to this topic...

×   Pasted as rich text.   Paste as plain text instead

  Only 75 emoji are allowed.

×   Your link has been automatically embedded.   Display as a link instead

×   Your previous content has been restored.   Clear editor

×   You cannot paste images directly. Upload or insert images from URL.

Loading...
 Share

  • Recently Browsing   0 members

    • No registered users viewing this page.
×
×
  • Create New...