Backyardsniper
AH elite
Any body that has read anything I have posted by now knows I have a new to me double rifle that I am working to get proficient with. I had an interesting lesson today. I have purchased a CZ bobwhite 20 gauge SxS as a trainer. I took it to a friend of mines today to shoot some sporting clays. He has 10 promatic throwers set up for a pretty nice little sporting clay range. Today's training was going to be centered around working the double triggers while in a dynamic engagement, not just standing in front of a target board taking slow fire aimed shots. On a side note, that little $650 CZ is nice. It is a clay busting machine and it will probably be my go to hunting gun for a little while.
So back to the moral of the story, I have probably 150 rounds through the double rifle so far. All of them, except that one time, going according to plan. Right-left or Left-right. No problem.
We start shooting clays and I pull out ahead of a low left to right crossing shot and I squeeze off the front trigger, just behind it, damn, pull the lead out a touch farther and squeeze off the front trigger again. There it was, muscle memory, standing in front of a target board firing off well thought through shots, no problem. Put your body in a situation where it has to react through training and muscle memory though and it will do what you have trained it to do. I have always shot an automatic or an O/U with a single trigger.
Related story, I hunted pheasants in S.D. several years ago and you could take the plug out of your gun there. So I did and loaded her to the gills. Every time I would fire 3 shots then stop, then remember " oh shit I got two more shells". Too late. Much as I assume it would be too late with a (fill in the blank) bearing down on you in a charge and you lite off one barrel and then in a panic give the same trigger a tug again.
So if you are gonna shoot a double gun you better practice with a double gun until you can run it without even thinking about it. I believe the SxS shotgun is one of the best training tools you can have to become proficient with the functions of a DR.
After the sporting clay shooting we took some clays and hung them on some waist high limbs in my buddies woods along a trail. We then made a little stalk and took some 25-30 yard off hand shots at the stationary clays with the 470. While not everyone has access to an area where you can safely do that, I highly recommend it if you do. The clays give you a very binary system. Its either a kill or a miss, unlike paper targets where you can be close or say, well that would have been in the kill zone. This is a kill or a miss. My goal is proficiency out to 35yd offhand on clay size targets and 60-70 off sticks. Maybe more, we will see how it goes, but I think that is a good starting point. However far I can consistently hit a 3.5-4" clay target should be a good measure of how far of a shot I can confidently take on an animal.
So back to the moral of the story, I have probably 150 rounds through the double rifle so far. All of them, except that one time, going according to plan. Right-left or Left-right. No problem.
We start shooting clays and I pull out ahead of a low left to right crossing shot and I squeeze off the front trigger, just behind it, damn, pull the lead out a touch farther and squeeze off the front trigger again. There it was, muscle memory, standing in front of a target board firing off well thought through shots, no problem. Put your body in a situation where it has to react through training and muscle memory though and it will do what you have trained it to do. I have always shot an automatic or an O/U with a single trigger.
Related story, I hunted pheasants in S.D. several years ago and you could take the plug out of your gun there. So I did and loaded her to the gills. Every time I would fire 3 shots then stop, then remember " oh shit I got two more shells". Too late. Much as I assume it would be too late with a (fill in the blank) bearing down on you in a charge and you lite off one barrel and then in a panic give the same trigger a tug again.
So if you are gonna shoot a double gun you better practice with a double gun until you can run it without even thinking about it. I believe the SxS shotgun is one of the best training tools you can have to become proficient with the functions of a DR.
After the sporting clay shooting we took some clays and hung them on some waist high limbs in my buddies woods along a trail. We then made a little stalk and took some 25-30 yard off hand shots at the stationary clays with the 470. While not everyone has access to an area where you can safely do that, I highly recommend it if you do. The clays give you a very binary system. Its either a kill or a miss, unlike paper targets where you can be close or say, well that would have been in the kill zone. This is a kill or a miss. My goal is proficiency out to 35yd offhand on clay size targets and 60-70 off sticks. Maybe more, we will see how it goes, but I think that is a good starting point. However far I can consistently hit a 3.5-4" clay target should be a good measure of how far of a shot I can confidently take on an animal.