Powder Creek Shooting Park

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Skeet Shooting


Today's skeet shooting field varies little from its 1920 beginnings. It has eight shooting stations and two trap houses. Seven of the stations are arranged in a half-moon between the two trap houses, and one station is directly between them. The High House, on the left side of the field, throws its targets from a trap 10 feet above the ground. The target rises to a height of 15 feet by the time it travels to the center of the field. The Low House target, on the right side, leaves the trap house just 3-1/2 feet from the ground. It also rises to a height of 15 feet by the time it reaches the center of the field.



Round of Skeet

A round of skeet consists of 25 targets, with 17 shots as singles and 8 as doubles. The first miss is repeated immediately and is called an option. If no targets are missed during the round, the last or 25th target is shot at the last station, low house 8.

The shooting sequence is as follows:

  • Stations 1 & 2: High House Single; Low House Single; High House/Low House Pair
  • Stations 3, 4, & 5: High House Single; Low House Single
  • Stations 6 & 7: High House Single; Low House Single; Low House/High House Pair
  • Station 8: High House Single; Low House Single
Skeet Field Layout Diagram

Skeet is shot in squads of up to five shooters. They move from station to station around the half-moon, ending up in the center, at the end of the round. 12 gauge or smaller, of any type shotgun, may be used as long as it can fire at least two shots. The preferred shot size is #9, but nothing larger than 7-1/2 should ever be used. Since strength is not a factor, women are able to compete equally with men. Left-handed shooters do just as well as right-handed.