Cushings Trap Range
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The most fun you can have with a shotgun.
14 TRAP SHOOTING LESSONS
© 2000 James Russell Publishing
The lessons herein are for competition trap shooters. Apply each lesson per weekend of
practice shooting or apply these tips whenever you attend a registered shoot.
Inspect your gun and clothing. Make sure no gun settings have changed, point of impact,
comb, buttplate, etc. The shoulder padding on your shooting vest can imperceptibly
alter the length of pull over time creating shoulder-crouching and a misalign swing.
Wear the same shoes you use in competition as you do in practice. Wearing different
shoes can alter your stance by adding or detracting height that will alter your gun hold
point and defeat learned muscle memory. Inspect your shooting glasses. Prescription
lenses should be updated yearly for corrections.
Before you shoot, take a ten second visualization of calling for the target swinging
smoothly and seeing a perfect sight picture and the target exploding with authority.
Visualization is a powerful technique professionals in all sports disciplines use to
reach perfection. It is instructing the mind what the desired result is to be; a command
to perform to maximum ability. If you miss a target? Replay the shot by visualizing a
perfect shot, so you won't miss the next target.
Watch the prior squad's targets, tracking them smoothly with your eyes before you shoot.
This will stimulate your eye muscles to focus your vision and prevent lazy eye
syndrome on the first trap you shoot. It will successfully import target behavior
patterns to your subconscious mind increasing performance.
Observe the concentricity of the trap house in relation to the station posts. The trap house
should be centered as observed from post #3. This is one of the trap shooting secrets
professional shooters are fully aware of and many shooters are not. It results in
shooting traps perfect and then blunder on the misalign traps into a losing score. To
the discerning eye and with experience you'll discover the trap house and the stations
are slightly out of alignment. The trap house may be shifted to the left or right of the
stations. Adjust your stance position otherwise the target will exit at a strange angle
and you will miss the target. If the house is shifted left, adjust your foot placement a
bit left so you are standing square to the trap house. Do not shift your gun or upper
body left or right to compensate, shift your stance so your swing will remain in
perfect alignment. This one tip alone will serve to gain you many high scores!
Before shooting a competition beware of the practice trap! Amazingly, these traps are not
always set to competition settings and may throw soft slow targets and targets with a
solid face. The traps can be out of alignment too. It is good to warm up at a practice
trap, but only if you are aware that the event traps you shoot may throw faster targets
and targets with shallow razorblade angles.
Look at your targets before you shoot them! In competition shooting events walk to your
assigned traps to detect targets traveling in variations from trap to trap. Trap one
could be perfect, but trap two the targets may be flying lower or higher, left or right of
normal. This is caused by improper trap alignment or settings. Setting can be changed
to throw a legal target, but alignment cannot be changed at this time. Compensate by
adjusting your gun and eye hold positioning on the trap house. Reading these two
books Trap Shooting Secrets and Precision Shooting - The Trap Shooter's Bible will
give you detailed instructions to compensate and resolve many trap shooting
problems.
Have a sense of inner authority within when you step on post. Be confident and assured
that your visualization exercise will come to pass. If in doubt, visualize again right
now the target exploding. Stand firmly with confidence and control holding the gun
with absolute authority. When it is your turn to shoot, shoulder the gun with intimate
authority so you and the gun feel as one unit. It is important to feel the gun as being a
part of you, not just an object in hand. You and the gun are now one and the gun can
not do anything without your command.
To solidify this one on one connection with the gun, control cheek pressure to the comb.
This pressure must be felt to obtain shot consistency. If you apply too little or too
much cheek pressure the eye/rib alignment will be altered resulting is hit and miss
shooting; shooting above or below the target. Cheek placement must also be
consistent. If your cheek is placed a tad to the left or right will allow the gun to shoot
away from the target you see; shooting to the left or right. You now have learned that
seeing the target and eye/bead alignment can be dead on, yet you can still miss the
target all due to improper cheek pressure and placement. Feeling cheek / comb
pressure is extremely important to maintain proper eye/rib alignment and for
repeatable accurate shots!
Pay attention to the squad rhythm. Is it fast, slow, smooth or choppy? Mentally you must
make adjustments to your own setup pacing, not alter your set up timing, but to be
"aware" that an irregular squad's timing can sneak into your setup forcing you to hurry
up. A fast shooting squad should be avoided. If you can't avoid it, then make sure you
maintain your own internal and external timing. forget about everyone else and just
start your timing factor when the prior shooter calls for the target. This will reset your
setup timing to remain consistent. A slow and sloppy squad's timing can be managed
only when you are aware of the problem. Those who feel there is no problem will
drop targets! Watching a shoot off you will see good shooters miss targets due to
unfamiliar squad timing altering the shooter's normal set up and timing. Awareness is
concentration.
. Do not focus or mentally respond negatively to distractions. Gun jams, misfires,
background noise is all part and parcel to the game. The moment you allow yourself
to be distracted your score will suffer. Learn to block out distractions by listening and
observing them, then they will no longer be distractions, just normal sounds and
events.
. Pay attention of where the shooters on your squad are breaking the targets. If the
shooters are breaking them quickly, be careful. If they are breaking them at strange or
irregular distances from the trap, be careful. What's the point here? Know that the
squad can have a powerful influence on a shooter that is not totally focused on natural
timing factors. Maintaining control of your set up and where you normally break the
target must be maintained. If you slip here you'll be influenced by the squad and start
breaking targets sooner or later than you usually do. Lost targets will result.
. Control your breathing. Take a relaxed deep breath prior to calling for the target.
Incorporate this into your set up routine. Oxygen supplies a burst of energy to the eyes
which will allow you to see the target sooner and with increased clarity. It also helps
to calm the mind and body. Controlled breathing will help you whenever you become
tense.
. Raise your eyebrows just before or when you call for the target. If you look in the mirror
you may see your eyelid covering the iris of your eye. This happens to a severe degree
when under stress when the forehead tenses and compresses downward like when you
are shooting your last trap or in a stressful shoot off. Twenty percent of light gathering
vision can be lost. Vision reduction will make the targets appear dim and fast flying
with trailing comet tails and will create a surprising number of missed targets. Eyes
wide, than call. You will see an improvement in your shooting performance and
whenever you are under tension if you incorporate the technique in your practice
sessions now.
. Control emotions. The target you are shooting is only a target you have obliterated many
times before. Place no association on the target assuming it has more value than all
the other targets you have shot today. This means no counting targets. No mental
imaginations of winning or losing if you can only hit this target. If you miss a target,
learn to reset your mind that the miss never happened. This will help you avoid
making corrections in a registered shoot. Flush the mind of emotion and shoot like a
machine using the same precision techniques you learned in practice. Everyone
misses targets. It just happens. Accept it. Overcorrecting leads to experimentation and
more targets unnecessarily lost.