Five stand is more exciting than trap and throws a wider variety of patterns than skeet. And it's faster and cheaper than sporting clays. To better your skills at each game, it’s important to learn how trap, skeet, and sporting clays differ from one another and from trap shooting.
Fortunately, it’s likely you can find trap, skeet, and clays at most shooting clubs around the country. And the best shooting grounds offer those three, plus five stand. Through practicing clay pigeon games you can master your shooting skills, because like driving a golf ball, shooting a shotgun is a skill that gets better the more you do it.
Trap Shooting
Trap shooting is the original type of clay pigeon shooting. It began in the 18th century and for decades used live birds. Artificial targets were introduced in the late 1800s, first as glass balls and then as clay discs.
By the First World War, trap shooting had evolved into the two main ways it's practiced today.
- American Trap: Practiced at most shooting facilities in the U.S. It uses a single launcher located in a low trap house to throw clay targets away from shooters standing in a line of five stations. The trap house is in front of this line of shooters. As the game progresses, each shooter stands at a station, fires at a series of targets (each presented at different angles), and moves right to the next station.
- Olympic Trap: Like American Trap, but instead of using a single launcher, it throws targets from a line of 15 machines, still positioned in front of shooters. Each machine throws a clay at a different, but set, angle.
- Double Trap, Wobble Trap, Down-the-Line, Bunker Trap: Variations of American or Olympic Trap.
Skeet Shooting
Skeet is the second-oldest type of clay pigeon shooting. It was created in the early 1920s by a grouse hunter looking to sharpen his skills. In 1926, a shooting magazine introduced the sport to America and offered $100 to anyone who could come up with a name for it. “Skeet,” derived from the Norwegian for “shoot,” won.
There are two types of skeet: American and Olympic. Both use a pair launchers set in two different-height towers positioned across from each other. As shooters follow a course from one tower to the other, the launchers throw clay pigeons at a variety of angles designed to simulate the shots upland hunters encounter in the field.
Compared to trap, skeet targets are thrown closer to the shooters and in a wider variety of scenarios.
Sporting Clays
Sporting clays is the third major type of clay pigeon shooting and the youngest. Sporting clays was developed in the U.K. and brought to America in 1980. Since then, it has exploded across the country to become one of the most popular shooting sports in the country.
Sporting clays is shot on a course made of 10–15 stations. These stations are laid out one after another, like holes on a golf course. Some stations feature one, two, or more clay-pigeon launchers, all throwing targets at different heights and angles. There are no official rules regarding how these launchers must be positioned, so no two sporting-clays courses are the same. Because of the varied shooting situations, you’ll want skeet and modified combo chokes for shorter ranges, and if there are stations with longer ranges, a full choke will be helpful.
If you’re visiting a shooting club, the only gear you need is your desired shotgun, eye protection, and ear protection. A clays belt or vest to manage your shells is also recommended, but not entirely necessary. Most courses are designed for 50 or 100 rounds, so you should plan to bring at least that many shells, and vest or belt pockets will keep your next rounds within easy reach.
Compared to trap and skeet, sporting clays offers the widest variety of hunting-style shots. This makes it a great way to sharpen your skills for the season or to keep them sharp all year.
Five Stand
If you were to put trap, skeet, and sporting clays in a blender, five stand would pour out. It features a line of five "stands" for shooters and a number of launchers arranged in front of the shooters, to their sides, and even behind them. Shooters are presented five targets at each station, 25 targets in all.
Five stand is more exciting than trap, and throws a wider variety of patterns than skeet. It's faster and cheaper than sporting clays.
If you’re a hunter, five stand is a great game, giving you the chance to work on shots simulating everything from fleeing rabbits and flushing quail to ducks dropping into a set of decoys.
Shotguns For These Games
While you can shoot any of these games with your favorite bird shotgun, if you want to be competitive in trap, skeet, or sporting clays, you'll want a gun tailored to each of them.
These shotguns offer little differences, like weight and chokes, which equal to big advantages when you pull the trigger.
- Trap guns: These are heavy, have one or two long barrels (up to 34"), tight chokes, and they’re almost always 12 gauges. Because of their weight, once you get these guns going, they swing smoothly and stay swinging. This makes it easier to follow through on shots, and it soaks up a lot of recoil. Trap guns also have relatively straight stocks. This helps them shoot high so you use a technique known as “floating your target.”
- Skeet guns: These are also heavy, but their barrels are 26"–30" long and their chokes are very open. Like trap guns, their weight soaks up a lot of recoil and helps you to keep the gun moving on crossing shots. Compared to trap guns, their stocks may have a bit more drop. While 12 is the most common gauge for skeet, people also shoot small bores and .410s.
- Sporting-clays guns: These are lighter than trap and skeet guns, have more choke in them than skeet guns, and they’re stocked more like hunting guns. Barrels are usually 28"–32".
Which Shooting Game Is Best For Hunters?
Shoot a lot of skeet, sporting clays, or five stand. Any of these will prepare you for a busting pheasant or a bursting covey of quail. More importantly, when you shoot these games, use your hunting gun. While a competitive target gun can improve your score on the range, it's not the gun you'll carry in the field.
Live birds, unlike clay pigeons, have minds of their own. Every time one flushes, you don't know where it's going to go: Straight away, to the left, or back towards you. The best way to prepare for these upland hunting scenarios is to practice.
When you shoot, try to mimic the stance and posture of a hunter approaching a pointed bird or anticipating a flush. Hold the gun low (not mounted). Keep your eyes on the sky and a little weight on each foot. And think about how you're going to smash that clay when it flies into view.