We’ve taken a look at the best air rifle targets which you can use at home. If you’ve got a garden with a range of above 20m then you’ve enough room. Read our key advice on garden airgunning which covers neighbours, pets, noise and other things you should be thinking about. (Wondering whether paper or metal targets are best? Scroll down to find the answer.)
Air rifle expert and Shooting Times contributor Mat Manning says:
“Being an accurate shot with an airgun hinges on being familiar with your gear and understanding the downrange performance of your ammo of choice. That means getting in lots of range time, and the best way to achieve that is by setting up a safe target layout in your garden so you can practise whenever time permits.”
Mat Manning warns: “You must stop pellets from travelling beyond the target. If you don’t, you risk breaking the law. Pellets must never stray outside the limits of your garden. Always use a solid backdrop of brick, stone or concrete. Large paving slabs can be used to the same effect. ” (Read our list of the best airgun pellets.)
Place a homemade sound muffler and solid backstop behind your target to keep your garden shooting within the law and maintain neighbourly relations.
You can check up on airgun laws here to make sure you are following the rules correctly.
Mat also advises: “When it comes to garden shooting, paper and card targets are a great starting point. Because they show exactly where each shot strikes they are brilliant for zeroing and pellet testing.
“Punching holes in paper can get a bit monotonous, though, but there are lots of reactive targets that make things much more interesting. Knockdown targets with reset cords are really popular as are spinning targets which reset by gravity, and wooden targets made from board that smashes when you hit it are good fun, too. Reactive targets are a great way to keep young shooters engaged and I often set up a combination of knockdowns and spinners, all with safe backstops in place, when shooting in the garden with my children.”
(Read Mat’s advice on how to shoot an airgun more accurately.)
Ideal for garden airgunning, you get hours of entertainment. They measure 14cm x 14cm, so are small enough to refine your skills.
Stick these wherever you want to create a target. The 2″ diameter will add a touch of finesse to shooting tin cans. Bright orange for good visibility on dull days. 10 sheets in a pack.
Classic targets which disappear into a satisfying white puff when you hit them right.
Once you’ve mastered static paper targets you can move onto these spinning ducks which are a great way to hone your aim. The ducks flip down as you hit them.
Hit the target right and your shot bursts into fluorescent yellow on impact. You can see your shots at a distance, even on a gloomy day.
You shoot the four ducks first and then shoot the round target to reset it. So you’re not constantly walking backward and forward.
Choose your quarry from a rabbit, crow, boar, pigeon or rat. You can adjust the kill zone to between 40mm to 15mm. Reset the target by hitting the yellow bottom disc.
If you want a bit more colour in your target then these do the job perfectly.
Move these around in whichever position you want on your target board.
+ 13cm x 2.5cm
+ All steel construction
Use up left-over Christmas or birthday party poppers in this target. Attach the shooting target to a post in front of your backstop, connect a party popper. Then take aim – when you hit the target it will pull the string and the popper will explode.
Mike Morton of Airgun Shooter says: “One of my favourite types of spinner is a double-target affair consisting of a rabbit’s head and counterweight on one side of the spinner, and a pigeon’s head and counterweight on the other. You can shoot the smaller counterweights too, so this single device offers a total of four different targets.”
Comes with 10 targets supplied and holds 14cm targets.
Q: I really enjoy shooting metal knockdown targets with my airgun but the ‘serious’ shooters at my local range only use paper ones. What is the best sort of target for me to use during my practice sessions?
A: Both types of target you mention have their uses and tend to excel in different ways. I like to use paper or card targets when testing ammo or zeroing scopes because they show exactly where each pellet has struck. This clarity quickly reveals how well pellets are grouping, and how low or high they are striking over various ranges — vital information when calculating holdover and holdunder.
Although paper and card targets are great for honing your gun/ scope/ammo combo and your own technique, shooting them can get a bit boring. That is when the reactive targets you enjoy shooting come into play. Once I know my gear is set up as it should be, I tend to move over to knockdown and spinning targets to make things more exciting as I test myself over various ranges. MM
Know where any spent ammunition not being contained ends up. The spent pellets will have fallen to the ground immediately beneath and in front of the target. If you can’t account for the pellets, or suspect they may be bouncing off the target, don’t use that particular target in a garden setting any more.
Your choice of rifle will not only come down to personal preference but will also depend on which species you plan to stalk, writes Bruce Potts.