Thursday, 30 August 2007

Something for nothing

Honestly, you give people something for nothing and are they grateful? No, they just complain when you stop!

For the last year and more, we've been running a free-to-enter competition to win a gun - typically worth about £1000 - every month in the magazine. It helps promote the magazine and in modern marketing terms it's "added value" for the readers.

But the magazine is a business like any other, and we can't just keep giving away a free gun every month. Could your local gunshop afford to do that and stay in business? Neither can we.

So we had two options: ditch the competition altogether, or charge a nominal amount for entry - not to make a huge profit (fat chance!) but to offset some of the cost of the gun... before the managing director hauls me up in front of the board to explain why I'm throwing their money away!

And I thought, well, I'm sure readers would rather have the choice of entering if they want to. And if they don't want to spend a quid or two on an entry, no-one is forcing them.

Well, blow me if I don't get an earful from an irate reader accusing me of killing off the sport of shooting single-handed! And then another reader calls to accuse me of making obscene profits from a phone-in scam!

So listen up: if you don't want to enter, don't enter; if you do enter, I wish you the very best - but either way the sport of shooting will continue regardless, and I won't be retiring to the Bahamas on the proceeds!

Monday, 27 August 2007

It's a folding pocket knife, officer



As our esteemed government insists on treating us all as five-year-olds, even a perfectly innocent stalker, keeper or countryman can get his collar felt for carrying a knife these days. Personally, I've had a knife and a length of string in my pocket since I was at school. It's a part of me. I feel naked without it. It's invaluable umpteen times a day, for innumerable little jobs. And since my ancestors (and yours) used knives to fight wild beasts and marauding tribes, hacked down trees and harvested crops to make this country what it is, I'm blowed if some jumped-up do-gooding numpty is going to tell me I can't be trusted with a pointy thing any more.

Having said all that, I'd rather not have to explain it to the magistrate, with all the bother and expense that would involve, not to mention the difficulty next time my firearms certificate comes up for renewal. Oh, and if you ever find yourself in that position, think very hard indeed before accepting the apparently easy way out of a 'police caution'. That is basically an admission of guilt, and will cause you all kinds of bother in the future.

So now I'm carrying this rather smart - and very practical - little Spyderco knife that's been designed precisely to fall outside the latest nanny-state knife laws. It has a blade of (just) under 3ins, and it folds. It doesn't lock - although it does open with a very positive click. In normal use, your forefinger blocks it from folding onto your hand, so it's almost as safe to use as a lock-knife. And if PC Plod makes a fuss, I'll refer him to the Criminal Justice Act 1988, Section 139.

The knife is available, price £69.95, from Heinnie Haynes; for more on the UK knife laws see this document at the BASC website.

Friday, 24 August 2007

'Natural Shooting' with Mike Yardley


Today we've been at Braintree Shooting Ground in Essex, getting the photos for the next few articles in Mike Yardley's brilliant new 'Natural Shooting' series in the magazine. It's always fun spending a day on the clay ground with Mike - we work well together and we've become quite efficient at getting the photos we need in the bag.

Rach was there helping out, and my daughter Emma (pictured above with Mike) came along too. After a frustrating time in the pigeon hide on Sunday, she was hoping to pick up some tips!



Above is a brief video clip showing Mike putting his advice into action. We shot a few more clips where Mike explains some of the fundamentals of the Natural Shooting system. Once they're edited, we'll be putting them on the website.

Meanwhile, here's a shot I was particularly pleased to get - not just because it shows the clay at the moment of breaking but if you look closely you can see the shot pattern passing through the spot where the clay was struck.

Wednesday, 22 August 2007

Sporting Shooter podcast - episode 4

This episode we’re shooting pigeons near Liverpool, with John and Mark from decoying.co.uk. We talk to Chips Hardy, author of ‘Each Day a Small Victory’, we take some beginners shooting at West London Shooting School, and we talk to Charles Bull of justcartridges.com about the rising cost of cartridges. The music is ‘All for me Grog’ by The Pubcrawlers at www.podsafeaudio.com

Monday, 20 August 2007

Spinning-wing pigeon decoys


Just back from Liverpool, where I was pigeon shooting with John and Mark from decoying.co.uk. We were using their amazing new Air-Pro spinning-wing decoys, which flicker realistically in the breeze and certainly pulled in the birds from a long way off. Unfortunately I was a bit rubbish at hitting them, but you can't have everything! The new decoys are available now from www.decoying.co.uk for £49.99 per pair.

Saturday, 18 August 2007

The cost of cartridges


I've just been to visit Charles Bull who runs justcartridges.com, near Oxford. We stood in his warehouse, stacked with over a million shells of every bore and shot size imaginable, and had an interesting chat about the price of cartridges, which has been rocketing this year - some say due to the demand for lead in China.

Whatever the reason, it's causing concern for some shooters, particularly those who get through a good few shells each week.
Charles doesn't think it's going to make a big difference to the number of people shooting, though. As he says, the cartridges are a tiny fraction of the cost for a game shooter. And even for clay shooters, the increase is relatively small in proportion to their investment in guns, clothing, membership fees and the like.

For those who are looking to cut their costs, Charles offers this advice: "Cartridge manufacture is so high-tech these days that there really isn't such a thing as a bad shell. For most shooters, they won't notice the difference between a cartridge that costs £200 a thousand, and one that's £120 a thousand."

So if you want to dent the cost of your shooting, buy cheaper shells. Simple. And guess what, Charles sells some! Check out his prices online at www.justcartridges.com. You might want to turn off the speakers on your computer first though, as the site has a maddening series of ricochets as the front page loads!

Thursday, 16 August 2007

Company clay day


What a great day! A group of 12 of us went clay shooting at West London Shooting School. Most of the group above work on some aspect of Sporting Shooter, at least part of the time - but most of them had little or no experience of shooting.

Not any more! Under the expert guidance of WLSS's instructors, even the total beginners were soon hitting clays - and now they're hooked. Trouble is, they'll be nagging the MD to let them do it again soon.

Rach and I took literally hundreds of photos, shot a bit of video and recorded a few interviews, so we'll be covering the day in the magazine, on the website and in the podcast over the next few weeks. Here's Hayley shooting her very first clay pigeon:


WLSS run a lot of these sort of days, and they do them very well. The staff are friendly and welcoming, and soon put everyone at their ease, even when their friends have been scaring them silly with stories about how the recoil will break their arms. The ground laid on a good lunch, and the instructors have an uncanny ability to melt into the background at just the right moment and let the group gel.


I suppose I'm biased, but I reckon more companies should run days like these for their staff. I know it sounds trite, but it really does foster a great team spirit, and make everyone feel that bit more valued and special. I'm sure the cost of the day must be repaid many times over in productivity.