Having been in the shooting industry for almost 10 years now, it is exciting and heartening to see the increase in female shooters and the general acceptance that it is a sport for all. There is no doubt that the rise in women donning their tweeds and taking to the peg has provided retailers a whole new market of potential customers and this does leave me wondering whether some products, such as ladies’ guns, are necessary or not.
I dabbled in clay shooting at the tender age of 11 but it wasn’t until my late teenage years that I started shooting regularly, with my first gun a tired, second-hand yet functional 20-bore Beretta Silver Pigeon. This did the job for a few months until I decided that I wanted something more substantial, and I moved onto a 16-bore round body William Powell Phoenix. Although it was a very attractive gun, I wouldn’t be quick to recommend a 16-bore to anyone as, in my experience, they have more recoil than a 20 and less weight to absorb it than a 12, leaving me with a somewhat bruised shoulder (potentially down to poor gun position I must admit). After a string of short-lived love affairs with 12-bore English side-by-sides, I eventually found the one, my 12-bore FP Baker, a Birmingham-made side-by-side from circa 1920 that is well-balanced, incredibly elegant and fits me well. It is a pleasure to shoot.
Market
This was around six years ago now and ladies’ guns were only just coming onto the market. There is now a plethora of female-orientated models from some of the larger gunmakers, such as the Browning B525 Liberty Light, the Beretta Vittoria, the Caesar Guerini Syren and the Blaser F16 Intuition, to name but a few.
Diese Geschichte stammt aus der July 2023-Ausgabe von Sporting Gun.
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Diese Geschichte stammt aus der July 2023-Ausgabe von Sporting Gun.
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