Airgun laws in the UK as they stand Airgun shooters are being urged to conform with new legislation relating to…
Setting up airgunning as the noblest of shooting sports probably sounds like a tall order to many — it certainly does to me.
Airgun shooters wear funny clothes, we get excited about shooting rats and grey squirrels and we don’t like to pay for our sport.
But there is a so much more to airgun shooting than the casual observer might first realise.
It demands an extremely high level of fieldcraft and marksmanship. Add to that the fact that most of us provide a free pest control service, for which we are sometimes rewarded with fine free-range meat for the pot, and this peculiar pastime suddenly begins to sound a great deal nobler than one might first imagine.
The airgun shooter takes his sport wherever and whenever he can, and is always prepared
Airgun shooters deal mostly with extremely wary, wild quarry; animals that live on their wits and have learned to steer well clear of humans. Head out reeking of aftershave or with car keys jangling in your pocket and you won’t stand a chance of creeping within range of untrusting rabbits. And it’s a similar case with sharp-eyed corvids and skittish woodpigeons, which take flight as the slightest hint of human presence in their woodland haunts.
However, the determined airgunner still needs to get uncommonly close to his or her quarry in order to take telling shots. Our guns are whisper-quiet, a trait that makes them well-suited to covert pest control, but their limited power makes them useless at extreme range. I like to be within 30 metres when I’m targeting live quarry – and preferably even closer.
Airgun shooters have to engineer situations that get them on very close terms with their wily quarry. We hone our stalking skills and learn how to use the wind to sneak up on unsuspecting rabbits, we build discreet hides and utilise decoys to catch woodpigeon, crows and magpies off guard, and we use night vision and baiting tactics to pick off fidgety rats as they go about their nocturnal rounds.
Most of these techniques demand an in-depth knowledge of the seasonal and day-to-day habits of whatever quarry we might be targeting. We also need to be in touch with the ground we shoot over in order to pre-empt the influence that factors such as food sources and weather conditions are likely to have on the behaviour of our quarry. Experience reigns supreme and the best airgun shooters are likely to have endured countless blank sessions while honing their craft.
Airgun laws in the UK as they stand Airgun shooters are being urged to conform with new legislation relating to…
Ratting in the dark using night vision optics
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A close understanding of wildlife and the countryside is vital, but the successful airgun shooter also needs to be a crack shot. Most of the species we target are very small and therefore present a tiny kill zone. To ensure that our little projectile strikes a vital organ, responsible airgun shooters should limit their maximum shooting distance to a range at which they can confidently and consistently group pellets within a circle the size of a £1 coin.
That level of accuracy is challenging enough over a fixed range, but the fact that airgun pellets tend to have a distinctly curved trajectory means we also need to have a detailed understanding of our ammunition’s downrange performance.
Responsible airgun shooters eat any edible quarry and do their best to make use of fur and feather
Once we’ve got that mastered, there is the matter of precise range estimation so that correct hold-over and hold-under can be applied to compensate for the rise and fall of the pellet.
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