Bob Peters
Well-known member
In a different thread there was a new hunter and he said a few times how important it is to get on the bird fast, and next year he's gonna bring a light 20 out so that he can get on the bird real fast. I understand this thinking, but my opinion differs. If you're an experienced hunter, and have a good general carry position and awareness of your surroundings(dog and good cover), you really have more time than you think when a bird flushes. And we've all seen others and done it ourselves when a bird busts out of the cover and so many times the first shell is a miss, and why? Often because we rush. We recover, get our cheek on the stock, eye focused on the bird, and drop him on the 2nd shell. I can remember the farthest shot I made all year, the dog put up a rooster, I moved almost in slow motion as I wasn't sure if I should take the shot, I decided to, pulled the trigger, and stoned him. That isn't the first time I've slowed down and my shooting improved. I will admit that riding out a bird or not being prepared can lead to missed birds and lost opportunities. I think the key is something like a goldilocks solution, not too fast not too slow. These are quotes that might explain better my thoughts on the subject:
"Make haste slowly" Michael McIntosh
"Be quick but don't hurry" John Wooden
"Move at a comfortable pace" Andy Duffy
"slow is smooth, smooth is fast" I think that one originates from the armed forces?
Everyone has different vision and reflexes, so only you can judge what speed you should shoot at. I do know that the more I hunt the better I get at shooting at what for me is a comfortable pace, and this has improved the number of birds in my game bag.
"Make haste slowly" Michael McIntosh
"Be quick but don't hurry" John Wooden
"Move at a comfortable pace" Andy Duffy
"slow is smooth, smooth is fast" I think that one originates from the armed forces?
Everyone has different vision and reflexes, so only you can judge what speed you should shoot at. I do know that the more I hunt the better I get at shooting at what for me is a comfortable pace, and this has improved the number of birds in my game bag.