Aiming to fundraise Clay shoot benefits cancer fund

 PINE PLAINS — A private fish and game preserve club in Pine Plains was the site of a clay shoot in the early morning hours of Saturday, Aug. 27, all to benefit the Ryan McElroy Children’s Cancer Foundation.

 The foundation holds many different fundraising events, said Board Trustee Arthur Hart. Clay shooting is just one of them. 

 The organization has held a few similar shoots in Staatsburg, N.Y., in the past. This year, the foundation decided to bring the event to Pine Plains; it hopes to make it an annual tradition.

 Part of the event consisted of a clay shooting competition. Squads of four to six people gathered at the registration stand by 8:30 a.m. and made their way to the 18-station course by 10 a.m.

 The clay shooting competition team winners were announce after lunch and received a trophy as their grand prize. And, in the spirit of good sportsmanship, all teams — regardless of their success — received a prize.

 The sport

 Clay shooting, or clay bird shooting, is a popular sport and is even featured in the Olympic summer games.

 The sport is very much like golf but with a gun — the game calls for aim and precision, according to those who participate.

 Shooting courses may have as many as 15 different stations. Shooters go through several different stations where clay discs are dispensed into the air or ground by a machine at different ranges. The discs vary in size and shape.

 The weapon of choice is typically a shotgun, for which various ammunition is available.

 Hart said that for the event’s sporting purpose of shooting at clay discs, most used bird shots — a type of ammo packed with small metal spheres that fly out in different directions.

 The goal of the game calls for players to shoot down as many discs as possible.

 A brief history

 It is believed that clay shooting saw its beginning through early target sports such as spear throwing and archery, according to the website for U.S. Shooting — a nonprofit corporation chartered by the U.S. Olympic Committee to serve as the national governing body for shooting sports.

 Marksmanship by the 10th century had become a social and recreational sport, as the  activity became more and more popular.

 U.S. Shooting notes the first shooting clubs formed throughout the 13th and 14th centuries where participants — all of whom were males at the time — used bows and wheel-lock muskets. By the 16th century, firearms began to gain popularity among shooters.

 The first targets used were wooden targets or live pigeons, until the clay discs were developed.

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