If you're a waterfowler eager to take to the marsh Saturday when Minnesota's 2008 duck and goose season begins, and you feel your life is lacking surprise, try patterning your shotgun.
The process, and its findings, might in fact be very surprising.
What is patterning? Ballisticians can get pretty technical in their answers. But basically it's a process of determining the pellet "pattern" produced at specific distances downrange by a shotgun, using various choke and load combinations.
Last week, with the help of a friend, Brett Bader of Somerset, Wis., and one of my sons, Trevor, I patterned two shotguns, a Super X2 12 gauge semi-auto Winchester, which I shoot, and a Mossberg 12 gauge pump, which is Trevor's gun.
Both were outfitted with factory-issued modified chokes. All loads fired were comparable, 3-inch, No. 2s.
• • •
Patterning can be accomplished a number of ways. Perhaps there is no "best" way (though certified ballisticians probably favor one over another). The goal in any event, regardless of methodology, is to get a sense of which load works best in your shotgun.
By "best" I mean which load is most evenly distributed within, say, a 30-inch circle at distances downrange of between 30 and 40 yards.