#3 in a series of newbie questions:
In highpower and bullseye pistol, you spend a *lot* of time dry firing to practice stance, trigger squeeze, sight alignment, etc.
I'd like to do something like that with trap, but I know a lot of trap shooters get really twitchy about "stuff" going on near them when they shoot, kinda like bowlers who don't want the person in the next lane to be doing anything when it's their turn.
So, how do I go about this? In a perfect world I'd be at a practice session where there's only four people who want to shoot, so I could stand at the 5th position and follow/aim/click on each bird for all four other shooters. I'd be going through the motions of shooting without actually making any noise or knocking down birds.
Does anyone do anything like that? Is there a chance in hell that any group would put up with me doing something like that?
If not, what's a good way to practice aim, trigger squeeze, and follow through?
In highpower and bullseye pistol, you spend a *lot* of time dry firing to practice stance, trigger squeeze, sight alignment, etc.
I'd like to do something like that with trap, but I know a lot of trap shooters get really twitchy about "stuff" going on near them when they shoot, kinda like bowlers who don't want the person in the next lane to be doing anything when it's their turn.
So, how do I go about this? In a perfect world I'd be at a practice session where there's only four people who want to shoot, so I could stand at the 5th position and follow/aim/click on each bird for all four other shooters. I'd be going through the motions of shooting without actually making any noise or knocking down birds.
Does anyone do anything like that? Is there a chance in hell that any group would put up with me doing something like that?
If not, what's a good way to practice aim, trigger squeeze, and follow through?