Have
you ever looked at darts on TV? And have you ever wondered how the
players throw a dart from that distance – about eight feet – and
it lands in the treble twenty; the sixty. Then they throw two more
into the sixty and the announcer says one hundred and EIGHTY!!! And
the crowd goes wild? Sometimes if the first one doesn't go in neither
do the other two. They might get one more in there but the other will
be in the twenty or even the one or five.
The
confidence of that first dart spurs them on to the other two or
vice-versa.
That's
why they will go to the bottom of the board and go for the nineteen
to try and get a couple of trebles in there – or they may go down
there because the flight of one of the darts is blocking their view
of the treble twenty.
Now
I am a good shot with a rifle – well I was, I got my marksman's
badge when I was in the army cadets (hey!!! the ACF not the CCF!!) -
but I was using sights. They weren't telescopic sights, which are
easy to use as long as you can keep the rifle still, but a kind of V
sight.
There
again, though, you have to keep the weapon still. A good way of doing
this is to pull it into your shoulder and twist at the same time, then
squeezing that trigger so softly that you don't even feel it. Rather
like tickling a trout as they swim beneath you and suddenly it's in
your arms – but don't ask me as I don't fish even though my son is
an expert carp angler.
But going
back to the darts with their shooting/firing without sights. I have
never really fired many pistols – a sten, yes and a bren gun –
but I have been told that if you hold a pistol in your hand and point
it at the target as if it's your finger you get a sure shot. So it might be the same
principle for dart players.
David
Beckham, when he was a boy, would practice hitting the cross bar from
way out till he got good. How good? Well you know.
I have
always thought that good photographers would be good rifle marksmen
as they have the discipline to be still and to touch that shutter at
the right time and with the gentleness in the finger of an eye
surgeon.
I remember
I went out on a smallish boat to see the whales migrating north in
the Pacific Ocean. Unfortunately I didn't have a zoom lens on my
camera and it wasn't automatic focus or anything so as soon as the
shout went to – WHALE ON THE STARBOARD SIDE AT TWO-O-CLOCK – or
whatever, you had to point, focus and squeeze. I took a few but they
were so tiny in the the frame that they didn't look great when I
cropped them; not bad, but not great.
It
was an Olympus with all the bells and whistles of what was available
to me (at my price) at that time so I bought a Canon
not
long after that. That was great but it eventually wore out; I was
having to take gaffa tape with me everywhere to keep the thing closed
and I left it on the Queen
Mary 2 on
our way back to Blighty when the time came – unfortunately I left
the lens by mistake.
So
recently I looked on eBay for a 35mm camera and bought one. Not
remembering that I was looking for a Canon with automatic focus I
bought the same kind of Olympus again – mistake!!!
Maybe I
should have practiced trying to hit the cross bar or the treble
twenty?
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