I forgot to saythag the Westley is a 12 bore, 28" barrels, I/C and 3/4 chokes and weighs..............6lbs 2ozs. Get the smelling salts for Will !
Anybody watched these? Interesting to see how they say they tackle clays, give there input and with shotkam footage too
If you let the clay pass and swing through it at Ol. Skeet you will be too slow on the pairs. Will work on other, not so fast skeet disciplines, but not on Ol. Skeet. The singles will work with swing through.
The good guys have their hold point, view point and perfect foot position for every stand.
The movement goes from gun down right in front of the clay. When the mount is complete the lead is also complete and the shot breaks instantly.
Looks very easy and elegant but takes a lot of practice to score at a reasonable level.
The gap between to be fast enough, controlling your lead/ barrels and not to rush and get uncontrolled at the same time is not huge.
You could train sort of an automatism to move to the targets if they always fly exact the same way. But if they are not (wind) you will miss.
And the good shots are able to correct their movement and hit the clay as the are always aware of the position of their barrels and the target.
Olympic skeet is fascinating for me but also a huge challenge.
I don't doubt it. Never having had them, I can't say how much they affect vision, but from what I understand from a couple of gents I used to shoot with, is they do vary from glare, colour change, blurriness, light sensitivity etc. Blurriness associated with cataracts was described like having Vaseline smeared over your glasses. As you suggested, it's the degree of vision deterioration and percentage that will cause dominance change.Just on the eye dominance and my experience. Due to an operatio over a 12 month period, cataract formed in my Rright"Master" eye. My vision went from 20/10 to 20/250 even when corrected. Target sports where I had shot with both eyes open became difficult. Mainly because I could see the (open) sight but not the target clearly. At no point did the sight start to align with my good non dominant eye. My grouping was awful but around the center due to aimimg at a big fuzzy blur. Not to the left which would indicate a dominance change.
My eye dominance for clays didn't change one jot. Scores didn't drop off. It seemed as long as there was enough info coming in, however bad/fuzzy the target was, it didn't matter, dominance was the same.
I only shoot maintained lead on Ol. Skeet. This is a special dsicipline for me where I have to take every little chance to get faster for the doubles.I missed a word in my post that you quoted. I should have said:
I use a little maintained lead on pairs at stations 3, 4 and 5, but shoot everything else by letting the clay pass the barrel first. Pairs on 1,2,6 and 7 aren't any harder for it. On stations 2 and 6 I tend to miss in front of the first clay if I rush to kill-point ahead of the clay. So for me, "swing-to" (as lead is very minimal) those clays works better than maintained, and certainly better than just stabbing the barrel out and waiting for the clay. If I do this right, I shoot the first bird about 1-2 meters in before the stake, and the second bird at ca. 4 meters past the stake. At my level, that's fast enough.
Of course a lot of this personal preference, style and method. Some guys I shoot with either hold their gun close to the stake or very near the house - and they shoot 20+ averages all day long. Wouldn't work for me, as I try for as small a movement from mount to kills as I can, but to each his own. I do shoot enough Olympic to know what works for me. I'm not saying I couldn't improve - I'd certainly love get more consistent but who wouldn't...
I wholly agree on the wind-thing. Our grounds really suffer from winds (close to the shore), so there's little reliance on automatism.
My goodness it gets worse. Pete you havnt invented anything people have always done it both ways and one isn’t better than the other it’s what works for the individual.SpanielLover. You are correct about lead of course, it is THE most important component that gets shooters to the top. They may have a perfectly fitted gun, they may diligently learn to mount and swing it correctly, but if they don't know how much lead a target needs, they will miss.
As you can read on the link to the Bobby Fowler post above, it is much easier to see lead at the muzzle than out there at the target. But (unashamed bragging maybe) I am very proud of inventing the system and I was the first to use it on my students almost 35 years ago now. Don't forget, imitation is the sincerest form of flattery. Shooting coaches will come and go, but books that can actually teach a shooter something as complex as lead are eternal.
The Unit Lead system works and all the figures are in the book to explain exactly why it works. The Unit Lead system and the Reading Targets book are the only two books written on the subject of lead. It's just a pity that even some of the shooters that use it, do so in secret and like to dismiss it to prevent others from using it.
I will post something on here as soon as the books can be downloaded as an e file and always happily explain anything that anyone doesn't understand via e mail. Thanks.
I only shoot maintained lead on Ol. Skeet. This is a special dsicipline for me where I have to take every little chance to get faster for the doubles.
But the gap between to be too much in front and waiting for the clay (will be a miss) and to be too slow is not huge.
To get an average of 20+ i would have to train every week. So I´m fine with my 17s and 18s (and some 20s...) as I shoot it perhaps once in a month or even just every 6 weeks. And i have to admit not having the fastest reaction time and have to accept that.
But i take an advantage out of it as i have no problems with skeet- like targets on a sporting course.
And Station 8 is always fun.
Thanks @bordergun, I am always happy to read most anything about shooting technique. So I look forward to reading your ebook.SpanielLover. You are correct about lead of course, it is THE most important component that gets shooters to the top. They may have a perfectly fitted gun, they may diligently learn to mount and swing it correctly, but if they don't know how much lead a target needs, they will miss.
As you can read on the link to the Bobby Fowler post above, it is much easier to see lead at the muzzle than out there at the target. But (unashamed bragging maybe) I am very proud of inventing the system and I was the first to use it on my students almost 35 years ago now. Don't forget, imitation is the sincerest form of flattery. Shooting coaches will come and go, but books that can actually teach a shooter something as complex as lead are eternal.
The Unit Lead system works and all the figures are in the book to explain exactly why it works. The Unit Lead system and the Reading Targets book are the only two books written on the subject of lead. It's just a pity that even some of the shooters that use it, do so in secret and like to dismiss it to prevent others from using it.
I will post something on here as soon as the books can be downloaded as an e file and always happily explain anything that anyone doesn't understand via e mail. Thanks.
Fully agree @SpanielLover@Savage10fp every high level shooter uses Maintained where it is the best option. I am sure the best could shoot 100 clays with any one method and still score high, some could shoot an entire course from the hip pretty well. I would also think most have a favoured method where the presentation allows for application of more than one; just like a golfer who naturally sees a fade or a draw, where either is the safe shot they'll play their natural shot.
Wow I shot with mickey rouse 1994 - 2009 and all the other good shots and we all saw and taught lead at muzzle measuredSpanielLover When you say it "isn't anything new", I'm afraid I dissagree. If you go here www.peteblakeley.com then click on testimonials on the drop-down, you will find a letter from a guy called Mark L Kiddie. Mark has since passed away, but won everything there was to win at the competitive shotgun disciplines.
When the UL book first came out, we had lots of telephone conversations about the logic of the system. Mark actually bought several copies of the book and handed them out to others, some of whom have since become successful shooting coaches here in the US.
At that time, (2007) absolutely NOBODY was suggesting applying lead at the muzzle...........but lots are now. If you can find reference to ANY coach that was saying that then, I would be more than happy to read it? And absolutely NOBODY was suggesting applying a specific measurement to apply to targets, to give them a way to develop a repertoire of sight pictures to apply leads (both standard leads and compound leads) as quickly as this system does. But unfortunately, as I said previously, some buy the book and before they read it claim that it doesn't work.
As Freddy said a few posts ago " I bought the book second hand so there is no suggestion of me agreeing with the author"......... even though I repeatedly tell buyers that "I am more than willing to explain things in the book that they don't understand". Freddy goes on to say "lead is governed by gun speed" Correct. Which is why I suggested learning the leans with maintained lead.
The book absolutely will help shooters to build up their repertoire of bird/barrel relationships on a SC course very quickly. But if any shooter reading this thinks it will fix eye dominance, gun mounting problems and variables of gun-speed, it will not, so please don't buy it.
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