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| SPORTING CLAYS | ||||||||
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Sporting clays is a form of clay
pigeon shooting. Described as "golf with a shotgun", the
sport differs from trap and skeet shooting in that:
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| 1. It is often considered to be more difficult than trap or skeet. | ||||||||
| 2. It involves shooting clay targets at multiple locations (called stations). | ||||||||
| 3. Unlike trap and skeet, which are games of repeatable target presentations, sporting clays targets are thrown in a great variety of trajectories, angles, speeds, elevations and distances. | ||||||||
| The original idea behind sporting clays was to create an experience that more closely reflects actual hunting conditions. Whereas top-tier trap and skeet professionals may have hit ratings nearing 100%, the best sporting clay shooters hit their targets only about 83% to 95% of the time. | ||||||||
| EQUIPMENT | ||||||||
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Although the sport is challenging, it is quite popular
with novice shooters and ordinary hunters. While many
shooters opt for expensive double-barreled shotguns, the
game is equally enjoyable with an inexpensive
pump-action shotgun or autoloading (semiautomatic)
shotgun.
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| Safety is an important part of sporting clays. Proper ear and eye protection and firearms safety procedures are required to be followed at all times while on a course (WW RULES) | ||||||||
| COURSE LAYOUT & PLAY | ||||||||
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A typical course will consist of 10–18 stations, each
station having a pair of clay-throwing machines, called
traps. Varying numbers of clay pairs are shot at each
station, with the total shots on a typical course adding
up to 50 or 100 (two or four boxes of shells,
respectively). Advanced shooters have the clays thrown
as simultaneous pairs (called true pairs in most of the
US), while novice or intermediate shooters can opt for
the clays to be thrown on
report
(the second clay launched on the report of the shooter's
gun, hence the name report pair). Targets are thrown at
different angles and speeds; sometimes across the
shooter's view (crossers), towards the shooter
(in-comers), away from the shooter (out-goers), or
straight up in the air (often called "teals").
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| The shots are intended to simulate hunting for quail, grouse, pheasant, pigeon, or other game. Many courses have traps which throw targets from tall towers simulating high-flying ducks or geese. Some courses have targets that roll and bounce along the ground to simulate rabbits. There are also targets, called 'battues', that loop in the air — this does not simulate any particular animal, but it is usually a challenging target. | ||||||||
| The speed at which a trap throws a clay can also be controlled by the course setter, and many of the traps are made to be relocatable on the course. Therefore, the configuration of a sporting clays course (trap location, clay trajectory, and speed of the clay) can easily be changed, allowing various levels of difficulty and a multitude of layouts. | ||||||||
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