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Best way to improve?


Shadowchaser
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I've been shooting for 10 years but only been going regularly for the past couple.

 

My shooting however has improved very little in that time. Today was an embarrassment with a score of just 18/50. Some easy targets were missed.

 

Every now and then I can get mid 30's out of 50. I had one proper shooting lesson last year which was informative and some adjustments were made to my gun. My scores didn't really differ afterwards. I have since purchased a new gun and have had the same varied results.

 

Ideally I'd like to be hitting a consistent minimum of 30/50 by the end of the year.

 

I have access to a trap and land on which to shoot and wonder if it's simply a case of shooting at different targets over and over again (say 50 shots on one target). I suppose another lesson wouldn't go amiss either.

 

Does anyone here have any thoughts, because shooting a sporting 50 every week is getting me nowhere?

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A singular lesson will not offer a massive improvement you'll need a stead course to almost double your scores.

 

A single lesson can help with 1 maybe 2 bad habits most self taught shots have lots and these take time to over come and relearn, you may even see a dip before your required improvement.

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I'm never really sure where I'm going wrong, too much lead, not enough, above, below etc..

 

My usual method of shooting is to try and maintain lead.

 

Go and have a few lessons if you can and don't know about anyone else but I have always found maintained lead hard - you really should explore other methods as ML isn't the answer to lots of presentations.

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I am in a similar position to you as far as scores go , usually around 50%, but starting to improve gradually.

 

I had a lesson a few weeks ago and it has helped me get into a routine at each stand by thinking about the basics, getting my feet right , visual pick up point, kill zone etc before calling for the bird.

 

I needed to have a structured approach to start improving otherwise I would start shooting without thinking about what I was doing, miss the first few and then mentally I was already defeated. As people keep telling me the mental side is more than half of the battle.

 

Now I just practice as much as possible to try and make the routine second nature , I think it is working and my confidence has improved .

 

All the best.

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Maintained lead is fine for some targets. It won't work on springing teal for example - you can't lead what you can't see. On dropping clays - the clay may well be accelerating - making maintained lead a poor choice. However, it is good for skeet.

 

The reality if that it takes many techniques to hit all clays. Pull through, maintained lead, track and pull ahead etc.

 

As a few have said - if you genuinely want to get better - get a few lessons. Beretta on here - Brian Clegg - one of the very top clay shooters, great coach and thoroughly decent bloke.

 

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=QlAS8SWLd6M

 

Well worth a look.

Edited by Gordon R
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lesson time,and to start with eye check...18/50 after 10 years you may find your eye dominance has changed a tad...lots of good books out there if you are a book type...are you maintained lead for ALL targets?cos if so that is very strange/rare....and begs question why?

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lesson time,and to start with eye check...18/50 after 10 years you may find your eye dominance has changed a tad...lots of good books out there if you are a book type...are you maintained lead for ALL targets?cos if so that is very strange/rare....and begs question why?

No not ML for all. I guess I started using it as often as possible when I read an article about not letting the clay overtake the gun.

 

My eye dominance was checked last year at the lesson and seemed fine. Looking back at last years scores I managed 35, 34 and 31 in a row and then back to normal. And those scores were before I took the lesson!

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