Sunday 18 March 2018

Clay Shooting Introduction

Breaking a few clays


I started clay shooting in 2002.  It happened almost by accident.  

I was along with a friend of mine one day, lending a hand at our cricket club before the season started.  He opened the boot of his car to get something out and I noticed he had a shotgun with him.  He was leaving to go to a practice DTL shoot and asked me if I wanted to go.  I always had an interest in clays and often thought about trying it but didn't know how to even go about getting into it.  I didn't even know he shot clays.  I wasn't long in accepting the invitation.  

On my first DTL line of 15 targets, I managed to hit 3.  On my second line, I hit 11.  That was me hooked.  I went and bought my first shotgun the following week. A good old Baikal.  I have been shooting clays since.

I have shot a few of the different disciplines if clay shooting over the years.  Skeet, Automatic Ball Trap (ABT), Olympic Trap, Sporting, Compak Sporting, but I am definitely a Down The Line (DTL) shooter.  It is where I started and where my main interest would still lie.  I don't mind Sporting at all and look forward each month to the Sporting shoot at my club but I also look forward to getting back to DTL again the following week.

My attitude and interest in DTL has changed over the years too.  

I am a Club shooter.  I shoot the very, VERY, occasional 100 Bird Registered shoot but I am very much a club shooter.  A much better atmosphere and more relaxed than the registered scene I find.

About 10 years ago I would have really like to have tried the registered scene and would have tried hard to represent the Northern Ireland team at International level.  I was shooting well back then and had a real hunger and grit that I wasn't going to miss anything.  I went weeks on end without dropping a single target. I had shot hundreds of targets without missing.  Then it started playing on my mind.  This could be the day I drop a bird.  I was getting nervous even before I'd left the house to go to a shoot. It started to annoy me.  Eventually, one day in the middle of a line, I called pull and fired two shots into the air to get the monkey off my back.  I haven't counted any spells of targets since.

I then went through a spell where I really lost interest in clay shooting.  I stopped shooting club competitions altogether.  I still shot on practice days, but it was more for something to do than any interest in the sport.  I was only shooting DTL then.  Week in and week out.  I didn't really find any challenge in it.  I was almost ready to give it up.

Then we started shooting Sporting at the club.  Once a month. We set out a few traps and have a 40 Bird shoot over 4 stands.  I am not as good at Sporting as I am at DTL but I love the challenge of it.  I miss targets but I don't mind that.  It has really helped me to start enjoying shooting again.  That break once a month, or more when we visit other clubs, has made me look forward to, and enjoy, DTL again.  I still don't shoot in the club DTL competitions but I now really enjoy and look forward to, the releaxed Saturday afternoons at my club.

The more I think about it, I realise that my outlook has changed again.  I have went as far as I possibly can at club level.  I have no real interest in going down the registered side of the sport, so where does that leave me?

We have a few members at the club who are relatively new to shooting.  I have tried my best for them.  Being UCPSA Safety Officers, myself and my good friend Graeme, have shown them how to handle a gun safely at a clay ground.  We have also shown them the basics of feet position, gun hold point, and how to break a few clays.  I now get more satisifaction of seeing them shooting good scores than I do out of shooting big scores myself. 

It is this line of thinking that is one of the reasons for starting this blog.  Perhaps I can help a few other newcomers to the sport, and even perhaps a few who have been shooting for a while, to break a few more clays.


 I'll add new content over the coming weeks and hopefully a few people will enjoy reading it.

Welcome to my ramblings

Fly & Clay

My rantings on Fly Fishing, Fly Tying and Clay Shooting

I have decided to start a blog. I often think about putting things on my personal Facebook page but there are too many friends on there who are not into these types of pursuits so I'll spare them that.  Hopefully some people reading this will find some of the information useful and get something out of reading it while others will scoff and ridicule. Ah well, such is life! 



These three pursuits are my main passions in life.  I have been fishing since the age of 6, tying flies (well binding materials onto hooks) since I was 14 and shooting clays for over 16 years.  Many other 'hobbies and interests' have came and went over the years but these three have really stuck with me.  




I'll add things over the coming weeks and hopefully someone will find it interesting enough to look in on and have a read at.