OUTDOOR SPORTS AND GAMES
BY CLAUDE H. MILLER, PH.B.
VI
THE USE OF FIRE-ARMS
Importance of early training—Why a gun is better than a rifle—How
to become a good shot
Whether a boy of fifteen should have a gun or a rifle is a question that
parents will have to settle for themselves. There is no question but that a
careful boy who has been taught by some older person how to handle a gun is more
to be trusted than a man who has never learned the proper use of fire-arms and
who takes up the sport of hunting after he is grown up.
Most of the shooting accidents are caused by inexperienced men who have never been accustomed to guns
in their younger days. Once or twice I have just missed being shot by friends who had never been hunting before, and who became so excited when they
unexpectedly kicked up a rabbit or walked into a flock of quail that they fired the gun without knowing whether any of their friends were in range or not. When
a boy is allowed to have a gun it should be a real one. Air rifles and small calibre guns are all the more dangerous, because they are often looked upon as toys.
In handling a gun, always treat it as though it were loaded, no matter if you
know it is empty. By this means it will soon become second nature to you
never to point the gun at any one even carelessly or in fun. A guide once said
to me, "A gun is a dangerous critter without lock, stock, or barrel, and if a
feller ever points one at me I think he means business."
A double barrelled hammerless shot-gun
A gun can never be trusted. Accidents happen so quickly that it is over
before we know it and the terrible damage is done. Sometimes the trigger will
catch on a coat button or a twig, and, bang! an unexpected discharge takes place
and if you were careless just for an instant, it may cost some one his life.
Especial care must be taken in loading and unloading a gun. It is at this time
that a gun is most likely to go off unexpectedly.
The best way to learn how to handle a gun is to watch the methods of an old
hand. Never fire a gun when you are standing behind another person. You may know
that you are not aiming at him, but the concussion of the air near the end of
the barrel is terrific, and your friend may have a split ear drum as a
result.
A shot-gun is better for a boy than a rifle, for the reason that most real
shooting except for big game is done with a shot-gun, and besides, it takes a
lot of practice to shoot well with it. A shot-gun is not a weapon for play but a
real tool. In almost every section of the country there is some small game to be
hunted and there is usually also an opportunity to practise at clay pigeons.
No one would think of hunting quail, ducks, or rabbits with a rifle, and even
if you were an excellent rifle shot at a still mark you might not be able to hit
moving game at all. A shot-gun is less dangerous for the reason that its range
is limited to a little over a hundred yards, while a rifle may carry a mile. A
cheap shot-gun is far more dangerous than a cheap rifle. Until it is possible to
buy a good one it is better to have none at all. A good American-made gun can be
bought for about twenty-five dollars. A gun suitable for its owner should fit
just as his clothing fits him. When a gun is quickly brought to the shoulder in
firing position, there is no time in actual hunting to shift it around. When you
buy a gun, remember that your canvas or corduroy hunting coat makes more of a
bulge at the shoulder than an ordinary suit and accordingly see that the stock
is the proper length. The "drop" of a gun is the number of inches that the stock
falls below the line of the barrel. If the stock is bent too much you will
shoot under your game. If it is too straight the tendency will be to shoot over
game. The average stock is made to fit most people and will probably answer most
purposes unless you can afford to have a stock made especially. The principal
thing is to do all your practising with your own gun until it becomes second
nature to bring it up quickly and have the eye find the barrel instantly. A
shot-gun is not aimed in the same way as a rifle. The method of good shots is
rather to keep their eye on the game and when they "feel" that the gun is
pointed right to fire. A skilful shot can tell whether he is shooting too high
or too low just as he pulls the trigger. The brain, head, and eyes and
trigger-finger must all work in harmony or you will never be a good shot. Never
flinch as you shoot. This is a very common fault of beginners and it is fatal to
becoming a marksman.
The first lesson in handling a gun is to understand perfectly how it works.
If it is a hammerless gun, remember that it is always cocked. When you open the
barrels you cock the gun automatically. For this reason there is some kind of a
safety device provided, which should always be left at "safe" except at the
actual instant of firing. It is just as easy to learn to push the safety off
when you fire as it is to learn to pull the trigger, if one starts right.
Never carry your gun with your finger on the trigger. Wait until you put the
gun up as you are ready to shoot. Don't forget the safety. A great many shots
are missed because the hunter forgets whether he has left it on or off and in
his anxiety to hit the game will tug and pull on the trigger until, just as the
game disappears out of range, he will remember that he did not release it. This
shows the importance of acquiring the proper habit at first.
It is harder to correct bad habits in handling a gun than to teach the
beginner the proper way at first. On your first lesson in the field, walk on
the left side of your teacher so that your gun will be pointing away from him.
If you come across any game, try to take your time before you fire. Nearly every
one shoots too quickly. As most shot-gun shooting is what is called snap
shooting, there isn't much time at best, but a good shot will be sure that he
has covered his game before he fires, while a beginner will trust to luck. This
will be the hardest fault to correct. Consequently a beginner should if possible
hunt alone for a while, as the presence of another gun alongside of him makes
him too anxious to get in the first shot, and gets him into bad habits.
If your teacher also has a gun, he must assure you that he does not intend to
shoot and then you will try harder to get the game and run less chance of
missing. Always unload a gun before going into a house, under or over a fence,
or in or out of a boat or carriage. If you leave your gun, even for a minute,
unload it. Never rest a loaded gun against a tree or building. Never pull a gun
loaded or empty toward you by the muzzle. In unloading always point it toward
the ground. A jar will sometimes discharge a gun and very often a discharge will
take place when closing the breech on a tight shell.
Always be ready for game. In hunting, we never can tell at what instant it
will rise up in front of us. "Be ready" does not mean having the muscles and
nerves constantly on a tension. It is simply to carry your gun in such a
position that you can quickly bring it to the shoulder at any time. It is a good
plan to practise aiming at various objects as you go along until you gradually
overcome your awkwardness.
It is difficult to say what makes a good shot with a gun. There is no
question but that practice will make any one a better shot than he would be
without it, but some people are better shots with very little practice than
others with a great deal. One very important thing is to do your practising
under conditions similar to the actual hunting. If the cover is thick where you
hunt, a swamp or brush lot for example, you will not derive much benefit from
practising entirely in the open. A pigeon trap is an inexpensive way to learn to
shoot. Some experienced hunters will say that practice at clay pigeons does not
help in the field, but at the same time a good brush shot is almost always a
good trap shot and if you can become skilful enough to break an average of
eighteen to twenty clay pigeons out of twenty-five at sixteen yards rise, you
may be sure that you will get your share of game under actual hunting
conditions.
The most difficult part of bird hunting is to learn to give the game a start.
The average shot-gun will kill quail at sixty yards and duck at forty. The
farther the game is away from us, provided it is within range, the more the shot
will spread. I once saw a half-dozen hunters fire at a covey of quail that rose
in an open field before they had gone thirty yards and every hunter scored a
clean miss. Any one of these men could bring down his bird under the same
conditions nine times out of ten if he had taken his time. On this occasion when
their guns were empty another hunter who had withheld his fire said, "Are you
all done, boys?" and shot a bird with each barrel at a measured fifty-eight
yards. To kill a bird that another man has shot at is called "wiping his eye,"
and it is the chief joy of an old hunter to do this with a beginner. If you do
not want to let the old hunter wipe your eye, take your time.
Learn to shoot with your head well up and with both eyes open. When the game
rises, keep your eye on it and at the instant that you see it on the end of your
gun barrel, fire. The greatest joy of hunting is to see the game appear to
tumble off the end of your gun barrel when it is hit. If there is a doubt as to
whose bird it is, and this happens constantly as two people often shoot at the
same time at the same bird, do not rush in and claim it. Remember you are a
gentleman, but if you are sure that you hit it, at least stand for your
rights.
So much of the pleasure of hunting depends on our companions that we must be
considerate of the feelings of others as well as our own. Always hunt if
possible with experienced hunters. You will not only have more fun, but you will
run much less risk. In rabbit hunting, one is especially at the mercy of the
beginner who fires wildly without any thought as to whose life he may be
endangering, so long as he gets the rabbit. If you hunt with some one who owns
the dogs, be very careful not to interfere with them by giving commands. As a
rule the owner of a well-trained dog prefers to handle him without any help,
and, while he may not tell you, you may be sure that he will resent it if you
try to make the dog do your bidding when his master is around.
The pattern of a gun, as it is called, is the number of shot it will put
within a circle at a given distance. As a rule the factory test pattern will be
found on a tag attached to the gun. If not, you can easily get the pattern
yourself. The usual distance for targeting a new gun is thirty yards, and the
standard circle is thirty inches. Make a circle on the barn door with a piece of
chalk and string fifteen inches long. First drive a nail into the wood and
fasten the string to it with the chalk on the loose end. Then describe and
measure ninety feet from the target. Fire as nearly as you can at the centre of
the circle and count the shot that are inside the chalk mark. In order not to
count the same shot twice mark them off with a pencil. Perhaps a surer way would
be to fire at the door first and in the centre of the load of shot drive the
nail and describe a circle afterward. The chief advantage of studying the
pattern of your gun is to know just how much it scatters and how far it may be
depended upon to shoot and kill.
In a choke-bore gun, the end of the barrel is drawn in slightly and made
smaller to keep the shot together. Guns that are used in duck and goose hunting
are usually full choked as most of the shots are long ones, but for ordinary
brush and field shooting a gun that has a full cylinder right barrel and a
modified choke on the left will be the best for general purposes.
The best size is 12-bore or gauge. Ten gauge guns are entirely too heavy for
general use and the smaller bores, such as sixteen or even twenty gauge, while
they are very light and dainty, are not a typical all around gun for a boy who
can only afford to have one size. The smaller bores, however, have become very
popular in recent years and much may be said in their favour.
The standard length of barrels is either twenty-eight or thirty inches. The
shorter length will probably be just as satisfactory and makes a much better
proportion between the stock and barrels. You can easily test the amount of
choke in a 12-gauge gun. A new ten-cent piece will just go inside the end of the
barrel of a full cylinder gun and just fail to go into one that has been
slightly choked.
While it is impossible to give any written directions for shooting that are
as valuable as actual practice, the important thing for a beginner is to get his
form right at first, just as in golf or horseback riding, and then to make up
his mind that every shot has got to count.
Rifle shooting is entirely different from shot-gun shooting and skill in one
branch of the sport of marksmanship does not mean much in the other. A boy may
be an excellent rifle shot at a stationary target and still not be able to hit
"a flock of barns," as the country boys say, with a shot-gun. Skill with a rifle
is chiefly of value to those who are interested in military affairs and more
rarely to those who are fortunate enough to have an opportunity for hunting big
game. In settled communities there is a strong feeling against allowing boys to
have rifles. Practically the only game that can be hunted will be our little
friends, the song birds, and no self-respecting boy will shoot them. A small
calibre rifle such as a 22-calibre Flobert will afford considerable pastime at
target practice and is also excellent to hunt snakes and frogs along some brook
or creek, but generally a boy with a rifle is a public nuisance, and as a rule
is liable to arrest in possessing it. If we fix up a rifle range where there are
no dangers of damage from spent bullets or badly aimed shots it is well enough
to practise with a small rifle.
A real sporting rifle, such as is used for big game, is a very dangerous
fire-arm and cannot be used with safety anywhere but in an absolute wilderness
or on a target range. Such guns will kill at a mile and go through a tree a foot
or two in diameter; to use such a weapon in even a sparsely settled section is
very dangerous indeed. If a boy has any chance of going hunting for deer or
moose, he will surely need practice and for this purpose a range will have to be
selected where there is absolutely no danger to any one within a mile or two. A
good practice range is across a lake or river with a bank of earth or clay to
stop the bullets. Big game hunting is done so frequently from canoes that it is
well to get practice from a boat, both moving and stationary. To shoot
successfully from a sitting position in a canoe is a very difficult feat. Just
as with a shot-gun the universal tendency is to shoot too quickly, with a rifle
it is to shoot too high. The reason is that we hold our head so high up in
looking at our game that we fail to see the rear sight at all. Be sure your
head is low enough to see both sights.
The modern sporting rifle that will kill at a mile. An
unsafe weapon for boys
Always hold your breath while you are taking aim. Learn to shoot from all
sorts of positions, lying, sitting, kneeling, and standing. If the shot is a
long one, be sure that your rear sight is properly elevated for the distance.
Most of the shots at big game are stationary shots and within a hundred yards;
consequently accuracy counts for more than quickness.
With a magazine or repeating rifle be sure that you have emptied your
magazine before you leave the gun. With a shot-gun there is a possibility that
the "person who didn't know it was loaded" may not kill his victim outright.
With a sporting rifle it is practically sure death.
The general rules of care apply to both rifles and shot-guns. Always clean
the gun after you have taken it into the field. This is necessary whether you
have fired the gun or not, as a gun barrel will always collect a certain amount
of dampness. It is an excellent practice to keep a gun covered with oil or
vaseline except when it is in use. It not only prevents rust, but the grease
also discourages visitors and friends from handling the gun, snapping the
trigger, or otherwise damaging it.
In this chapter, I have not said anything about revolvers or pistols, because
I do not believe that any sensible boy will care to own one. A revolver is a
constant source of danger owing to its short barrel, and as it has no practical
value except as a weapon of defence, and as there is a severe penalty for
carrying a concealed weapon, I should not care to recommend any boy to own a
revolver.
The final question whether we may have a gun and what kind it should be, will
depend very largely on the place we live. Any kind of a gun is very much out of
place in cities or towns. The boy who does not really have an opportunity to use
a gun should be too sensible to ask for one, for surely if we own it we shall
constantly want to use it even at some risk. It will be far better to ask for
something we can use and leave the gun question until the time when we have a
real opportunity.
Finally we must remember that the one who has the gun in his possession is
rarely the one that is accidentally shot. We should therefore avoid companions
who do own guns and who are careless with them. No amount of care on our part
will prevent some careless boy friend from risking our lives. The safer way is
to stay home.
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