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Slowing Down
A more deliberate gun mount and swing improves shooting success

It's hard to slow down when you are in a duck blind or a goose pit with other shooters.

Both hands must work together to perform a perfect gun mount.

When "Take 'em!" is called, it is every shooter for himself. The first one who pulls the trigger tends to bag the easiest, closest bird. But if you think about it, maybe you don't want to bag the easiest bird. Maybe a more challenging shot would please you more.

So let's think about slowing down. Whether you need to sit up or stand up to begin the shot, move as fast as your body will permit. No need to slow down that aspect of your shooting. The gun mount, swing and triggering is where I'm suggesting slowing down.


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Maybe you already do. If you do slow down regularly, turn the page to the next Wildfowl article.

I know I'm often too fast with my gun mount and swing. I do it despite practicing my gun mount almost every day of my life, even though when I practice, I consciously work at performing slowly. While shooting one heck of a lot of ducks at several hotspots in Uruguay and Argentina this summer, I still had to keep reminding myself to slow down.

It is not an easy when ducks are flying every which way -- over, in front of and behind the decoys.

When I suggest slowing down, I'm not talking about moving so slowly the birds are out of range before you first hit the trigger. Only a tiny difference exists between mounting and moving too quickly and performing the tasks in a more orderly, slower manner.

Hand in Hand
One of the most common mistakes revealed in a too-quick move to the bird is when the right hand is used too forcefully and not in concert with the left hand. Obviously, I am talking about a right-handed shooter. When the right hand takes over, and it almost always does when you move quickly with a shotgun, the muzzle comes down and away from the target's flight path. You don't want that. Instead, you want a smooth move, with the muzzle starting and staying right on the bird's flight path. No right-handed shooter can achieve that if they allow the right hand to dominate the gun mount.

Slowing down a little allows the two hands to work together, not against each other. In past columns, I've dwelled on practicing the gun mount over and over -- starting the muzzle moving on the imaginary bird's flight path first, then blending in the gun mount while continuing a smooth swing. To accomplish it, both hands have to work together.

I only shared a duck blind for two days with Missouri's Tony Vandemore, but his shooting move is classic. He can beat his blind mate to the bird anytime he wants, but he looks so slow doing it. Obviously, he's not slow. His move is so controlled, his hands are working together and his movements are fluid. Of course, he kills one heck of a lot of ducks, Canada geese and snows every season, so experience is undoubtedly a huge factor in his performance. For years, Vandemore has shot the same semi-auto for virtually all of his waterfowl hunting. He knows his shotgun so well. No one can say enough about sticking with one gun day in and day out, year in and year out.

Mounting the Gun
Let me get back to the gun mount. I have covered the subject in previous Wildfowl shotgun columns. If you still have your copy of the October issue, read or reread my suggestions for using a laser or mini flashlight device in the muzzle of the shotgun. After working on keeping the light right on your aiming point -- mounting the gun for a straightaway target -- the following advice details the way to practice your gun mount thereafter.


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