Home/How mental discipline can improve your shooting
How mental discipline can improve your shooting
<strong>Phil Coley on the pychology of shooting</strong>
ShootingUK29 October 2018
Many people dread the first bird of the drive. The lone bird heading straight towards you, with all the field’s eyes on you.
Mental block
One of the many things gameshooters worry about is trigger freeze or flinching. This happens at the moment that you are about to pull the trigger and find that you can’t. Trigger freeze has nothing to do with technique, it is purely brought on by a mental block.
Mental discipline to improve your shooting
The key to shooting any target, be it a clay or quarry, is being decisive. The moment you try to second-guess or change your mind is the moment you miss.
The best way to explain this is through the analogy of catching a ball. If someone was to throw you a ball, you catch it in the palm of your hand and use instinct. The same can be said for shooting. When a bird comes out and heads towards you, the process of shooting it is already in play in your mind. What then happens is that the process either plays out or you intervene and stop it, leading to a miss.
Not using instincts is usually caused by self-doubt, or a lack of confidence. Confidence can be improved by having a lesson as well as creating a routine to follow before pulling the trigger. One of these is, for example, saying “bum-belly-beak-bang”, every time, which eventually becomes a part of your subconscious.
Many people miss birds in front. This happens because they miss a bird and assume that they are behind, so they add even more lead.
When you miss, start again and let your subconscious take over. Shoot where the bird is going, not where it has been. Many Shots miss out the vital stage of starting behind the bird and swinging through, and start too far ahead, which will result in a miss.
How to improve your shooting accuracy: How can you hit the ground running next season? Season experts give their hints…
Relax and breathe
It is important to be able to calm down in a drive and focus on the next bird. To achieve this, try a simple technique called centering. To centre yourself, breathe in to a point an inch behind your belly button, focusing on that point as you breathe in. This has two outcomes: first, it gives you something to focus on, and second, it keeps you taking deep breaths, which is an important part of staying relaxed. By being more relaxed, you increase your peripheral vision, which is vital to shooting in the field where you need to be able to react to a second bird.
Visualisation
Visualisation involves imagining a situation and going through it in your mind and is frequently used by Olympic competitors. It can play a key part in shooting better and warming your mind up.
If you were to think of your favourite partridge drive or pheasant drive, imagine a covey coming out in front of you. What can you see? How does it feel to see that bird coming towards you? Imagine you are ready to take the shot, how does it feel and when will you pull the trigger?
Visualisation is a way of “shooting” without actually holding a gun. The benefit is that it makes you think of what you will shoot and in turn increases your muscle memory and leads to a muscle twitch.
For example a dog when lying on the carpet asleep will suddenly start shaking slightly. It is dreaming of chasing a bird and flushing it, and its legs move as it dreams. This is similar to what we are trying to achieve with visualisation, though we are able to make the conscious decision to pull the trigger.
The evening or morning before a shoot, go through in your mind how it feels to shoot a bird and what thoughts you go through before pulling the trigger. When you get to your peg and feel excited about the drive, remember to relax and take a breath to steady yourself each time. Be aware that sometimes when you miss, you may just be in front rather than behind, so start the process again.
Those concerned with presentation of birds and seasonal returns might be best buying in purebred Alectoris rufa from Portugal. Egg and poult producer Bryan Johnston explains
By ShootingUK
Get the latest news delivered direct to your door
Subscribe to Shooting Times & Country
Discover the ultimate companion for field sports enthusiasts with Shooting Times & Country Magazine, the UK’s leading weekly publication that has been at the forefront of shooting culture since 1882. Subscribers gain access to expert tips, comprehensive gear reviews, seasonal advice and a vibrant community of like-minded shooters.
Save on shop price when you subscribe with weekly issues featuring in-depth articles on gundog training, exclusive member offers and access to the digital back issue library. A Shooting Times & Country subscription is more than a magazine, don’t just read about the countryside; immerse yourself in its most authoritative and engaging publication.
To provide the best experiences, we use technologies like cookies to store and/or access device information. Consenting to these technologies will allow us to process data such as browsing behavior or unique IDs on this site. Not consenting or withdrawing consent, may adversely affect certain features and functions.
Functional
Always active
The technical storage or access is strictly necessary for the legitimate purpose of enabling the use of a specific service explicitly requested by the subscriber or user, or for the sole purpose of carrying out the transmission of a communication over an electronic communications network.
Preferences
The technical storage or access is necessary for the legitimate purpose of storing preferences that are not requested by the subscriber or user.
Statistics
The technical storage or access that is used exclusively for statistical purposes.The technical storage or access that is used exclusively for anonymous statistical purposes. Without a subpoena, voluntary compliance on the part of your Internet Service Provider, or additional records from a third party, information stored or retrieved for this purpose alone cannot usually be used to identify you.
Marketing
The technical storage or access is required to create user profiles to send advertising, or to track the user on a website or across several websites for similar marketing purposes.