tower 1

Shooting tower pheasants—birds released from height to simulate very high, curling gamebirds—requires a mix of discipline, correct gun mount, and precise timing. Here’s a clear, field-proven approach used on serious tower shoots in the UK and increasingly in the U.S.

Set Up Correctly

  • Stand slightly open, feet shoulder-width apart
  • Front foot pointed where you expect to shoot
  • Weight slightly forward, knees soft
  • Gun Ready Position
  • Butt just off the shoulder pocket, muzzle up
  • Hands relaxed—no death grip
  • Eyes up and scanning, not glued to the bead

Read the Bird

  • Tower pheasants:
  • Start very fast and high
  • Slow as they apex
  • Then curl, stall, or drop steeply
  • Let the bird:
  • Clear the tower
  • Show its line
  • Begin to settle

Pick a Kill Zone

  • Choose one spot in the sky where you’ll shoot:
  • After the bird has committed to a line
  • Before it starts tumbling or dropping straight down
  • This prevents:
  • Chasing the bird
  • Over-swinging
  • Shooting behind

The Mount and Swing

  • Mount smoothly—don’t snatch
  • Bring the gun to your face first, then shoulder
  • Keep your head down on the stock
  • Swing through the bird
  • Start below and behind
  • Match speed
  • Accelerate through the beak
  • Pull the trigger while still swinging
  • Stopping the gun = missed bird.

Lead: Less Than You Think

  • Because tower pheasants:
  • Are often slowing
  • May be dropping vertically
  • Typical lead:
  • 12–24 inches on a crossing bird
  • Very little lead on straight-down or curling birds—often just cover the bird and pull through
  • Trust your eyes, not the bead.

Most of all, however, shoot safe. Always be aware of the shooters, dogs and bystanders around you.

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