Hi all. As a new boy to the forum, but a Clay shooter for the past 32 years, I am going straight in at the deep end with the "Bee" in my bonnet.
Shooting English Sporting (ESP) is meant to "simulate the shooting of game as closely as possible" without harming any living creatures.
Yet at ESP events, I am seeing ever increasing numbers of shooters adopting the gun up stance prior to calling for the target. Surely this is not shooting?
To quote a paragraph from my shooting bible - "A recent article in a shooting magazine claimed that good gun mounting was half the
battle to good shooting. The author of that article was wrong: it is very nearly all the battle."
In this context then:
a. Is it fair to start with the gun already in the shoulder?
b. Should English Sporting copy the FITASC rule that the gun should be held below a line on the shooting vest
until the target is in sight? If not, why not?
This topic may well generate gasps of horror from some, but I firmly believe the art of good shooting starts with the moving and pointing at the target as
the gun is mounted into the shoulder.
Shooting English Sporting (ESP) is meant to "simulate the shooting of game as closely as possible" without harming any living creatures.
Yet at ESP events, I am seeing ever increasing numbers of shooters adopting the gun up stance prior to calling for the target. Surely this is not shooting?
To quote a paragraph from my shooting bible - "A recent article in a shooting magazine claimed that good gun mounting was half the
battle to good shooting. The author of that article was wrong: it is very nearly all the battle."
In this context then:
a. Is it fair to start with the gun already in the shoulder?
b. Should English Sporting copy the FITASC rule that the gun should be held below a line on the shooting vest
until the target is in sight? If not, why not?
This topic may well generate gasps of horror from some, but I firmly believe the art of good shooting starts with the moving and pointing at the target as
the gun is mounted into the shoulder.