birdshooter
Well-known member
If a shotgun fits reasonably well and you shoot it often enough then yeah you learn to shoot it well. Off the rack shotguns are normally set for the average build and they would have us all being 5'9" and 170 lbs. If you have a long neck, long arms and or are 6'5" then it would surely benefit from some kind of alteration to your stock. Length of pull can be added or cut down easy enough and drop to comb these days can be done with some of the newer Autoloaders and their shim adjustments. Those can likely get you close enough unless you are of extreme dimensions. The closer the gun is to fitting you well the easier and more natural the gun mount will become without having to adjust to it.Often a miss is when I get twisted-up in deep cover, when the bird busts-out in a direction not anticipated. It make sence about gun-fit and everything else brought up, but I am just an old farm-kid, still shooting the first shot-gun I bought as an adult (11-87) and you eventually just figure it out and it is instinctive if you do it enough with the same gun. Sound like a bunch of folks are switching guns during season, I have a few spares/back-ups/loaners, but they seldom see the light of day. Might try a Berretta 20 this season, loaded-up a few boxes for it last winter...figured it might be a decent "old man" gun for me someday when gun weight becomes an issue. A little off topic...starting to get wound-up for the opener already! Nice that the posts and activity is picking-up on the board now.
Eye dominance is a whole different can of worms and one that could be continued altogether on another thread.

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