Most men that are good with a catapult are 9 times out of ten good with a rifle or shotgun , not always the other way round though , Wayne's a class act 💥💥
Bought an Aomekie red dot sight for my boy on Amazon. He's 10 so only uses it under direct supervision and it fell to pieces inside after 5 short uses with no mistreatment. Steer clear lads it's a £30 set of lens caps!
After one have planted the trees , one need to have checkup and supplemental planting the next year . Since depending on areas , wind weather , soil, insects and so on . Can lead tp 30-40 % of tree loss . Even more if it is the wrong tree sort . And then the woodlands have to be looked after until it’s time to send the timber to the mill .
I have limited experience with bolt action rifles. Is there a reason that so many shooters on FSB take the weapon all the way out of their shoulder and lower it to waist level before cycling the bolt? What little I know of the subject was that the rifle should remain in the shoulder supported by the off hand the head should move only enough to not get whacked in the face by the bolt, then immediately back on target.
I can only speak for myself here, but it’s a case of one step at a time. This was my first time shooting a moving target with a rifle, so the concentration was on executing one good and safe shot. Moving forwards, after perfecting the first steps, we’ll be looking at faster reloading in the shoulder with multiple shots. I think for most UK rifle shooters, reloading in the shoulder isn’t necessary or habitual, because rarely are shots ever taken free standing. The focus is on keeping your eye on the animal (through the scope) to see it’s reaction to the shot (bullet placement) then decide if a follow up shot is needed, or watch to see where the animal drops / heads to if it hasn’t dropped on the spot.
@@CattyShackHunter thanks for the reply. I know shooting in the USA is considerably more martial in nature. So that might explain why we always think of follow up shots (among other things) even at the beginning stages of our practice.
@@Aikibiker1 no problem. I’m very process orientated. So, perfect one thing, then move on. Otherwise you can be doing multiple things wrong at once, and trying to correct multiple things at once. A bit like giving a child a shotgun, one cartridge, and a single clay target to shoot when they’re beginning, as opposed to two cartridges and a simulated pair.
Most men that are good with a catapult are 9 times out of ten good with a rifle or shotgun , not always the other way round though , Wayne's a class act 💥💥
Most men who shoot live quarry with a catapult don't care if they wound lots of quarry - catapult or gun.
@@johnsmith-cn5yv some idiots mate ,,, not all
Thanks guys as always.
Regarding the wildlife act, it's about time brent geese were back on the quarry list. They are wrecking our estuaries.
Another fantastic show, i liked the rifle segment as I'm just putting in for my FAC, some great information there,
Cheers Charlie and the team
Bought an Aomekie red dot sight for my boy on Amazon. He's 10 so only uses it under direct supervision and it fell to pieces inside after 5 short uses with no mistreatment. Steer clear lads it's a £30 set of lens caps!
Another very enjoyable show.
Suggestion to Cai , if he would look into freeze drier machines since they are starting to fall in price now.
Top show as always!
Where’s Lupton nowadays? I’m missing that chuckle.
Agreed, I miss Roy. Hope he is well 🙏
Busy with his birds I expect.
Another Great Video Guys 💯💥💥💥💥💥💥💥
Good Lord! A time when the BBC actually showed the skills of a gunsmith rather than trying to demonise anyone involved with shooting sports.
After one have planted the trees , one need to have checkup and supplemental planting the next year . Since depending on areas , wind weather , soil, insects and so on . Can lead tp 30-40 % of tree loss . Even more if it is the wrong tree sort .
And then the woodlands have to be looked after until it’s time to send the timber to the mill .
👍👍🦌🦌🐕🐕🐇🐇🐀🐀🐿️🐿️👍👍
That's what I was going to say @manofkencatapulultsgunanddi5069 😅
👍👍
Come on David you do a report on wapiti then the last deer you show is a sika !!!
great show well done all
Great content,great advice!
That rife needs no break in, already done. Break ins are for lesser rifles.
I have limited experience with bolt action rifles. Is there a reason that so many shooters on FSB take the weapon all the way out of their shoulder and lower it to waist level before cycling the bolt? What little I know of the subject was that the rifle should remain in the shoulder supported by the off hand the head should move only enough to not get whacked in the face by the bolt, then immediately back on target.
I can only speak for myself here, but it’s a case of one step at a time. This was my first time shooting a moving target with a rifle, so the concentration was on executing one good and safe shot. Moving forwards, after perfecting the first steps, we’ll be looking at faster reloading in the shoulder with multiple shots. I think for most UK rifle shooters, reloading in the shoulder isn’t necessary or habitual, because rarely are shots ever taken free standing. The focus is on keeping your eye on the animal (through the scope) to see it’s reaction to the shot (bullet placement) then decide if a follow up shot is needed, or watch to see where the animal drops / heads to if it hasn’t dropped on the spot.
@@CattyShackHunter thanks for the reply. I know shooting in the USA is considerably more martial in nature. So that might explain why we always think of follow up shots (among other things) even at the beginning stages of our practice.
@@Aikibiker1 no problem. I’m very process orientated. So, perfect one thing, then move on. Otherwise you can be doing multiple things wrong at once, and trying to correct multiple things at once. A bit like giving a child a shotgun, one cartridge, and a single clay target to shoot when they’re beginning, as opposed to two cartridges and a simulated pair.
First!