Baird, Texas, Webley & Scotts have returned to the U.S. In this series, we discuss the Webley & Scotts currently available at affordable prices to American wing and clays shooters.
There are two challenges to finding a great shotgun — fit and suitability.
The shotguns section of Shotgun Life is dedicated to helping you recognize the perfect shotgun (that you’ll want to keep for the rest of your life, and then hand down to your family for generations to come.)
For some people, finding a great shotgun is simply love at first sight. For others, a great shotgun grows on them — and they find themselves down in the basement cleaning it for absolutely no other reason than just to be in its company.
But for every shotgun owner who falls in love with their pride-and-joy, there are teams of engineers and craftsmen toiling away behind the scenes to bring your gun to fruition.
As you’ll see, shotguns are generally designed for a particular sport. Some shotguns have composite stocks and fore-ends to withstand the travails of duck hunting. Then there are single-shot trap guns with high ribs that help you intercept rising targets. And skeet shooters find that their beavertail fore-end is particularly adept at bringing about a smooth, quick swing.
So let the search begin. Here is what you’ll find in our shotgun section…
Baird, Texas, Webley & Scotts have returned to the U.S. In this series, we discuss the Webley & Scotts currently available at affordable prices to American wing and clays shooters.
The saying “Win on Sunday, Sell on Monday” is a long-standing belief in the automotive industry. It captures the view that winning a race, especially a prominent one, can boost sales and buff up the entire brand. In essence, taking the checkered flag becomes an adverting campaign that fuels demand by everyday drivers looking to capture some of the glory and performance.
We see it all the time from Chevrolet, Ford, Chrysler, Toyota, Porsche, Cadillac and Audi, among others. But for them, race cars also serve as rolling laboratories. Features we take for granted including disk brakes, fuel injection, turbochargers, aerodynamics, active suspensions and paddle shifters started at grueling races such as the 24 hours of Le Mans, 24 hours of Sebring and Daytona 500 to eventually make their way into their bread-and-butter cars and trucks.
On June 6, 2024, Tony Galazan’s Connecticut Shotgun Manufacturing Company announced it’s RSP round-body sideplate over/under, and after shooting the 20/28 combo version we can say that you would be hard pressed to find a better American-built bird gun.
Visit the company’s 120,000 square foot facility at 100 Burritt Street, New Britain, Connecticut, and you’ll see a marriage of old-school craftsmanship and high-tech production. Tony has held the torch high to fulfill his vision as America’s premier gunmaker of traditional sporting shotguns. To prove it, the CSMC family tree includes continuation models of American icons such as the Winchester Model 21, A.H. Fox and Parker Brothers. While some of those reproductions may have been financially out of reach for some enthusiasts, in 2006 Tony captured their American spirit with the more affordable and best-selling round-bodied RBL side-by-side boxlock.
With the European Union and Japan facing at least a 20-percent tariff, our favorite sporting gun makers in Italy, Germany and Japan could see price increases that cut deep into household budgets for hunters and clays shooters considering entry-level or mid-priced shotguns – raising the question: are Turkish shotguns suddenly a phenomenal deal?
Sporting guns made in Turkey have long suffered a reputation for inferior quality. Although their cheap prices were a lure, in the end it was often the case of getting what you pay for. A $400.00 Turkish over/under would have a tough trigger and manufacturing tolerances that could often be described as parts flying in close formation.
On December 10, 2024, after leaving the dentist in Tallahassee, Florida at 4:07 PM following a routine visit, I never anticipated that, several hours later, after years of resignation or perhaps even apathy, I’d draw the proverbial line in the sand at the Walmart in Thomasville, Georgia.
My intentions were mundane. After the dentist, visit either Bass Pro or Academy Sports in Tallahassee, both about six minutes away, to buy a large box of .22 long-rifle bullets. My wife wanted to start pistol lessons with her new Beretta Bobcat. And while shopping for the .22s, I’d check out prices on shotgun shells – in particular 12-gauge, 1⅛-ounce, #8s, which is the only load I shoot simply because anything smaller undermines my confidence as an average recreational clays shooter. Call me crazy, or insecure, perhaps superstitious, but what can I tell you?
Here’s the good news: the Ranges at Oakfield in Thomasville, Georgia is only seven minutes from the Shotgun Life office. And the bad news? The skeet, trap and five-stand face south, which means that, just about any time of the day, you’re shooting directly into the tropical South Georgia sun.
Development of the Ranges at Oakfield began in 2014, as a collaboration between Thomas County and the Georgia Department of Natural Resources. The Georgia DNR played a critical role in determining the viability of the project through exhaustive environmental and community impact studies. When the Ranges at Oakfield finally opened in October 2020, clays shooters were taken aback that they would be shooting into the sun. The explanation was simple: had the fields been facing in most any other direction residential noise abatement or proximity to County Farm Road probably would have spiked the project.
There’s something to be said about owning a sporting shotgun from a company that also makes the classic dangerous-game double rifle. Reliability and precision comprise the fabric of the gunmaker. The craftsmen at the bench know that if a cape buffalo charges you at 30 miles per hour, hearing click instead of bang when pulling the trigger could be the last and most unfortunate sound you never want to hear.
Of course the stakes aren’t nearly as fatal when shouldering your side by side for a flushing covey of quail, when you eyeball an individual bird, know it’s yours, pull the trigger and…click. Although it may prove to be a random mishap of the entire day, you lose faith in the shotgun, and second-guessing your shots creeps up on you for the remainder of the hunt.
Unfortunately, all of us can’t afford a custom-fitted shotgun that may triple the price of the original off-the-shelf donor. Of course, every sporting-gun guru will swear that a shotgun fitted to your exact measurements can effectively improve your performance through an optimal sight picture, impeccable gun mount and intuitive trigger control.
But let’s face it, checking out at the supermarket these days or a visit to the gas-station pump might upend your priorities with the harsh financial disappointment that your dreamy beauty of a bespoke over/under may find its way into your gun safe…after the kids graduate college (and dear God don’t move back home)?
As an avid clays shooter, I enjoy spending summer days on the shooting course with my friends. Recently, the increasing heat waves and alarming rise of heat strokes reported at outdoor sporting events or religious gatherings have made us all more aware of potential heat-related health risks. This prompted me to look for ways to optimize safety and performance when clay shooting in extreme heat and humidity.
The four lanes of U.S. Route 84 cut through rural South Georgia. You’ll pass country churches, body shops, gas stations, convenience stores, farms, agricultural equipment dealers, skirt the downtown Cairo (home of the Syrupmakers high-school football team), before reaching Broad Avenue and the town limits of Whigham – population 428 as of the 2020 census. Having driven through the town several times over the years on my way to someplace else, and with Whigham’s total area of 1.2 miles overshadowed by a few blocks of derelict storefronts, you’d think it would be pretty easy to find a business that is still in operation.
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Shotgun Life is the first online magazine devoted to the great people who participate in the shotgun sports.
Our goal is to provide you with the best coverage in wing and clays shooting. That includes places to shoot, ways to improve your shooting and the latest new products. Everything you need to know about the shotgun sports is a mouse-click away.
Irwin Greenstein
Publisher
Shotgun Life
PO Box 6423
Thomasville, GA 31758
Phone: 229-236-1632