Getting the right shooting glasses is important – but that isn’t my focus this month. Instead, I want to look at how we use the eyes themselves when shooting and why, quite often, we are under-utilizing the single most important tool in our armory.
The human eye is an incredible device. It can process a piece of information in just thousandths of a second and, in conjunction with our subconscious mind, help us make decisions that we aren’t even aware of. However, when it comes to shooting clays, many of us seem to be reluctant to let our eyes do what they do best!
One of my favorite coaching analogies is: do you look at your hands when you catch a ball? Of course, you don’t. You know where they are because you can see them in your peripheral vision, as well as being subconsciously aware of their position in relation to the rest of your body. In the same way, you shouldn’t need to look at the gun (i.e. the bead, or even the rib) to know where it is pointing. You’re much better off maintaining your focus solely on the target.
The other part of this, though, is that our eyes and brains work together at incredible speed to create a ‘catch solution’ for where our hands need to be to catch the ball; more often than not, our hands are actually moving quite slowly as we catch the ball because we have pre-positioned them based on the brain’s ‘solution’.
Bu hikaye Sporting Shooter dergisinin August 2020 sayısından alınmıştır.
Start your 7-day Magzter GOLD free trial to access thousands of curated premium stories, and 9,000+ magazines and newspapers.
Already a subscriber ? Giriş Yap
Bu hikaye Sporting Shooter dergisinin August 2020 sayısından alınmıştır.
Start your 7-day Magzter GOLD free trial to access thousands of curated premium stories, and 9,000+ magazines and newspapers.
Already a subscriber? Giriş Yap
RSPB gives mixed message on shooting
Having recently attended the RSPB’s virtual AGM, Conor O’Gorman discusses the outcome of the charity’s year-long review of game bird shooting
Causeway for concern
Alan Jarrett’s renewed interest in reading takes him down memory lane to an offshore island duck flight that very nearly ended in disaster
Through a purple patch
The Garrows Estate is taking a conservation-focused approach to restoring the wildlife populations and biodiversity on the Scottish heather moorland.
When the wheels fall off
Losing form on a day’s shooting can be infuriating, especially if you’ve been shooting like a god up to that point. Simon O’Leary looks at some common causes and how to remedy them
Beaches, books & bad behaviour!
The annual Kay family vacation to Northumberland offers a chance to give the cockers a blast on the beach – although they don’t always shower themselves in glory, as Ryan Kay recalls...
Using the Stop whistle
Now you’ve instilled the basics, it’s time to up the ante with some more tricky distance work. Howard Kirby explains how to take the core Stop whistle command to the next level
The humble teal
They may be tiny, but as far as Rupert Butler is concerned, the appeal of this little duck is huge. He recalls some of his most memorable nights in pursuit of these aerial acrobats
Fab all-rounder
Mike is impressed with the Fabarm Elos B2 Field Notte, which offers great value for money, is suited to fieldwork or clays and is future-proofed for use with steel in all choke constrictions
CALL OF THE WILD
Dom Holtam reconnects with one of the purest forms of shotgun shooting as he walks-up woodcock over pointing dogs in the Scottish Highlands
A yen for the Fens
Tony Jackson recounts a memorable duck flight over an area of Fenland in Norfolk with his friend and author, the late Alan Savory