Jump to content

Shooting Times and Sporting Gun


Blackpowder
 Share

Recommended Posts

22 minutes ago, TIGHTCHOKE said:

Like all of the printed media about Fieldsports, they can only rehash all the same stuff with different pictures.

Exactly!

Great for beginners who have never seen it before and probably want to soak up as much information as possible, but the older hands tend to stop reading them after a while.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

I wondered how I came to get an email from Sporting Gun, offering me the opportunity to purchase tickets for the Shooting Times Woodcock Club dinner ?

It is in London, tickets are £175 each ! With the cost of overnight stays, fuel or travel, no change from £1000  ?  Makes me wish I had missed that second Woodcock   !   😁

Mind you, I could get the chance to meet Vinnie Jones  🤔

Link to comment
Share on other sites

3 hours ago, Westley said:

I wondered how I came to get an email from Sporting Gun, offering me the opportunity to purchase tickets for the Shooting Times Woodcock Club dinner ?

It is in London, tickets are £175 each ! With the cost of overnight stays, fuel or travel, no change from £1000  ?  Makes me wish I had missed that second Woodcock   !   😁

Mind you, I could get the chance to meet Vinnie Jones  🤔

£75 I think tickets are and isn’t so bad for entry to the Saville club and a meal.

 

Just now, Fargo said:

£75 I think tickets are and isn’t so bad for entry to the Saville club and a meal.

 

 

37C6689A-E049-4C1A-8A8D-951929566446.jpeg

Link to comment
Share on other sites

3 hours ago, TIGHTCHOKE said:

Like all of the printed media about Fieldsports, they can only rehash all the same stuff with different pictures.

 

I used to read Sporting Gun years ago and would bump in to Robin regularly, but you can only rewrite the articles so many times.

The shooting mags mirrored Jack Hargreaves's out of town.  Jack used to go pigeon decoying and rabbit shooting but suddenly that wasn't acceptable.  The program decended to tying flys or making a wicker basket or out in the garden.  Simarly the mags used to cover stuff like making a duck pond blasting out a hole pond using sacks of nitrogen fertiliser until the use of fertiliser bombs by the ira and health & safety stopped all that sort of thing.  The mags went into fairy story mode about having a lovely day watching the sun go down and  friends.   The prices went through the roof and they were adverts for upper market tat with the stereotype  range rover with Barbours and hunter wellies brigade. It was just a one way ticket.  Eley cartridges weren't Eley anymore,  they were made in  France and its just gotten worse. And as for the beginner learning much from the mags, the odd articles that are written are generally rehashes of old articles which were fairy stories in the first plalce. The blind leading the blind. I haven't bought a shooting mag for years. A friend sometimes hands Me a pile and it's just a flp through. A minute or two and then either in the bin or left in random waiting rooms to spread the word. 

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Sorry, misread the dinner ticket cost, but I will still be giving it a miss I'm afraid. 

1 hour ago, Minky said:

The shooting mags mirrored Jack Hargreaves's out of town.  Jack used to go pigeon decoying and rabbit shooting but suddenly that wasn't acceptable.  The program decended to tying flys or making a wicker basket or out in the garden.  Simarly the mags used to cover stuff like making a duck pond blasting out a hole pond using sacks of nitrogen fertiliser until the use of fertiliser bombs by the ira and health & safety stopped all that sort of thing.  The mags went into fairy story mode about having a lovely day watching the sun go down and  friends.   The prices went through the roof and they were adverts for upper market tat with the stereotype  range rover with Barbours and hunter wellies brigade. It was just a one way ticket.  Eley cartridges weren't Eley anymore,  they were made in  France and its just gotten worse. And as for the beginner learning much from the mags, the odd articles that are written are generally rehashes of old articles which were fairy stories in the first plalce. The blind leading the blind. I haven't bought a shooting mag for years. A friend sometimes hands Me a pile and it's just a flp through. A minute or two and then either in the bin or left in random waiting rooms to spread the word. 

I make a point of making sure I take a shooting magazine to leave in the Doctors waiting room, on the rare occasions I go there. They are 'anti gun' and refused to sign my Certificate renewal paperwork.   🙂

Link to comment
Share on other sites

6 hours ago, Westley said:

I make a point of making sure I take a shooting magazine to leave in the Doctors waiting room, on the rare occasions I go there. They are 'anti gun' and refused to sign my Certificate renewal paperwork.   🙂

No magazines in our surgery these days!

Link to comment
Share on other sites

I got a warning i was going to be banned off a site for slagging the country mans weekly , i had been getting it since the 70s they changed the name and the format and i could hardly read it so stopped my subscription but every week they posted about it on a site and a few ripped into it LOL . We got a message to stop it from the mods but i see now its no a weekly mag its a fortnightly one the start of the end no got enough materail to fill it and half of its show results   

Link to comment
Share on other sites

8 hours ago, Minky said:

The shooting mags mirrored Jack Hargreaves's out of town.  Jack used to go pigeon decoying and rabbit shooting but suddenly that wasn't acceptable.  The program decended to tying flys or making a wicker basket or out in the garden.  Simarly the mags used to cover stuff like making a duck pond blasting out a hole pond using sacks of nitrogen fertiliser until the use of fertiliser bombs by the ira and health & safety stopped all that sort of thing.  The mags went into fairy story mode about having a lovely day watching the sun go down and  friends.   The prices went through the roof and they were adverts for upper market tat with the stereotype  range rover with Barbours and hunter wellies brigade. It was just a one way ticket.  Eley cartridges weren't Eley anymore,  they were made in  France and its just gotten worse. And as for the beginner learning much from the mags, the odd articles that are written are generally rehashes of old articles which were fairy stories in the first plalce. The blind leading the blind. I haven't bought a shooting mag for years. A friend sometimes hands Me a pile and it's just a flp through. A minute or two and then either in the bin or left in random waiting rooms to spread the word. 

I am exactly the same , I first started to buy the S Ts in 63 when I left school and had to work to be fed and watered , it was then 1s/6d and I looked forward to it every week , then when I got married and left home my mother carried on buying it weekly as I popped round every Friday night when I left off , this carried on till she passed away and I carried on buying the odd copy until I retired then believe it or not one of the guns in the shoot who I used to take duck shooting on the estates flight ponds bought me a years subcription as a leaving present , this was just over 15 years ago and I haven't bought one since , I flick through the pages in Tesco's and very rarely I spend more than a few minutes reading it , another thing I find is nearly every other week there is a special edition number like Deer stalking , Dog training or anything else they can think of , all for a higher price than the normal weekly edition may I add :good:

Link to comment
Share on other sites

5 minutes ago, marsh man said:

I am exactly the same , I first started to buy the S Ts in 63 when I left school and had to work to be fed and watered , it was then 1s/6d and I looked forward to it every week , then when I got married and left home my mother carried on buying it weekly as I popped round every Friday night when I left off , this carried on till she passed away and I carried on buying the odd copy until I retired then believe it or not one of the guns in the shoot who I used to take duck shooting on the estates flight ponds bought me a years subcription as a leaving present , this was just over 15 years ago and I haven't bought one since , I flick through the pages in Tesco's and very rarely I spend more than a few minutes reading it , another thing I find is nearly every other week there is a special edition number like Deer stalking , Dog training or anything else they can think of , all for a higher price than the normal weekly edition may I add :good:

The corner shop used to get it  in for and i had to ask them to stop it when there was 5 or 6 copies laying on the table unread . it was mounting up to a fair bit every month with all the diffrent mags 

Link to comment
Share on other sites

16 minutes ago, marsh man said:

I am exactly the same , I first started to buy the S Ts in 63 when I left school and had to work to be fed and watered , it was then 1s/6d and I looked forward to it every week , then when I got married and left home my mother carried on buying it weekly as I popped round every Friday night when I left off , this carried on till she passed away and I carried on buying the odd copy until I retired then believe it or not one of the guns in the shoot who I used to take duck shooting on the estates flight ponds bought me a years subcription as a leaving present , this was just over 15 years ago and I haven't bought one since , I flick through the pages in Tesco's and very rarely I spend more than a few minutes reading it , another thing I find is nearly every other week there is a special edition number like Deer stalking , Dog training or anything else they can think of , all for a higher price than the normal weekly edition may I add :good:

We do seem to mirror each other.  I used to task mother to get me a copy of ST when she went to the  market on Thursday for 2/6 ..... l  think and I was very disappointed if she came home without the copy because they had either sold out or the mags hadn't been delivered to the shops.  BUT the articles became more like fairy stories rather than actual reports of days in the field.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

11 hours ago, Minky said:

We do seem to mirror each other.  I used to task mother to get me a copy of ST when she went to the  market on Thursday for 2/6 ..... l  think and I was very disappointed if she came home without the copy because they had either sold out or the mags hadn't been delivered to the shops.  BUT the articles became more like fairy stories rather than actual reports of days in the field.

For a good many years when I was younger I was interested in all forms of shooting and field sports in general , we often held a Hare coursing day and I would look forward with being part of the beating team , the same with field trials , I would often compare my untrained dogs to some of the next to useless ones that had never retrieved anything without being directed , or tried to be directed onto a retrieve , then on the other hand we had dogs that to me were brilliant retrievers , same with clay shooting , we were lucky we had big compertitions on our door step like the British Sporting , watching some of the best shots in the country made you realise how far behind we were , so when getting the S Ts each week I found just about every page full of interest ,in the early days they even had a weekly page , or half a page on the W A G B I clubs which were and still is my first passion , then over the years you start losing interest on certain parts of field sports and shooting in general .

Hare coursing was banned , along with hunting on the horses , clay shooting never held much interest , rifle shooting , fox shooting and so on , so the S Ts became less and less interesting and then some of the old hands started to pass away and the new ones were not on the same planet as those who we were brought up with , now I am well into my 70s the interest in the S Ts is around 10% , the rest have got no interest what so ever , so like a lot of the field sports we had in the early days , buying the S Ts is now well and truly over .   MM

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...