Information about Shooting
The word shooting can refer to game hunting which implies the hunting of upland game birds such as grouse or pheasant, rabbits, deer or other game animals.
Shooting can also refer to the sport of target shooting. This includes shotgun (skeet or trap), all of which use sporting clays.
Further, shooting refers to the sport of rifle and handgun precision marksmanship. Here, stationary paper targets or reactive metal targets are used.
There is also a growing sport of Cowboy Action Shooting. Here, competitors wear attire from the late 1800's and fire period weapons (single-action revolvers, lever-action rifles, and either double-barrel or pump-action shotguns) at a variety of metal and reactive targets.
The topic of shooting also encompasses the practical shooting sports of IPSC and IDPA competition. These strive, with varying degrees of success, to simulate the conditions and requirements of defensive pistol combat. Their goal is to train participants for real-world self defense using one's personal handgun of choice.
And, there is yet another practical shooting sport - 3-Gun competition - in which contestants use handgun, rifle, and shotgun to engage various paper or steel targets during the course of fire.
All of these various forms of shooting can be fascinating and rewarding activities for people of all appropriate ages. The utmost consideration, and one which takes precedence over everything else, is safety. Like many activities such as mountain climbing, skiing, sky-diving, or shooting, there is an element of danger involved. And especially here, this danger demands a sober understanding and respect for firearms and the specific rules for the safe handling of them.
Four Cardinal Rules For Handling Firearms
- Treat all firearms as if they are loaded.
- Never point a firearm at anything or anyone you are not willing to destroy or kill.
- Keep your finger off the trigger, and outside of the trigger-guard, until your sights are on the intended target and you are ready to fire.
- Know your target, what the projectile (ammunition) can do, what's between you and your target, and what is beyond.
It is a reasonable supposition to refer to most gun "accidents" as negligent discharges. Therefore, the shooter's diligent adherence to these four rules precludes nearly all possibilities of a negligent discharge.
In addition to these 4 basic Rules, certain behaviors are customary and expected.
- When handing a firearm to another person, the giver should either already have the action of the firearm open, or open it to show the recipient that it is, in fact, empty.
- On receiving the firearm, the recipient should check for himself/herself that it is, in fact, unloaded. Even though the firearm is determined to be empty, remember, it must always be treated as loaded, according to Rule 1.
- It is not only dangerous, it is very rude for one to point a firearm at any person at any time. This falls under Rule 1 (Always Loaded), as well as Rule 2 (Never Point). Pointing a firearm at another person should be considered a threat, and any violation of this should be acted upon by a stern admonishment of the guilty person.
Precision marksmanship in shooting competition (unlike in combat) can be achieved by the proper execution of the following 8-step procedure or checklist:
- GRIP
- Each hand should grip or firmly hold the rifle or pistol appropriately, according to the type of weapon and the position being used (offhand, sitting, or prone).
- SIGHT ALIGNMENT
- Except for a scope, the front and rear sights must be aligned appropriately, according to their design. Front sight focus can be used to provide more accuracy.
- TARGET ACQUISITION
- Check and double-check your target number to make certain you are shooting on your own target.
- POSITION
- After getting into position, close your eyes and relax -- then open them to see if you have established your Natural point of aim. If not, rotate your entire body stance or position until your weapon points on your target and at the intended point of hold (sometimes 6 o'clock and sometimes center).
- BREATHING
- Accuracy will be at its best when the body is most relaxed. This moment is known as the "natural respiratory pause" and is the point at which approximately two-thirds of the lung's capacity have been exhaled. During normal breathing, this usually lasts about 2 to 3 seconds, but may be extended up to 8 seconds by means of practice and experience to provide extra time to aim and squeeze the trigger (especially during gusty wind conditions) before lack of oxygen begins to adversely affect the eyes, blood-pressure, and pulse.
- TRIGGER CONTROL
- Slowly squeeze the trigger, adding pressure, until the weapon fires. Note: Any jerk on the trigger will move the weapon out of position, change the point of aim, and the projectile's point of impact. When the weapon fires, it should never be a surprise. You must learn to make it fire only when you want it to fire - when you are moving the last wiggle into perfect alignment on the target. The closer the alignment is to the intended sight picture, the tighter the shooter squeezes on the trigger. Never fire while moving away from the intended alignment.
- FOLLOW THROUGH
- Once the shot is fired, do not allow even one muscle move until you open your eyes from the natural blink which occurs upon firing. The projectile must be free of the barrel. At that point, observe the following:
- FINAL POSITION CHECK
See also
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References
gun is a common name given to an object that fires high-velocity projectiles. The projectile is fired through a hollow tube known as the gun's barrel. The projectile's caliber is usually designated in fractions of an inch or in millimeters.
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weapon is a tool used to injure, incapacitate, or kill an adversary.[1][2] Weapons may be used to attack and defend, and consequently also to threaten or protect. Metaphorically, anything used to damage (even psychologically) can be referred to as a weapon.
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Hunting is the practice of pursuing animals for food, recreation, trade or for their products. In modern use, the term refers to regulated and legal hunting, as distinguished from poaching, which is the killing, trapping or capture of animals contrary to law.
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Upland game bird is an American term which refers to those non-water fowl game birds hunted with pointing breeds, flushing spaniels, and retrievers. Upland game include the following:
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- Pheasant
- Bobwhite Quail
- Blue Grouse
- Ruffed Grouse
- Sharptailed Grouse
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Tetraonidae
Vigors, 1825
Genera
Grouse
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Vigors, 1825
Genera
- Falcipennis
- Dendragapus
- Lagopus
- Tetrao
- Bonasa
- Centrocercus
- Tympanuchus
Grouse
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Pheasants are a group of large birds in the order Galliformes.
Pheasant are characterised by strong sexual dimorphism, with males being highly ornate with bright colours and adornments such as wattles and long tails.
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Pheasant are characterised by strong sexual dimorphism, with males being highly ornate with bright colours and adornments such as wattles and long tails.
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The shooting sports include those competitive sports involving tests of proficiency (accuracy and speed) using various types of guns such as firearms and airguns (see Archery for more information on shooting sports that make use of bows and arrows).
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shotgun (also known as a fowling piece[1] or scattergun[2]) is a firearm typically used to fire a number of small spherical pellets called shot.
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Characteristics
Shotguns come in a wide variety of forms, from rimfire models with ...... Click the link for more information.
The term skeet may refer to:
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- A clay target.
- Skeet shooting or Clay pigeon shooting, a sport using such targets
- The Olympic Skeet event.
- Skeet surfing: A fictional sport featured in the 1984 movie Top Secret!, written and directed by the Zucker, Abrahams
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A trap is a device or tactic intended to harm, capture, detect, or inconvenience an intruder. Traps may be physical objects, such as cages or snares, or metaphorical concepts.
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Sporting Clays is a form of clay pigeon shooting. Often described as golf with a shotgun, the sport differs from trap and skeet shooting in that:
1. It is considered by many to be more difficult than trap or skeet.
2.
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1. It is considered by many to be more difficult than trap or skeet.
2.
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Cowboy Action Shooting (CAS), also known as Western Action Shooting or Single Action Shooting, is a competitive shooting sport that originated in California, USA, in the early 1980s.
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Practical shooting is a sport which challenges an individual's ability to shoot rapidly and accurately with a full power handgun, rifle, and/or shotgun. To do this, shooters take on obstacle-laden shooting courses called stages
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International Practical Shooting Confederation (IPSC) is a shooting sport based on the concept of practical shooting. Accuracy, power and speed are all required to achieve a maximum score.
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The International Defensive Pistol Association, founded in 1996, is an organization based in Berryville, Arkansas, USA that promotes defensive pistol shooting as a sport, using equipment including full-charge service ammunition to solve simulated "real world" self-defense scenarios.
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handgun is a firearm designed to be held in the hand when used. This characteristic differentiates handguns as a general class of firearms from their larger cousins: long guns such as rifles and shotguns, mounted weapons such as machine guns and autocannons, and larger weapons such
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A rifle is a firearm designed to be fired from the shoulder, with a barrel that has a helical groove or pattern of grooves ("rifling") cut into the barrel walls. The grooves are known as "rifling", and produce raised areas called "lands," which make contact with the projectile (for
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shotgun (also known as a fowling piece[1] or scattergun[2]) is a firearm typically used to fire a number of small spherical pellets called shot.
..... Click the link for more information.
Characteristics
Shotguns come in a wide variety of forms, from rimfire models with ...... Click the link for more information.
Natural point of aim is a shooting skill where the shooter minimizes the effects of body movement on the firearm's impact point. Along with proper stance, sight picture and trigger control, it forms the basis of marksmanship.
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