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Course Design

So, you’ve been a hunter all your life since you were a kid and you’ve always loved to shoot, doves, ducks, quail, that sort of thing.  Now your son (and perhaps grand kids also) are all eager to follow in your footsteps.  Each season, you hunt together and you look forward to these social gatherings with family and friends. A few weeks ago you shot in your first sporting clay tournament.  It’s a lot of fun isn’t it?  Here is a shooting sport that simulates actual hunting situations in the field but the difference is, you can shoot sporting clays all year round.  So let’s say you’ve done well, made a few bucks over the years and you have a nice ranch or piece of property somewhere.  Now you would like to consider setting up your own five stand or sporting clays layout on it but you’re a bit apprehensive about the possible pitfalls and ramifications involved.  You should be.  Designing an imaginative, safe and environmentally friendly course isn’t just a case of buying a few machines and sticking them behind some trees in a quiet corner of your ranch.  The location, shot fall distances pathways, wind directions, sun directions, type of machines you need, and most important, (especially for the private landowner) the installation of these machines in locations to give an overall eye-pleasing effect are all things that need to be considered.  I am also knowledgeable about all the current Texas Commission for Environmental Impact guidelines and EPA requirements for both commercial and non-commercial shooting facilities.  You need the help of an expert, so let me tell you why I consider myself to be uniquely qualified to give you advice on all these things. 

I have been involved in the sporting clay industry for over 35 years and I have set targets for literally thousands of sporting clay events and charity fundraisers.  I write technical articles for Sporting Clays magazine which is the official magazine of the National Sporting Clays Association.  Before I came to the US in1998 I managed several shooting facilities in the UK.  These were Clifford Farm Estates shooting ground in North Devon, Linnbridgeford Mill Shooting Ground near Lockerbie and Annandale Shooting Ground, on the Earl of Annandales Estate in S.W. Scotland.  When I came to the US in 1998 I was the manager of Westside Sporting Grounds in Houston.  I then moved to Dallas and from 1999 to 2003 I was the sporting clay and corporate events manager at one of the premier shooting facilities in the world, the Dallas Gun Club in Lewisville, Texas.  During my term of employment there, I designed the impressive sporting clay course and five stand facility.  I now consult and design courses at various other locations at private and public facilities throughout Texas, Florida and the UK. These include Valley View Ranch, near Athens, Cross Pines Ranch near Mineola and several other private locations.  Last year I installed Garwood Sporting Clays near El Campo and recently, the exciting “covey rise” game and dove towers at Mesa Vista, “Best Quail Hunting in the World” ranch, near Pampa in the Texas panhandle.  Course design and shooting instruction is my full time occupation, I do not have another job.  Amazingly, there are only a handful of us that do this as a full time occupation in the US, perhaps twenty or so. 

Sometime ago I put a private course in for a landowner who was very proud of his ranch.  He told me this:-

“I want you to put the course in so that we can’t see any machines and we don’t damage any of the trees when we shoot.”  It was a tall order but did I do it?  Of course.  That’s the way the game of sporting clays should be. The game was originally designed to replicate the type of shot we would get in the field.  Nobody wants to shoot simulated quail and as he does this, see machines filled with orange targets sitting on the ground in front of him does he?   Or shoot simulated dove shots with ugly tower structures sticking up above the tree line marring the landscape do they?  At the other end of the spectrum, on occasion I have had to tell people that the area they have ear marked for their course is unsuitable and politely refuse the job.  I re-visited one such location recently where the landowner went ahead with the project (not in Texas) and after two years it looked like a bomb site, with dead and dying trees that were shot to pieces, all over the place.  Mature trees are a natural resource for a course, destroying them should be avoided at all cost.  They should be integrated into the overall design to provide shade and rest areas for the shooters wherever possible. 

As the game of sporting clays continues to thrive over here so do the increasing number of machine manufactures, all promising reliable service from their machines and good after sales back-up service and parts availability.  So just who does manufacture the best machines?  Promatic machines are the best, period.  I knew the guy who designed the very first Promatic machine, John Graham, 15 years or so ago.  John basically looked at what was available on the market at that time and decided he could do better.  And he did.  Today, Promatic machines are the market leaders here in the US.  Their reputation for reliability, after sales service and flawless performance under the most hostile conditions is legendary. 

So you like to shoot quail?  No problem.  My covey rise layouts are exactly like the real thing and I don’t mean a wobble trap that’s sending single birds out at 70 mph.  Quail don’t do that do they?   I mean a set-up where you may get five birds, curling to the left and right and traveling at about 30 mph as you walk up on them, just like quail do.  You reload and then you get three birds, (with completely different angles and trajectories from the first ones).   Next, you may get a single, then maybe another three or four.  Totally random, computerized selection, just like bobs and blues do as they extricate themselves from the West Texas tangle of sage brush and plumb thicket.

A covey rise system under construction at private ranch

An established covey rise system, the birds rise from the ground and curl left and right just like quail.

What about driven pheasants? Once again, no problem.  Before I came here to the States, I lived deep in the heart of prime driven grouse and driven pheasant country, in a triangle between the Buccleuch Estate, Westerhall Estate and Annandale Estate.  The machines on the high tower at my shooting ground on the Earl of Annandales Estate would throw the best simulated driven pheasant clay targets anywhere and  shooters would drive hundreds of miles to “hone their skills” on the tower.  The targets would come over at varying angles, speeds and numbers just like the real thing.

A 100 foot Driven pheasant/Argentina dove tower during erection at private ranch

Four modified machines with a computerized release system give a unique simulated pheasant/dove flurry

For more course design pictures please click on the Photo Gallery section

So if you would like advice on setting up a sporting clays course, please give me a call.  I don’t think you will be disappointed.  I have designed courses, five stands and erected towers at various locations including:-

bullet The Dallas Gun Club, Lewisville, Texas.
bullet Garwood Sporting Clays, El Campo, Texas.
bullet Boone Pickens Ranch, Pampa, Texas Panhandle.
bullet Rockin’ K Ranch, Celina, Texas.
bullet Wildcat Mountain Ranch, Robert Lee, Texas.
bullet Cross Pines Ranch, Mineola, Texas.
bullet Ghost Apache Ranch, Cotulla, Texas.
bulletCircle K Ranch, Kaufman, Texas.
bulletHunt Oil Company
bulletValley View Ranch, Athens, Texas.
bulletHigh Tines Ranch, Muenster, Texas.
bulletBrazos Bend Ranch, Breckenridge, Texas.
bulletLone Oak Ranch, Greenville Texas.
bulletGiafford Ranch, Justin, Texas.
bulletFortune Bend Ranch, Palo Pinto
bulletTorreon Ranch, Turneville
bulletDouble Eagle Ranch, Giddings
bulletStone Briar Properties
bulletReyrosa Ranch, Texas
bulletRancho Palo Duro, Palo Duro Canyon, Amarillo, Texas

 

 

 

Mini "High" Towers

These "single stem" towers, up to 30 feet high, are built to my design. Each tower will fit unobtrusively behind a tree to simulate dove shots. The carriage on each tower holds two machines and each machine will rotate through 360 degrees. The complete tower can also be rotated through 360 degrees around the base, which makes changing the target flight line an easy operation for one person.

 

 

 

 

 

Super Sporting

Super sporting layouts are becoming increasingly popular for non-commercial recreational layouts for the private landowner. By carefully selecting optimum machine positions, these layouts maximize target presentation but minimize the number of machines involved. Instead of "hard" wiring, (which is often a maintenance nightmare), wireless remotes are used to release the machines. This will maximize machine permutations and present multiple shooting positions.   

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

"Promatic" clay target machines

For reliability, after sales service and value for money.  I recommend Promatic target launchers. Why? I have used these machines for over 12 years both in Scotland and over here in the USA. The Dallas Gun Club throws in excess of 3-4 million targets annually and most of the machines they have on the sporting clays course are Promatics. Any machine that can withstand the -30 degree temperature of a Scottish winter and the searing, 105 degree heat of a Texas summer and still keep throwing gets my vote!

               

 

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