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July 19th, 2018, 11:11 AM
#11
Has too much time on their hands

Originally Posted by
johny
Easy to say, but if you want to do a lot of shooting you can only do that with your own trap launcher.
If I go to our local skeet range I might shoot a maximum of three boxes of shells waiting for multiple squads of five to cycle through the range.
If I go out to crown land (clear cut or old abandoned gravel runway) I will often shoot 400 rounds in an afternoon. It would take 6 days to do the same at our local club.
When I want to practice I want to do a lot.
Any "trap launcher" that you're hauling into the woods isn't giving you near the practice or variety that a club does. I've put many new hunters into the layout boat who have "practiced" and fired thousands upon thousands of rounds at birds thrown from a "trap launcher", and watched them empty box after box into thin air on decoying divers.
If you want practice, shoot skeet, five stand or sporting clays, and shoot it often.
-Nick
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July 19th, 2018 11:11 AM
# ADS
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July 19th, 2018, 11:38 AM
#12
There are many clubs around that accept "guest shooters ", but you pay a little extra for a round of trap or skeet or sporting clays.
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July 19th, 2018, 11:46 AM
#13

Originally Posted by
Sprite
Any "trap launcher" that you're hauling into the woods isn't giving you near the practice or variety that a club does. I've put many new hunters into the layout boat who have "practiced" and fired thousands upon thousands of rounds at birds thrown from a "trap launcher", and watched them empty box after box into thin air on decoying divers.
If you want practice, shoot skeet, five stand or sporting clays, and shoot it often.
-Nick
I've also had clients that were champions on the range but couldn't hit a dead duck on the water from the blind/boat.
I know they had great scores on the range because I saw them shoot on the range.
Take the warning labels off. Darwin will solve the problem.
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July 19th, 2018, 12:04 PM
#14

Originally Posted by
Snowwalker
I've also had clients that were champions on the range but couldn't hit a dead duck on the water from the blind/boat.
I know they had great scores on the range because I saw them shoot on the range.
I have watched video's of " Tom Knapp exhibition shooter extraordinaire " , miss a lot of ducks while hunting, and laughing at himself for doing so saying " this is definitely not like shooting clay targets ".
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July 19th, 2018, 12:29 PM
#15

Originally Posted by
jaycee
There are many clubs around that accept "guest shooters ", but you pay a little extra for a round of trap or skeet or sporting clays.
Could you point me in the right direction of a club that offers this?
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July 19th, 2018, 05:55 PM
#16

Originally Posted by
HuTy
Could you point me in the right direction of a club that offers this?
PM SENT.
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July 19th, 2018, 10:52 PM
#17

Originally Posted by
Sprite
Any "trap launcher" that you're hauling into the woods isn't giving you near the practice or variety that a club does. I've put many new hunters into the layout boat who have "practiced" and fired thousands upon thousands of rounds at birds thrown from a "trap launcher", and watched them empty box after box into thin air on decoying divers.
If you want practice, shoot skeet, five stand or sporting clays, and shoot it often.
-Nick
Radio push button remote control Atlas Trap.
With it I can practice approach, oblique, crossing and away shots and anything in between
Plus continuous variable angle of launch so I can simulate anything from a jumping mallard to a Buffie coming in low and flat to the water.
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July 19th, 2018, 11:30 PM
#18

Originally Posted by
jaycee
I have watched video's of " Tom Knapp exhibition shooter extraordinaire " , miss a lot of ducks while hunting, and laughing at himself for doing so saying " this is definitely not like shooting clay targets ".
It may just be my option but real birds seem to fly "slower" then clays. Maybe it's because I have more time to watch my target, or maybe it's because a real bird does not go from 0 to warp 7 in .45 seconds.
I've jumped a lot of pond ducks and a few pheasants, there is no clay thrower in the world that can recreate that classic vertical lift, hang, and shift to horizontal flight of a real bird. When you get it right then it seems like you have all day to make the shot.
Take the warning labels off. Darwin will solve the problem.
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July 20th, 2018, 09:31 AM
#19

Originally Posted by
johny
Easy to say, but if you want to do a lot of shooting you can only do that with your own trap launcher.
If I go to our local skeet range I might shoot a maximum of three boxes of shells waiting for multiple squads of five to cycle through the range.
If I go out to crown land (clear cut or old abandoned gravel runway) I will often shoot 400 rounds in an afternoon. It would take 6 days to do the same at our local club.
When I want to practice I want to do a lot.
Do you clean up your halls, wads and target shards or just leave them there?
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July 20th, 2018, 11:09 AM
#20

Originally Posted by
Badenoch
Do you clean up your halls, wads and target shards or just leave them there?
Hulls yes.
I shoot on an old abandoned gravel airplane runway. Clay remnants make no difference there.
Do you search for your wads when you hunt?