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News
Calls grow for extended deer culling rights on Scottish moorland
By Hollis Butler (Group News Editor)
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Win CENS ProFlex DX5 earplugs worth £1,149 – enter here
Sean Ponting of Widdington Shoot has pretty much been there and got the T-shirt as far as Sporting and FITASC clayshooting goes. He has had 20 years of coaching experience, and has won competitions at county, regional and national level. He has been in the England team 18 times and also captained it. He is a member of The Association of Professional Shooting Instructors (APSI) and also designs layouts for grounds.
Sean says: “When I design a layout I have a few rules, one is the ‘eyesight test’. Clays must be easily visible to the shooter against the background. I also like to lay on ‘middle of the road’ targets and also some more testing ones. Especially when there are pairs – an easier one and a harder one. The harder ones sort the men from the boys but there are enough targets that even an average shooter can break them. You don’t want shooters to get disheartened.”
The clay that Sean was going to look at was a high, slow driven clay that Jeremy described as a “slow crow”. The pupil for the lesson was Widdington’s gamekeeper Mike “Tuesday” Mundy. Sean said: “Mike shoots this clay with his gun-up. I would normally start teaching someone gun-up and let them define their own style – there is no hard and fast style that works in every situation. Over time, if you are to be a good all-round Shot, you need to develop a repertoire, or quite simply a good bag of tricks.
Break point and hold point illustrated
Instructor Sean Ponting and pupil Mike Mundy
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