Above all, safety is the most important consideration. Always be aware of the direction in which the muzzle of your shotgun is pointing and never point it in an unsafe direction. Whenever you shoot, you should know where the shot will fall before you pull the trigger.
Follow these simple directions to be safe:
Carrying a shotgun in a slip
To prevent a shotgun falling out if your slip fastening should fail, keep it with the barrels down and stock up when slung over your shoulder. A shotgun should be opened before removing it from the slip to check that it is unloaded. Do not touch the trigger, even at this stage. Your next action should always be to check that the barrels are clear while pointing the gun in a safe direction. Don’t point the muzzle end of the slip at anyone.
Remember, a shotgun should always be considered loaded until proven empty and even then, still handled as if it were loaded.
On replacing the shotgun in its slip, you should check that the gun is unloaded, then insert the barrels first before closing the gun and fastening the slip.
Where to find the gun’s information
If in doubt about which types of cartridges are safe to use in your gun, check the flats of the barrels. You are looking for the proof marks, gauge or bore and chamber length of your gun. If you are not sure what it all means, then ask someone who does know. Your local club, gun shop, or police licensing department will always be pleased to help.
Carrying a shotgun out of a slip
When you are not shooting but have the gun out of its slip, it should be carried empty, open and over the crook of the arm, not over the shoulder or in any other way. The muzzles should not be rested on your feet.
Passing a shotgun to someone
When passing a gun to someone, it should always be proved empty; that is: open, empty and passed stock first so that the empty chambers are visible.
Crossing an obstacle on your own
Open the gun and remove the cartridges, then close the gun and, ensuring that the muzzles do not point at you, lean the gun with stock down and barrels up against or partially through the obstacle so that it cannot slip or fall. Otherwise, place the gun carefully on the ground and out of harm’s way so that you can easily reach it from the other side. Climb over the obstacle and retrieve the gun, again using appropriate muzzle awareness, open the gun, check the barrel for obstructions and continue. Carrying the gun over the obstacle is not a good idea.
Crossing an obstacle in company
Guns should be open and unloaded and held by one person while the other person climbs over the obstacle. The guns are then passed over (open, empty and stock first) one by one; the other person then climbs over and retrieves their shotgun on the other side.
Shooting safely
Shooting safely is paramount and you should always abide by the following statements:
Never point a gun, loaded or unloaded, in an unsafe direction.
- Never shoot unless you are sure it is safe to do so.
- Always have the safety catch on ‘safe’ until the moment before you fire.
- Always bear in mind the possibility of a ricochet, particularly across water or off branches and vegetation.
- Never fire blindly into dense vegetation.
- Never chance low shots without a clear fallout zone for your shot.
- Never travel with a loaded shotgun.
- Never put down a loaded shotgun or leave it unattended.
- Keep your fingers away from the trigger until you want to fire.
- Always be steady on your feet before you shoot. Never keep a dog attached to you while shooting; it may pull you off balance.
- Never shoot unless you are certain of your target and can see it clearly.
- Never shoot at, or near, overhead obstructions such as power lines or other installations.
- Be extra careful shooting near buildings or concrete structures; ricochets are a real danger.
- At all times guard against shot carrying beyond the boundary of your permitted shooting area.