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Started by markelljones, March 27, 2022, 06:38:44 PM
Quote from: Bowguy on March 27, 2022, 08:01:22 PMWelcome and sorry to hear of your troubles being police trained in shooting. Ah just kidding, kinda. Honestly if you have a gun you can prob start without loads of trouble. You need to pattern the gun. Typically we'd say try all kinds of chokes, loads, types, etc but time is limited and ammo hard to come by. What type chokes do you have and what type ammo can you get? You might be best with sights but that may or may not be necessary dependent on the choke, load combo. I'd recommend copper plated lead to start. TSS is gonna be real expensive and perhaps you can't get enough after all the things you'd need to do. Start so this is manageable Also how do you plan on calling? I'd say easiest to learn relatively quickly might be a box call. Learning the when's might be lots harder. All of this is to assume you'll have something to shoot at or call to. One month is really super short to do everything you need to get started with any real chance at success as novices. That's the truth but let's start at a few places you can prepare. A few firsts cause time is limited. Find birds. Get up early, crack of dawn. Drive around areas listening for gobbles. Locate as many as possible. You'll need em. If you know the woods stay out. Just long range locate. Another first, get that box call. Learn how to use it. David Halloran has some good you tubes about use, mistakes. Dr Lovett now passed has a real turkey cds to help listen and give insight. Patterning your gun, start close. If the gun shoots not perfect, get sights, scope, whatever but get it to shoot poa. If it does shoot straight pattern it and see where the pattern falls apart on you. That'll be your effective range. Being your limited if that's only 30 yards don't sweat it. Way more birds are killed under 30 than over. Pattern on large paper so you can see if pattern is favoring one side. (You need sights to fix) It's hard to give more specifics since you were vague in what you have. Keep posting your results and guys will guide you to things for consideration
Quote from: markelljones on March 27, 2022, 08:42:21 PMQuote from: Bowguy on March 27, 2022, 08:01:22 PMWelcome and sorry to hear of your troubles being police trained in shooting. Ah just kidding, kinda. Honestly if you have a gun you can prob start without loads of trouble. You need to pattern the gun. Typically we'd say try all kinds of chokes, loads, types, etc but time is limited and ammo hard to come by. What type chokes do you have and what type ammo can you get? You might be best with sights but that may or may not be necessary dependent on the choke, load combo. I'd recommend copper plated lead to start. TSS is gonna be real expensive and perhaps you can't get enough after all the things you'd need to do. Start so this is manageable Also how do you plan on calling? I'd say easiest to learn relatively quickly might be a box call. Learning the when's might be lots harder. All of this is to assume you'll have something to shoot at or call to. One month is really super short to do everything you need to get started with any real chance at success as novices. That's the truth but let's start at a few places you can prepare. A few firsts cause time is limited. Find birds. Get up early, crack of dawn. Drive around areas listening for gobbles. Locate as many as possible. You'll need em. If you know the woods stay out. Just long range locate. Another first, get that box call. Learn how to use it. David Halloran has some good you tubes about use, mistakes. Dr Lovett now passed has a real turkey cds to help listen and give insight. Patterning your gun, start close. If the gun shoots not perfect, get sights, scope, whatever but get it to shoot poa. If it does shoot straight pattern it and see where the pattern falls apart on you. That'll be your effective range. Being your limited if that's only 30 yards don't sweat it. Way more birds are killed under 30 than over. Pattern on large paper so you can see if pattern is favoring one side. (You need sights to fix) It's hard to give more specifics since you were vague in what you have. Keep posting your results and guys will guide you to things for considerationThank you for the lengthy response. I don't have anything but the gun, license, and tags. I don't have the attire or anything. We're required to wear some sort of blaze orange during the firearm seasons. The gun I have is very much a home defense gun. We have a lot of niche gun stores around here so I'm sure acquiring a choke won't be a problem.