Jan 24, 2010

Making plans to go to the Grand American Handicap this summer



Making plans to go to the Grand American this summer for the first time, have the RV rented, Dad and Cal are going. Mr F. E. Rogers of St. Louis MO won the Grand American Handicap with an LC Smith in 1906, the year this poster came out. He broke a 94 out of 100 in a "gale force" wind. That was just a few years after 1902 which was the last year they used live birds. 1900 was the last time live birds were shot at the Olympics. The first ATA Grand American was held in 1893. The Kentucky Derby has been around since 1853.

Jan 19, 2010

The Importance Of A Shooting Diary

I really struggled through my first 300 trap targets this year, really struggled. Shooting 20s from the 16 yard line kind of struggle. I was questioning my gun choice, the eye exercises I've been doing, whether I needed new glasses, if I jarred the rib or comb setting on my gun, etc...

I found some old notes yesterday I had kept from last year and I saw multiple times, "hold the gun high over the house, look down below the barrel for the target." What have I been doing? Holding high over the trap house and looking even higher. Targets were getting a huge jump on me and I was chasing after them, never getting a good look, constantly being surprised.

Went back out today and shot a 24 and a 23 from 16 yards.

Without those notes from last year when I was shooting well, how long would I have struggled? Needless to say, I am keeping an even better diary now. So simple and so easy to fix. Now I can go back to the more important work of trying to pick up that extra one or two targets, with confidence in my overall approach.

Jan 14, 2010

E A Hicken Sr.


Elwood Hicken, my grandmother's brother was a trap shooter. According to the ATA's website, he shot his first registered targets in 1953. He shot 750 singles that year for an average of 76.27%. He only shot 50 handicap targets that year and broke 76% of those. He shot pretty consistently for the next 40 years, shooting his last registered targets in 1993 at the age of 81 (I think). His high singles average was 94% in 1963. He ended his ATA career at 21.5 yards but I am not sure how far back he made it in his prime. All together, he shot 76,325 singles targets and 23,150 handicap targets. Thats a nice long career, I hope I am that lucky.

I mentioned his name on another website and found some people that knew him. He shot at Delaware County Sportsmen's Association in Media, PA, a club founded in 1915. Apparently he has been still calling the clubhouse from Florida every other week or so to touch base.
A few years back, he came up from Florida and insisted my parents take him to see the gun club. My parents remember going to see him shoot at Shawnee on the Delaware (a Pocono Mountains resort) in the early 1960s while they were in college.

Another poster related that Elwood was a past High Chief of the Atlantic Indians and while he didn't know much about his shooting career, he remembered him as a real gentleman. Indians are an informal social trapshooting club, in Illinois, we have the Illini Indians.

He's still paying his ATA membership dues, 98 years old now. Maybe he is a life member.

Hand trap

Found this in our basement. My Dad bought it years ago and it found its way into our basement. You can still buy hand throwers but they are made of cheap plastic now. White Flyer targets are still the dominant target you see being thrown at trap clubs. Not rare at all, there are a million of them for sale on the internet.

Jan 7, 2010

Wall Chart Up


I hung up my wall chart last weekend and started my dry firing practice. I got 25 empties, cut them short so they fit in a shell box, and shoot 4 rounds of trap. I wear my shooting glasses to try and make it as realistic as possible. Dry firing at the wall chart teaches muscle memory and a consistent gun mount, I try to follow the same pre-shot routine and focus on the leading edge of the target.
I'm trying to do it everyday, 100 mounts. Everything that I have read, for every clay shooting discipline, suggests dry firing. I also include eye exercises and visualization (more on that later).

Jan 2, 2010

X-Mas Sporting Clays


Dad (pictured) and I got some shooting in over the break but the weather was poor. We shot at Pintail Point in Maryland, first we shot wobble trap and then we shot a round of 100. Dad beat me by 5 targets, we shot for a $ a target. We shot 5-Stand and a round of 100 at Owens Station in Delaware. We were tied after that and I won the shoot off from the 22 yard trap line in sudden death. Weather was poor overall, cold, rainy and windy but we got some targets in.