It’s
the opening day of bird season, you have waited for months for this day. A chill
still lingers in the air, yet the maples and birches blaze in their autumn
their colors. As the sun climbs higher and starts to warm the air, traces of
white frost still highlight the shadows. Buck, your Ryman setter, is working
the cover hard. Life doesn’t get much better.
In the early season the leaves are still on the trees |
Buck
locks up like a statue.
You
hurry ahead of him and the bird explodes off the ground. In a blink it is gone.
You fired a snap shot that you don’t even remember. Was it aimed? Who knows?
Did you hit anything? Doubtful. Buck searches, but finds no bird.
Early
season is a tough time to hunt ruffed grouse. The foliage is still thick on the
trees and when a bird flushes it is gone in a blink. We all do it…start the gun
mount and point and shoot in a fraction of a second.
The fall colors add to the beauty of the season. |
How
many birds do we kill? Not too may. The abundance of leaves on opening day provide
an easy excuse.
Learn
to shoot slower. If you have time for your eyes to lock onto the bird as the
gun comes up to your shoulder, you will kill a larger number of them. It only
takes a fraction of a second, but it makes a huge difference in the number of
birds you will kill.
No bird can outrace a charge of shot, remember
that.
Those
hurried shots early in the season will tend to linger on, even as the leaves
drop and the forest starts to open up. It became a muscle memory reflex. One
way to force yourself to slow down is to mentally say something like “woodcock”
or “ruffed grouse” or “bird up” when
the bird flushes, then mount the
gun.
A
friend having a shooting slump with woodcock killed only one bird after missing
with almost an entire box of shells. The one he hit was cleanly decapitated and
fell six yards from his feet. That’s when he realized he was shooting way too
quickly and even with open choked barrels the load hadn’t spread.
He
started hitting woodcock when he said, “there goes one”, before mounting his
gun.
The reward of patient shooting. |
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