Quote:
Originally Posted by Narragansett
Right! Most common problems are pulling up on the side of a straightaway , not moving the gun on a straightaway ( trying to trap it ), or not properly picking up the target out of the house and improper foot positioning. Yep, no second move to the target, and you knew you were behind it. Time to shoot
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While foot position is important............ for the flight of the clays at the different stations. ( zones )
My instructor also taught me that learning to rotate at the hips
was also another important step, in proper set ups, to be able
to swing on the bird, no matter what the angle was.
"See the bird", now go after it.