If you want cheap practice you could try plastic paint bucket lids, thrown by a good mate.
Flys like a frisbee......our your local clay ground.
Like I said before try to stay away from talk on how much lead each bird is given. As all are different! You will find that as you get into it you will build up site pictures. This is where a bird comes in like one that you have shot at before. You will shoot these more easily than ones that come in from an unknown angle our direction that you have not shot from. Your brain instantly recognises what it needs to do.
You will also find that the snap shots (you don't see the bird till the last minute, it surprises you) has more success than one where you see it coming from a long way out.
Had this on phesant shoots here in the UK. Standing in the gun line and the first bird brakes cover soaring high and comes directly over you! You know that all nine guns are whatching you plus any beaters and picker uppers.....no pressure there it's an easy shot and you duff it! You have just out thought it and folded to the pressure![]()
1.Gun fit!
2.Practice! Not just during duck shooting. (Go buy a slab of 7.5 21gram clay rounds and get down your local clay ground)
Good luck![]()
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