Shooting once

Goosemaster

Well-known member
How do you teach a hunter to shoot more than once when a bird flushes, there are members of my family, who only shoot one time for some reason.
 
How do you teach a hunter to shoot more than once when a bird flushes, there are members of my family, who only shoot one time for some reason.
I preach that a hit bird should be shot at a 2nd time, if it can be done safely…I routinely search for “dead” birds that were shot once…happened several times opening weekend. And I have buddies that miss on the first shot and don’t shoot again for some reason. Most guys will go for a double if they hit a bird on the first shot and there’s another in the air…probably better to shoot the first hit bird a 2nd time and mark it well. But, it’s fun to get a double…hard to not try when given the chance. Some guys are frugal and don’t want to “waste” ammo…or, keep track of shots taken vs birds harvested, and like to boast about that. I hate losing birds…I Don’t fret about how much ammo I shoot…most of my shells are .50-75 cents each…closer to .50…I don’t care about that cost. TSS? I’d be more careful. I occasionally shoot some non-toxic stuff in a 28 gauge that run $1-2/shell, but that’s pretty rare…sharpy hunting in a WPA, for example…not enough shells used to get excited…bottom line, pheasants are tough, and I hate losing them, as well as putting my dogs through the rigors of the search when it’s hot and dry in the heavy cover that they usually end up in when they’re evading hunters.
 
I would suggest throwing doubles with the backyard trap. The drill is if the shooter hits the first clay, he has a go at the second. If he misses the first clay, he sticks with it and shoots a second shot at it. Once the student/shooter starts getting comfortable, you can add a wrinkle that if he hits the first clay and there is a decent sized piece still in flight, the student/shooter tries to hit that piece rather than the second clay. That simulates anchoring a hit but still flying bird.

You'll go through a lot of clays with this drill but they're cheap and there's no better way to teach/learn how to use that follow-up shot. Even after all the decades I've hunted, I still do this drill myself getting ready for Fall.

To a degree, this can be practiced shooting doubles at a trap club, but that competitive environment is not conducive to learning/teaching. Another factor is the traps at clubs throw birds much faster than most backyard-type traps (with some notable and pricey exceptions) which is discouraging to the student shooter trying to learn the technique.
 
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Huh, never heard of shooting twice at a bird going down.

I’m not the best of shots so I don’t take anything very far out there, and with a full choke the birds are pretty much dead or laughing.
 
I preach that a hit bird should be shot at a 2nd time, if it can be done safely…I routinely search for “dead” birds that were shot once…happened several times opening weekend. And I have buddies that miss on the first shot and don’t shoot again for some reason. Most guys will go for a double if they hit a bird on the first shot and there’s another in the air…probably better to shoot the first hit bird a 2nd time and mark it well. But, it’s fun to get a double…hard to not try when given the chance. Some guys are frugal and don’t want to “waste” ammo…or, keep track of shots taken vs birds harvested, and like to boast about that. I hate losing birds…I Don’t fret about how much ammo I shoot…most of my shells are .50-75 cents each…closer to .50…I don’t care about that cost. TSS? I’d be more careful. I occasionally shoot some non-toxic stuff in a 28 gauge that run $1-2/shell, but that’s pretty rare…sharpy hunting in a WPA, for example…not enough shells used to get excited…bottom line, pheasants are tough, and I hate losing them, as well as putting my dogs through the rigors of the search when it’s hot and dry in the heavy cover that they usually end up in when they’re evading hunters.
That's exactly what I'm talking about, shooting once and missing, and not shooting again. I have family members who will only shoot one time no matter what. A lot of times you can get a bird on your second or third shot.
 
Too much indecision and overthinking..."if I missed it must be too far", or the age old excuses I hear "they get up too far away". Actually had a buddy ask "do shotgun shells go bad? I miss a lot".
 
My bad habit is shooting once and as soon as the bird either folds by my shot (or more likely my hunting partners shot) I break open my gun to reload that 1 spent shell.

Most of the time, it seems like their is another rise at the same instant as my gun opens. The more I rush and scramble the slower the reload process happens. This is the feeling as when my zipper is down before entering the field and the birds start flying 10 yards from where I'm parked!
For those taking notes, don't make habits of doing either of these things.
 
I guess it all depends on personal choice.

Of the obviously wounded birds I’ve seen I think many of them are a result of second or subsequent shots. I hate to see one fly clean away then flinch on the second shot. Certainly a bird wounded but not dropped on the first shot requires a second attempt.
 
I guess it all depends on personal choice.

Of the obviously wounded birds I’ve seen I think many of them are a result of second or subsequent shots. I hate to see one fly clean away then flinch on the second shot. Certainly a bird wounded but not dropped on the first shot requires a second attempt.
I have a tendency to shoot over thick cattails, and a lot of times. Even the best dogs won't find them in there. That is a habit I'm trying to break and just deciding not to shoot.
 
I have a tendency to shoot over thick cattails, and a lot of times. Even the best dogs won't find them in there. That is a habit I'm trying to break and just deciding

I have a tendency to shoot over thick cattails, and a lot of times. Even the best dogs won't find them in there. That is a habit I'm trying to break and just deciding not to shoot.
Yeah, I’ve done it, still will take closer shots, especially if the slough is not large and full of water, but I have tempered my inclination to shoot at birds out to 35-40 yards over big cattail sloughs…too tough to recover consistently.
 
This season I've fallen in love with the Franchi Affinity 26" 20 gauge (I have two, the plain jane LH model and the almost-too-pretty-to-take-out-in-the-field Scheels exclusive RH Elite). They are both well under 6 lbs. Combine their light weight with the 26" barrel and they are very fast on the bird. Their light recoil makes fast follow-up shots a breeze.

That being said, I have two O/U's (Weatherby Orion 20 gauge and a Citori 725 Feather 12 gauge) that are no slouches in the follow-up shot department. They key is that both have mechanical rather than inertia operated triggers. If anything, the follow-up shot is even quicker than with my autos, particularly with the 20 gauge Orion.
 
I would think it'd be as simple as taking your family member(s) out to shoot clays a few times & encouraging them to shoot again when they miss. Shouldn't take long to get the hang of taking multiple shots. If this is your nephew, make sure he only misses hens once. No need to shoot again on those. In fact ideally, no shots would be taken at hens, but it seems like that kid is kind of a special case.
 
How do you teach a hunter to shoot more than once when a bird flushes, there are members of my family, who only shoot one time for some reason.
Meh..I wouldn't care how many times they shoot. My nephews wouldn't listen to me regardless. But I would guess that when they see others drop birds with the second or third shot, they'll quickly figure it out on their own.
 
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