Hartmann’s Hint #28: Symmetry

Symmetry

It’s April 2018, and yesterday a friend of mine—who is a reasonably new Level 1 instructor as well as being an A- or AA-class shooter—asked me to give him a formal lesson regarding doubles. I gave him some options on how he could shoot the doubles game with more success. His problems were with doubles at stations 4 and 5. He is in his mid 60’s, a left-handed shooter, and an excellent duck hunter. He has been shooting registered targets about three years.

As we changed his hold and look points, as well as his foot position on station 4, he made a comment that made me think about writing this hint. His comment was something to the effect that he thought that because station 4 was symmetrical, the doubles (both high first and low first) should have the same move, hold, and look points as well as break zones. While the field is symmetrical, we are not. We don’t change hands when we shoot the low house first versus shooting the high house first. In doubles, the hold points, look points and break zones on station 4 can be different when shooting either the high or low house first.

Stay safe, shoot well and have fun,

Barry Hartmann is an NSSA Master Level and NRA Certified shotgun instructor who can help you improve your skills at American Skeet and wingshooting. To contact Barry, email him at threeat8@aol.com or give him a call at (918)803-2393.

 

 

Hartmann’s Hint #29: Barrel Rise

Barrel Rise

 

When you shoot the upper barrel of an over-under shotgun for your first shot, there is a possibility of having to recover from a recoil-induced barrel rise before shooting your second shot.

If you shoot the bottom barrel first, there is a possibility of having straight-line recoil, which makes it possible to shoot the second shot without any barrel rise.

If you’re currently shooting your top barrel first, try changing to your bottom barrel first; you should like it.

Stay safe,

Barry Hartmann is an NSSA Master Level and NRA Certified shotgun instructor who can help you improve your skills at American Skeet and wingshooting. To contact Barry, email him at threeat8@aol.com or give him a call at (918)803-2393.

 

 

Hartmann’s Hint #30: Carrying Your Shotgun

Carrying your shotgun while shooting the clay target games

 

When you’re at the shooting range you’ll observe several methods of carrying shotguns.

Break-open shotguns are normally broken open and carried with the barrel pointed in front of the person holding it. I say normally, as you see the occasional shooter with the barrel backwards over their shoulder. I don’t think I’ve ever been hit by a barrel carried in this fashion, but others I’ve spoken with have, and they said it hurt. If we carry a break-open shotgun over our shoulder, we should keep the barrel in front of us so we don’t accidentally hit someone with it and so we don’t inadvertently point the barrel at someone.

Another thing we see frequently at the range is a pump or semi-automatic shotgun being held by the breech with the barrel pointing down. While this sounds like the safest possible way to carry it, and it is a common carrying position when we’re in the field hunting, it can sometimes be unsafe on a skeet field. When we’re hunting, there usually aren’t a lot of people nearby and the ground may not be hard packed or concrete. When shooting a round of skeet or trap, in addition to there being several other shooters on the field, the surface is usually hard-packed soil or concrete, and an accidental firing is always a possibility. I know I’ve seen this while hunting and once on a trap field. The pellets hit the ground and ricocheted in the general direction the barrel is pointing. If we’re lucky, no one gets hurt and there’s no property damage.

This is another reason why we use the term ‘MAT‘.

  • Muzzle - Keep the muzzle in a safe direction
  • Action – Keep the action open
  • Trigger - Keep your finger away from the trigger

The bottom line is to always have your shotgun unloaded except when you’re in the station and about to shoot, always be aware of your surroundings and the direction your gun is pointed, and always keep it pointed in a safe direction.

Shoot often and stay safe.

Barry Hartmann is an NSSA Master Level and NRA Certified shotgun instructor who can help you improve your skills at American Skeet and wingshooting. To contact Barry, email him at threeat8@aol.com or give him a call at (918)803-2393.

 

 

Hartmann’s Hint #26: Trap and Skeet Are Complementary

Trap and Skeet Are Complementary

Many of us have heard something like, “Skeet targets always fly in the same place, so skeet is easier” or  “Trap is just so boring.” Another saying goes like this. “Trap is easier to learn and harder to master than skeet.” There are many people that try to show that their sport is better than another one, but I believe that if it’s with a shotgun, it’s fun and that it takes a level of skill to be proficient at whichever sport it is.

I have shot most of the clay target sports at one time or another. I call myself a ‘homeless bunker shooter,’ as that was a game that I most enjoyed other than skeet and sometimes American trap. The reason I use ‘homeless’ is that there isn’t a bunker trap I’m aware of within a two-hour drive of Tulsa where I moved about a dozen years ago. For many years I was a cross-shooter (please don’t tell my mother). Yes, I shot both trap and skeet at a point in my shooting life when I was breaking a good score in both sports at the same time. But I digress; this hint is about the complementary nature of skeet and trap.

When I would have students of trap that were having a difficult time hitting hard right or hard left targets, I’d take them to a skeet field and teach them to shoot high 2 or low 6. This always helped their trap shooting, and it sometimes made them like skeet shooting, too. Conversely, when I’d have new skeet shooters that were having a difficult time with one target or another, I’d take them to a trap field, lock the machine in place, and teach them how to hit targets from all five stations before returning to the skeet field. This seemed to get their minds focused on seeing and breaking the targets.

The two games are complementary in that both games have moving targets, and you must look at the target in both sports in order to see them hit. Both games have hold points, look points, and foot positions that make it easier to hit the targets and to follow through. In both games, gun fit, mount, and stance are important. Both games take a high level of concentration.

The main difference between the games is the distance at which you shoot the targets and their flight paths. In trap, the targets are always flying away from you so you have a similar look at the target at all five stations. I say similar, as they never seem to fly in the same place twice, and as you change stations the angles are different. Also, trap machines for American trap have an ‘interrupter’ that makes it difficult, if not impossible, to know which way the next target will be thrown. In skeet you have more severe angles than in trap. Skeet also has going-away targets, some incoming targets and several crossing targets. There are some similar and some different presentations in the two games. In competitions, trap shooters also shoot three games, singles (16-yard), handicap and doubles, while skeet is two events, which I call ‘regular’ and doubles.

Some skeet shooters seem to think that shooting 200 targets in a day is tiresome, but trap shooters will shoot 300 targets per day if they shoot all three of their events. When I attended trap shoots, I would shoot all three, and I was wiped out by the time we finished a single day’s shooting. Sometimes trap shoots have the same format two days in a row, and that is a lot of work — fun, but still work. A gentleman I used to shoot with, Roman Warren, was in one trap shoot where he shot a thousand targets in a shoot-off after two days of shooting. That’s a lot of work.

The next time you have a chance to shoot either trap or skeet, do it. You’ll find that they are both fun and that either one can improve your shooting skills if you concentrate.

Barry Hartmann is an NSSA Master Level and NRA Certified shotgun instructor who can help you improve your skills at American skeet and wingshooting. To contact Barry, email him at threeat8@aol.com or give him a call at 918-803-2393.