Relatively new to shooting? Enjoying your first season? Here’s what every driven shooter should be aware of.
A polite driven shooter will respond to shoot invitations promptly – whether you can come or not. You NEVER PBI (pending better invitation).
Always listen carefully to the keeper’s briefing before you go out. You never chat to your neighbour or scroll on your phone.
If you’re on a formal shoot you should wear a tie (as a mark of respect towards your quarry) or a silk scarf tucked into a shirt (for a lady). (Read our list of the best Tattersall check shirts.)
Only well-trained dogs are welcome. Dogs that know their jobs both on the peg and off it.
A shooter who lets his mobile ring during a drive or checks it constantly is unlikely to be invited back.
Every Gun at a shoot should know the shooting safety rules by heart and practise them in full.
Poaching birds from other Guns is not the done thing. (Read how to tell which is your bird and which is your neighbour’s.)
Loaders are a fount of knowledge. Listen to them.
Gamekeepers and their teams are the eyes, the ears, the very soul of the shoot
Without a keeper there wouldn’t be a shoot. Do what they say.
Whilst camo has its place stalking and in some other disciplines there is no place for it on a driven shooting day. (Read our guide on what to wear shooting.)
Eat what you shoot and if you don’t know how to cook pheasant or partridge then learn. We have plenty of game recipes here.
On the grouse moor wear dark colours that will blend in with the surroundings, otherwise the birds will spot you.
Always pick up your spent cartridges.
Shut the doors of the vehicle you arrive in quietly, otherwise you will alert the birds.
Don’t forget to tip. If you don’t tip, you’ll be remembered for all the wrong reasons. (Read our guide to tipping on a shoot day here.)
This article was published in 2016 and has been updated.
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.