LeedsZeppelin
Member
Having only started the sport 18months or so ago, I cannot say what it was like before. But I see large numbers at the grounds I shoot at. There is always a queue at the stands.
Where I do most of my shooting, there is also quiet a lot of 18-30 year olds shooting. More than other grounds I've been to. A few under 18s every week too.
When I first started shooting I was invited to join a friend who had shot for years. The thought of clay shooting hadn't crossed my mind up until that point, and I think that's where the problem is - lack of publicity and knowledge on the sport.
I don't think price is as much as a factor as people suggest. Yes, it's an expensive hobby, but so is golf and fishing - two of the biggest pastimes in the UK. I think SGC licensing is a bigger issue. People assume a SGC is needed before they start shooting, and tales of the hoops you've got to go through to get one may put more people off than we realise.
On another note, I'm led to believe game shooting is on the decline due to pressures put on by animal activists. Would that not cause an increase in clay shooting, if not by only a small margin? I shot with someone a few months ago who told me he and his friends had turned to clay shooting as some activists had released all the birds from the traps on their syndicated shoot, thus ruining their shoot for the whole season. He doubted that the shoot in question would return the following year and has taken up clay shooting instead.
Where I do most of my shooting, there is also quiet a lot of 18-30 year olds shooting. More than other grounds I've been to. A few under 18s every week too.
When I first started shooting I was invited to join a friend who had shot for years. The thought of clay shooting hadn't crossed my mind up until that point, and I think that's where the problem is - lack of publicity and knowledge on the sport.
I don't think price is as much as a factor as people suggest. Yes, it's an expensive hobby, but so is golf and fishing - two of the biggest pastimes in the UK. I think SGC licensing is a bigger issue. People assume a SGC is needed before they start shooting, and tales of the hoops you've got to go through to get one may put more people off than we realise.
On another note, I'm led to believe game shooting is on the decline due to pressures put on by animal activists. Would that not cause an increase in clay shooting, if not by only a small margin? I shot with someone a few months ago who told me he and his friends had turned to clay shooting as some activists had released all the birds from the traps on their syndicated shoot, thus ruining their shoot for the whole season. He doubted that the shoot in question would return the following year and has taken up clay shooting instead.