The shooting skill that took the longest to develop

Alan

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I will say "calling my shots knowing where the bullet went before seeing the target". It ook me years to develop that level of awareness of sight picture and trigger press. I am still not perfect at it. It's one of those expert-level skills that separates good shooters from great ones. Patience and thousands of rounds eventually get you there.
 
After decades of handgun and rifle shooting, my most difficult transition was shotgun when I took up competitive trapshooting in 1989. I would have been low man on a squad with four blind shooters but l-o-n-g story short, I went on to be our Class AA State Champion with my first 200x200 in June of 2000 and was punched to the 27 yardline a month later. I recorded perfect scores in eight different states and enjoyed the sport tremendously before torn rotator cuffs eliminated me in 2008.

Ed
 
Figuring out how to call my shots took me years. As soon as I started trusting what I was seeing, my groupings got way tighter. It’s a skill no one really talks about.
 
Figuring out how to call my shots took me years. As soon as I started trusting what I was seeing, my groupings got way tighter. It’s a skill no one really talks about.
IME calling shots encompasses two parameters: 1/ Recall of the sight picture at the precise moment of fire 2/ What the exact conditions, i.e. wind, mirage, light were at the moment of fire and how you adjusted ( Kentucky windage) for these conditions. #2 comes into play if you shoot competition and have means to monitor "conditions" or have extensive experience correlating what the natural environment is showing -i.e. a military marksman using tree / grass movement to determine what affect it has on bullet flight to the target.
 
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It's my instant recall of site location at ignition and follow through, noticing where the projectile hits. It matters in all shooting sports ( Small & Large bore rifles and handguns; ML's and Archery types). I learned shooting from grey beards of these skills and weapons.
Remember: D L P E T P. (Discus, Learn, Practice, Evaluate, Talk/Teach, & Practice X- Infinity!)1- Find like interested people to DISCUS the topic of shooting whatever. 2- Learn by retaining info from discussions. Take all the garnered info to practice with for pertinence to you're development. 3- and PRACTICE (needs to be a religious, concentrated effort, not just burning ammo). 4- EVALUATE the target; learn to read what they tell you about skills attempted. Take written notes for review and planning future practice skills (Note book or on targets). 5- Find folks to talk shooting with and exchange of info. This makes it a swap of info (Teach and Learn improves the sport and its' reputation). 6- PRACTICE, PRACTICE X INFINATELY. Not practicing creates a mental, as well as a physical, degradation of skills.
 

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