Breaking Clays
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Breaking Clays — a channel dedicated to the art and precision of Sporting and Compak Sporting.
From world championships to training tips, we explore the beauty, discipline, and tradition of clay shooting — the sport where focus meets freedom.
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🎥 Women’s Clay-Pigeon Shooting — Melbourne, Australia (1950s)

A rare glimpse into the early days of women’s participation in clay shooting — captured by British Pathé in sunny Melbourne. 🇦🇺

In this beautiful piece of history, a line of determined ladies take their turn on the trap stand, breaking clays with elegance, focus, and remarkable skill.
Each shot, each applause marks a quiet revolution — proof that precision and passion in shooting know no gender. 🎯

Poise, confidence, and the sound of a perfect hit — this is how history was written, one clay at a time.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=rx4eP0-JsQo
#BreakingClays #ClayPigeonShooting #WomenInSport #BallTrap #ShootingHistory #BritishPathe
🎥 Berlin Clay Shooting Grand Prix — 1929 🇩🇪

Step back almost a century — to Berlin, 1929, where marksmen gather in a snow-covered forest for one of Europe’s earliest clay shooting grand prix events. ❄️
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=aIEvIahWPMg
Captured by Gaumont Graphic Newsreel (Reuters), this black-and-white footage shows competitors taking aim beneath the pines, their breath visible in the cold air.
No automatic traps, no digital scores — only discipline, instinct, and the sharp crack of the gun echoing through the snow.

Each frame reflects the spirit that still defines our sport today: focus, camaraderie, and precision under pressure.

In 1929, amid winter silence, the language of sport was already universal — one pull, one shot, one perfect break.

#BreakingClays #ClayPigeonShooting #BallTrap #ShootingHistory #CompakSporting #Berlin1929 #BritishPathe #GaumontGraphic
🎥 1934 World Clay Pigeon Shooting — The Pursuit of Speed and Precision 🇮🇹

In June 1934, Italy became the stage for one of the earliest documented speed shooting events in the history of clay-pigeon competition.
Captured by Giornale Luce, this extraordinary film records the World Record attempt in rapid-fire clay target shooting — an event that blended elegance, engineering, and the human reflex at its finest.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=F2M3dzfRpQk
On the range, competitors load their side-by-side 12-gauge shotguns while technicians prepare mechanical trap arms — a major innovation for that time. The clays launch automatically in rhythmic bursts, and in the center stands Ettore Stacchini, president of the Italian Federation (Federazione Tiro al Volo), who performs a flawless sequence:
every target broken in mid-air, his barrels moving like clockwork.

Judges with stopwatches record the time, the crowd applauds. What we witness is more than a display of skill — it’s the birth of a new concept: speed as a measurable discipline in clay shooting.

Until then, the sport was defined by precision alone — trap, skeet, and ball-trap valued accuracy and form. But in 1934, the world saw that true mastery also meant tempo, timing, and efficiency of movement.

Stacchini’s record marked a new chapter: the synchronization of man, gun, and machine — the essence of ballistic rhythm.

Nearly a century later, the spirit of that day still lives on — in every sporting and Compak Sporting shooter who feels the same pulse when the target flies.

#BreakingClays #ClayPigeonShooting #TiroAlPiattello #BallTrap #ShootingHistory #SportingClays #CompakSporting #Italy1934 #Stacchini
From Holland’s fields to the philosophy of Sporting
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=FeSg5XcLV0o
Unlike the strict geometry of Olympic disciplines, Sporting evolved organically — outdoors, amidst landscapes shaped by weather, wind, and imagination.
The Dutch shooters of the 1960 film represent this transition perfectly: they combine mechanical precision with the unpredictability of nature.

Each poste de tir (shooting station) offers a different challenge — a low crossing clay, a fast rabbit on the ground, a looping chandelle disappearing against the clouds.
This variety — the diversité des trajectoires — is what later became the soul of Sporting Clays, and eventually Compak Sporting, the discipline that condensed the same philosophy into a smaller arena without losing its natural rhythm.

The importance of the shooting grounds — les stands de tir

Every tradition needs a place to live.
The Dutch ranges of the 1960s — surrounded by trees, open skies, and fields — were more than shooting grounds. They were laboratories of rhythm, where sportsmen experimented with trajectories, timing, and technique.

In France, these became known as les stands de tir sportif, places of both competition and community — where shooters shared not just cartridges, but philosophy.
The stand is the heart of Sporting: it transforms space into experience. Without it, the sport is only mechanics; with it, it becomes art.

The heritage that shaped Compak Sporting

By the late 20th century, Sporting’s diversity demanded structure — and France, the cultural home of ball-trap sportif, gave it form.
Under the FITASC rules, Compak Sporting was born: five aligned shooting stations, six traps, and 25 targets per round.
Yet the roots of this discipline — its tempo, its instinctive rhythm — can be traced back to those mid-century European fields, where shooters chased clays, hares, and wind with equal focus.

“Compak Sporting is not a smaller sport — it’s Sporting concentrated, refined, and orchestrated.”

Legacy — timeless focus in motion

The 1960 Dutch film is more than historical footage; it is a bridge between eras.
The elegance of manual traps, the laughter of sportsmen, the dust of broken clays — all reveal the birth of a philosophy where every shooter reads the target’s language before pulling the trigger.

Modern Sporting and Compak Sporting still carry that same heartbeat.
The layout may have changed, the machines modernized, but the essence remains:
observation, anticipation, and the harmony between eye, barrel, and motion.

“Between the clay’s launch and its break lies a fraction of time — and the whole soul of the sport.”

Breaking Clays — exploring the art, heritage, and evolution of Sporting and Compak Sporting, from the open fields of Holland to the modern stands of Europe.
The Timeless Spirit of BALL TRAP DE LA RAPPE

Tucked away in the quiet, green heart of Normandy lies a place every shooting enthusiast should visit at least once — the legendary BALL TRAP DE LA RAPPE.

More than just a Stand de tir, it’s a piece of living French sporting history. Since the 1970s, this iconic range has echoed with the crack of shotguns and the cheers of friends celebrating a perfect hit.

🏆 From a Humble Beginning to National Fame

Founded back in 1974, BALL TRAP DE LA RAPPE began as a simple countryside range for hunters and locals. But as years passed, it evolved into one of the most respected names in French clay shooting.

When world champion Christophe Auvret took over in the early 2000s, everything changed.
Under his guidance, the place transformed — new courses, modern layouts, and an energy that blended professionalism with the warmth of rural France.

Here you’ll find Parcours de Chasse (a sporting course that imitates real hunting scenes) and Fosse Universelle (a dynamic version of trap shooting where clays fly unpredictably). Both disciplines challenge shooters’ precision, reflexes, and creativity — and that’s exactly what makes this stand so special.

💥 Where Legends Took Aim

Over the years, BALL TRAP DE LA RAPPE has welcomed not just sportsmen, but true legends.
French music icons Johnny Hallyday and Sylvie Vartan once shouldered their shotguns here — adding a touch of rock’n’roll to this peaceful corner of Normandy.

That mix of celebrity charm and down-to-earth camaraderie gave the place a soul of its own. You don’t just shoot here — you feel the spirit of French sport.

🌿 Tradition Meets Modern Passion

Today, BALL TRAP DE LA RAPPE remains one of France’s best-known and most beloved Stands de tir.
Whether it’s families spending a sunny afternoon, friends challenging each other, or professionals preparing for international competitions — everyone finds something special here.

Every clay target launched carries a bit of history, and every perfect shot echoes decades of passion, precision, and community.

🤝 Why People Keep Coming Back

Ask anyone who’s been there — they’ll tell you the same: BALL TRAP DE LA RAPPE isn’t just a place to shoot.
It’s a place to connect. To challenge yourself. To share laughter and stories between the trees and the echo of shotguns.

It’s where sport meets friendship — and where the French art de vivre truly comes alive. 🇫🇷



#BallTrap #StandDeTir #ClayShooting #FranceShooting #SportingClays #FosseUniverselle #ParcoursDeChasse #ShootingLife #Normandy #FrenchSport #ShootingClub #TrapShooting #ShotgunLife #ShootingCommunity #ArtDeVivre
The Spirit of Precision at JERRING Lőtér

In the heart of Hungary’s peaceful countryside, there’s a place where precision meets passion — the world of JERRING Lőtér, also known as Jerring Shooting Ground.

This isn’t just another Shooting Ground.
It’s a place that embodies nature, sport, and craftsmanship — a true example of how a Hungarian Shooting Ground can become a destination for both champions and newcomers alike.

🏆 Where Vision Became Reality

Founded by Hungarian world champion Tamás Jéri, JERRING Lőtér represents his dream — to build the most modern and environmentally friendly shooting complex in the region.

Spread across more than 50 hectares of oak forest, the ground offers 22 sporting clay layouts and 5 Compak Sporting fields, all fully automated.
It’s a mix of modern engineering and natural harmony — where the sound of shotguns blends with birdsong and forest breeze.

Here, every target flight is designed to challenge your reflexes and creativity — from fast rabbits and looping clays to high, mountain-style targets launched from 10 elevated towers.

🌿 A Place Built for Everyone

What makes Jerring Shooting Ground truly special is its versatility.
Whether you’re a beginner learning the basics, a corporate team looking for a day outdoors, or a professional athlete preparing for a world championship — you’ll find a place here.

The cozy clubhouse welcomes guests with warm hospitality and Hungarian character, offering everything from training sessions to friendly competitions.

And there’s a deep respect for nature, too: JERRING Lőtér uses eco-friendly, biodegradable clays and keeps its forest terrain as untouched as possible — proving that sport and sustainability can go hand in hand.

💥 The Future of the Hungarian Shooting Ground

Since opening in the late 2010s, JERRING Lőtér has become a landmark for shooting enthusiasts not only from Hungary but across Europe.
With its blend of high technology, natural beauty, and the personal touch of Tamás Jéri himself, it represents a new chapter in the history of clay shooting.

It’s not just a Shooting Ground — it’s a vision brought to life.
A place where every shot is a story, and every visitor leaves with the same thought:

“This is what perfection feels like — Hungarian style.” 🇭🇺

#HungarianShootingGround #ShootingGround #ClayShooting #BallTrap #StandDeTir
The 12-Gauge in Sporting and Compak Sporting — A Retrospective from a Passionate Shooter

When you look down the firing line — from sturdy over-and-unders to sleek Compak builds — you’re seeing history forged in steel. The 12-gauge isn’t just a number on a barrel: it’s a symbol of balance, shot pattern precision, and versatility that made it the benchmark across all sporting layouts.
This article is a clear-eyed, passionate look from someone who has lived this discipline — from the birth of the O/U to practical modern setups. No brand worship, no marketing gloss — just truth and craftsmanship.

A Bit of History — Told Like a Shooter, Not a Historian

Sporting was born as a way to mimic the flight of game birds. First came improvised traps, then structure, then passionate shooters. The over-and-under didn’t appear because it was stylish — it appeared because it worked. Two barrels on a single plane meant consistent sight alignment, smoother recoil management, and a balanced swing.

The 12-gauge became the workhorse early on: enough punch for long crossers, even patterns for closer shots, and full compatibility with modern chokes and loads. It’s the universal tool of the discipline — flexible, balanced, reliable.

“A gun should act as an extension of your body, not as an excuse for your mistakes.”
Words I’ve heard from many seasoned shooters — and confirmed myself over thousands of rounds.

The Evolution — Key Turning Points Without Brand Bias

The over-and-under made double barrels accessible and predictable.

Interchangeable chokes revolutionized adaptability — no longer did you need a gunsmith to change constrictions.

Modular trigger groups and detachable locks made maintenance and fine-tuning easy.

Barrel technology — longer forcing cones, back-boring, and optimized rib geometry — shaped both pattern quality and perceived recoil.

Every innovation served one purpose: to make the gun fit the shooter, not the other way around.

What Defines a Modern Sporting 12-Gauge O/U

There’s no single “perfect” setup — but there’s a clear consensus on what works best for most shooters today:

Barrel length: 30–32″ (sometimes 34″ for long targets).

Chokes: full set from IC to IM for on-the-fly tuning.

Adjustable stock: comb and pad tuning for stance consistency.

Trigger group: reliable, crisp, and — in some cases — removable for quick service.

These traits combine into a gun that’s responsive, durable, and adaptable to both Sporting and Compak formats.

Practical Scenarios — What Works and Why

Below are real configurations I’ve used or seen work in competition. These aren’t “best guns” — they’re real-world setups for real needs.

Scenario A — Fast Pairs and Tight Compak Windows

Barrels: 30–32″ (shorter favors agility).

Balance: lively, slightly forward-neutral.

Chokes: IC / LM or ¼–½ — open enough for fast, close shots.

Stock: adjustable comb for quick target transitions.

Feel: The gun becomes part of your hands — the second bird breaks before you realize the first one’s gone.

Scenario B — Long English Setups and High Crossers

Barrels: 32–34″ — more inertia and follow-through.

Balance: a touch toward the front for steadiness.

Chokes: LM / M or M / IM — tight enough to hold pattern at range.

Stock: stable, repeatable mount.

Feel: Smooth, predictable recoil. Patterns hold tight. The gun tracks like it’s on rails.

Scenario C — For the “Engineer Shooter” Who Loves Adjustments

Look for modular triggers and tunable balance weights.

Experiment with back-bore dimensions and choke combinations to build your signature pattern.

Fine-tune trigger pull and cast/comb angles for maximum comfort.

This setup is for those who measure patterns on paper and adjust hardware between rounds.

Scenario D — Semi-Auto Lovers (Tempo and Soft Recoil)

Gas-operated system tuned for light target loads.

Reliable cycling, minimal recoil, quick sight recovery.

Excellent for training or competitions where autos are allowed.

Quick Fitting Checklist — Simple but Vital

Mount: Gun should point naturally where you look.
Balance: Check where it “hangs” — between hands or forward-heavy.

Compak favors livelier balance; long-range setups favor stability.

Stock fit: No cheek slap, no head tilt.

Weight: Lighter guns swing faster, heavier ones track steadier.

Chokes: Start with IC/LM/M/IM — enough for any layout.

Pattern test: Shoot paper; let results, not theories, guide adjustments.

Pro Notes — Small Truths That Save Years

Changing chokes isn’t a sin — it’s strategy.

Don’t chase “magic” barrel specs: it’s about how it works with your chokes and loads.

Adjustable stocks are worth every dollar for developing consistency.

You control the gun, not vice versa. Balance it for your movement style.

Final Thoughts — The Heart of the 12-Gauge

The 12-gauge in Sporting and Compak is an entire language of control, rhythm, and precision. It’s simple in concept yet infinitely customizable in execution.
Every generation of gunsmiths refined the mechanics — but in the end, it’s all about you: how your eyes, hands, and instincts merge with a perfectly balanced tool.

And that’s the real magic — the craft of turning steel and wood into instinct.

#ClayShooting #SportingClays #CompakSporting #12Gauge
The History of Clay Shooting and Sporting: From Hunting Traditions to Modern Precision Sports

An analytical historical overview with a focus on the evolution of the discipline and the importance of shooting stands.

Introduction

Clay shooting is one of the few shooting sports that combines the heritage of traditional hunting, the engineering breakthroughs of the 19th-20th centuries, and the structured sports system of today. Among its disciplines, sporting stands out as the attempt to create training conditions that closely mimic real hunting scenarios while remaining safe, accessible, and standardized.

1. The Birth of Clay Shooting: From Hunting to Training Targets

Before the invention of clay targets, shooters trained using glass balls, wooden discs, or mechanical bird imitators. But in 19th-century England, with the rapid development of shotguns and hunting culture, shooters needed a training method that was:

safe

repeatable

affordable

realistic

This led to the creation of the first clay launchers in the 1880s. Soon, shooting clubs began experimenting with flight paths, angles, and target speeds, laying the foundation for a new sport.

2. Standardization and the Rise of Trap and Skeet

In the early 20th century, two structured disciplines emerged:

Trap - the target moves away from the shooter

Skeet - a system of eight positions with predictable trajectories

Both became Olympic disciplines, giving shooting sports global recognition. Yet many shooters felt that real hunting was more varied and dynamic - which inspired the creation of something new.

3. The Emergence of Sporting: Restoring Realism

In the 1920s-1930s, British hunting clubs began building field courses where each station simulated a real hunting moment:

a rising duck

a crossing pigeon

a high f lushing pheasant

a running rabbit target

In France and Belgium, the concept became known as "Stand de parcours de chasse", serving as a catalog of stands, where each stand had its own unique trajectory and level of difficulty. This idea emphasized that a stand was not just a shooting position but a complete "hunting scenario" within a larger course.
#clayshooting #sportingclays #shootingsports #ClayShooting #SportingClays
4. The Evolution of Sporting in the 20th Century

By the 1960s-1980s, sporting transitioned from hunter training to a fully independent sport. The discipline expanded with:

different sizes of targets (midi, mini, battue)

complex trajectory patterns

club-level competitions

the first international rule sets

The most important growth factor was the infrastructure of shooting stands. The richer the variety of stands - the stronger the shooters - because sporting relies on adaptability above all.

5. The Role of Stands: Why Infrastructure Defines the Sport

Shooting stands are the heart of sporting. Their importance lies in:

- Realism

Each stand recreates a specific hunting situation. Without diverse stands, sporting becomes repetitive.

- Shooter Progression

More trajectories mean faster skill development in reading targets, timing, and leading the shot.

- Club Development

Clubs with well-designed courses attract shooters, stimulate local competitions, and sustain the community.

- International Standards

Modern sporting requires stands capable of delivering:

stable mechanics

safe sectors

consistent target releases

flexible course layouts for competitions

A well-designed stand is the foundation of sports performance - just like a quality track for motorsport or a training base for football.

6. Modern Sporting: From Elite Hobby to Popular Sport

Today, sporting is one of the fastest growing shooting disciplines, supported by:

international federations

world and continental championships

digital scoring systems

simulators and VR training

corporate and competitive events

growing participation of women and youth
Clubs strive to build multifunctional courses - essentially entire "parks of shooting scenarios" - where the catalog of stands ("Stand de parcours de chasse") becomes the core tool for designing both training programs and competitions.

Conclusion

The history of clay shooting and sporting is the story of how hunting tradition evolved into a modern, highly technical sport. And at every stage - from early clay targets to world championships - the key element has always been the shooting stand. Stands shape training quality, athlete progression, and the character of the entire discipline.

A sporting course is not just a place to shoot.
It is where the story of hunting becomes the story of sport.

#clayshooting #sportingclays #shootingsports
How Clay Shooting Began: A Deep Dive Into Its Origins
Clay shooting is one of the most respected and technically advanced shotgun sports in the world. Its foundations go back more than 150 years, shaped by innovation, tradition, and the transition from live-bird shooting to modern artificial targets. In French-speaking regions, the sport is still known as “tir aux plateaux”, highlighting its cultural and historical importance. https://akbulatakbu.lat/2025/11/15/how-clay-shooting-began-a-deep-dive-into-its-origins/ #ClayShootingBegan
The Birth of Compak Sporting: Why the Sport Needed a Compact Format
Compak sporting stands today as one of the most dynamic and accessible disciplines within the world of clay shooting. Although closely connected to traditional sporting clays, compak sporting is not simply a simplified version of the sport. It emerged as a response to the logistical, spatial, and competitive challenges that clubs and shooters faced as clay sports expanded worldwide. In French-speaking regions, the discipline often appears under terms like “compak sportif”, “parcours compact”, or within FITASC documents as part of “tir aux plateaux” https://akbulatakbu.lat/2025/11/16/the-birth-of-compak-sporting/ #CompakSportingHistory
#ClayShootingEvolution
#BirthOfCompakSporting
Famous Shooting Clubs That Shaped the History of Clay Sports

Clay sports — from clay shooting to sporting and compak sporting — were shaped by historic shooting clubs that defined rules, culture, and the transition from live pigeon shooting to tir aux plateaux.

Key Historic Clubs
Paris Tir aux Pigeons (France)

One of the first organized shooting clubs; birthplace of early competitions and the shift to clay targets.

Monte-Carlo Pigeon Shooting Club (Monaco)

A luxury 19th-century venue that elevated shooting to an international sport.

Arcachon Salle du Tir au Vol (France)

An iconic resort club that helped spread early tir aux plateaux culture.

Bisley Shooting Ground (UK)

The “Marksman’s Mecca” and a key force in shaping modern sporting and competitive standards.

Modern Influential Clubs
Jerring Lőtér (Hungary)

A high-tech Central European center with advanced sporting and compak facilities.

La Rapée Ball Trap (France)

A leading modern French club known for top-tier parcours de chasse and major competitions.

Their Impact

Created competitive seasons and early tournaments

Helped standardize rules later adopted by FITASC

Led the shift from live pigeons to clay targets

Shaped the culture and lifestyle of clay sports

Competition Calendar (EN / FR)

EN: National championships, sporting & compak events, FITASC World Sporting, Compak World Cup.
FR: Championnats nationaux, parcours & compak, FITASC World Sporting, Coupe du Monde Compak.

Sporting Clubs List (EN / FR)

EN: Bisley, Jerring Lőtér, La Rapée, National Clay Shooting Centre, O Pinhal.
FR: La Rapée, Tir au Vol Paris, Arcachon, Jerring Lőtér, Centre National de Tir.

#ClayShootingHistory #SportingClubs #ClaySportsEvolution
Clay shooting has evolved for more than a century, influenced not only by technology, competitions, and federations, but also by the legendary shooting clubs — or in French, clubs de tir / stands de tir, and in Hungarian, lövészklubok.
These historic venues shaped traditions, rules, and the culture of sporting, compak sporting, and the entire heritage of tir aux plateaux. #ClayShootingHistory #SportingClubs #ClaySportsEvolution https://medium.com/@fenix_12527/famous-shooting-clubs-that-shaped-the-history-of-clay-sports-87cd97ceaaae
The Global State of Sporting Clays: Where the Sport Thrives Today
Sporting clays has evolved from a niche shooting discipline into a worldwide sporting ecosystem supported by powerful federations, thousands of shooting grounds, and a rapidly growing community of enthusiasts. Today the sport’s development is driven by infrastructure, technology, culture, and a strong competition calendar. https://medium.com/@fenix_12527/the-global-state-of-sporting-clays-where-the-sport-thrives-today-c926eaf453ab This article explores where sporting clays is most developed, which countries have the greatest number of ranges, and what drives the sport forward in 2025. #BreakingClays #CompakSporting #BallTrap
Modern Sporting Culture in France: A Snapshot

France has developed one of the most distinctive clay-shooting cultures in Europe. Under the broad name ball-trap, the sport blends outdoor tradition, refined technique, and a strong community spirit.

France’s shooting identity is built around two key disciplines:

Parcours de Chasse (Sporting)

Natural, terrain-driven layouts where forests, hills, vineyards, and ravines shape every target. Battues, minis, crossers, and rabbits fly in ways that feel organic rather than engineered.

• Compak Sporting

A compact, fast format set inside the metal cage, with precise shooting arcs and dynamic pairs. Clear structure, quick rhythm, and strong competitive appeal.

Across the country, hundreds of clubs operate as social hubs — terraces, coffee, conversations, and community. French shooters value smooth movement, clean épaulement, controlled lead, and reading the clay’s line rather than forcing the shot.

FITASC’s presence in France strengthens the technical and competitive culture, with active national circuits and diverse regional events held year-round.

Modern French sporting is a mix of landscape, precision, and tradition — a style that feels both authentic and uniquely French.

#balltrap #sportingfrance #clayshooting
Sologne Shooting Club — Professional Overview of the Shooting Complex

Sologne Shooting Club is one of the most advanced and diverse shooting facilities in France, located in the heart of the Sologne region. Covering more than 100 hectares, the complex offers top-level infrastructure for Parcours de Chasse, Sporting Clays, and Compak Sporting, making it a prime destination for competitive shooters, hunters, and participants of international events.

The grounds feature 27 Parcours de Chasse courses, 65 shooting stations, and 210 trap machines, including high Haut-Vol towers and elevated platforms above water and marsh zones. This scale allows shooters to train across every type of trajectory — from fast low “rabbits” to long-range high pheasants.

The Compak Sporting area, fully compliant with FITASC standards, regularly hosts major events such as the Grand Prix de France, giving athletes the opportunity to train under authentic competition conditions.

A notable advantage of the club is the coaching program led by Charles Bardou, multiple World and European Champion. His methodology helps shooters of all levels systematically improve technique and consistency.

Sologne Shooting Club stands out as a facility built for serious performance training, high-quality sporting infrastructure, and a fully professional shooting environment.

#sportingclays #compaksporting #parcoursdechasse
Sologne Shooting Club — My Experience at One of France’s Best Sporting Clays Destinations
When you shoot sporting clays long enough, you hear whispers about certain places — legendary grounds where the experience goes far beyond a standard shooting range.
Sologne Shooting Club is one of those places.
Located in the heart of the Sologne region, this facility is widely known among competitive shooters, hunters, and clay enthusiasts across Europe. https://theclayarenajournal.blogspot.com/2025/11/my-experience-at-one-of-frances-best.html What Makes Sologne Shooting Club So Special
A Massive, Immersive Shooting Environment
The moment I entered the grounds, I understood why shooters talk about it with such admiration. Sologne’s natural landscape — forests, ponds, marsh areas, and rolling hills — creates the perfect environment for realistic and challenging clay targets.

Here are the numbers that truly impressed me:

27 Parcours de Chasse courses

65 shooting stands

210 trap machines

5 high towers (Haut-Vol)

7 elevated platforms above water and marsh zones

This is not a typical shooting club. This is a European-level clay shooting complex designed for realism, challenge, and diversity. #sportingclays
TAV Vetralla stands out as one of Italy’s strongest destinations for both Compak Sporting and Sporting Clays. The club offers modern pedane, reliable lanciatori, and a wide variety of piattelli trajectories that challenge shooters of every level. The layouts follow official FITASC/FITAV standards, making training feel like real competition.

TAV Vetralla regularly hosts major events such as Grand Prix and national championships, attracting top Italian and European shooters. The atmosphere is professional, well-organized, and ideal for improving consistency, reading trajectories, and building competition-level skill. A great choice for anyone serious about progressing in clay shooting.

#compaksporting #sportingclays #italyshooting
Clube de Tiro Vale das Pedras is one of Portugal’s most versatile and well-structured shooting complexes. With 12 Campos de Tiro, modern Pedanas, automatic Lançadores, and dedicated zones for Compak Sporting and Percursos de Caça (the local Sporting Clays format), the club offers a wide range of Pratos trajectories suitable for both training and competition.

The facility also includes a Restaurante, Loja de Caça, a family Parque Infantil, and green leisure areas — making Vale das Pedras a convenient choice for athletes and families alike.
https://www.reddit.com/r/Vombat07/comments/1p22iw2/a_comprehensive_overview_of_a_modern_portuguese/
A solid option for anyone training Compak Sporting or Sporting-style shooting in Portugal.

#compaksporting #sportingclays #portugalshooting
Grand Prix of Hungary – Compak Sporting
📍 Venue: Jerring Shooting Ground, Felgyő, Hungary

The Grand Prix of Hungary – Compak Sporting will take place at the Jerring Shooting Ground, Hungary’s flagship clay venue. With 26 layouts (22 for Sporting and 5 fully-automated for Compak), 10 raised platforms and a world-champion coach on site, this competition offers first-class training and competitive conditions.

Athletes can expect a 200-target format under true international standards — perfect for refining technique, tempo and match readiness.
#compaksporting #clayshooting #hungarygrandprix