Everybody with any common sense already knows that training is necessary. Training is usually necessary for just about anything.
That is why I suggested above that if somebody is going to use a shotgun for self defense in a home, make sure everybody can handle the shotgun. Train not just with only birdshot, but with buckshot and slugs (if you are going to use slugs). There is a difference between birdshot and buckshot. And especially between birdshot and slugs.
I tried some 9mm ammo in my handgun that was the type of ammo used for training in the Olympics. It had considerable recoil. I could handle it fine, but it was different than shooting 115 grain training rounds. My 9mm handgun is one of the few that can handle P+P ammunition. When I bought self defense ammunition at a Bass ProShop the guy in the gun department told me my 9mm could handle P+P ammunition. But I decided just to get the standard self defense ammunition. It is more like the 115 grain field ammo that I shoot most of the time to train with.
People are told to train the way they would actually fight. I go to the range on a regular basis and practice. Not just with my 9mm but also with my .45.
If you don't have a plan you would be in trouble in an actual situation. And if you had to defend yourself and your family from an intruder, that is going to be different than shooting at paper targets.
One good thing about a pump action shotgun or a AR-15 is that the intruder might just run when he finds himself looking down the barrel of one of those. Which would be fine. Because then you don't have to shoot somebody.
With proper training a person should be able to function in a situation. And training is obviously necessary to be able to handle the gun.
That is why I suggested above that if somebody is going to use a shotgun for self defense in a home, make sure everybody can handle the shotgun. Train not just with only birdshot, but with buckshot and slugs (if you are going to use slugs). There is a difference between birdshot and buckshot. And especially between birdshot and slugs.
I tried some 9mm ammo in my handgun that was the type of ammo used for training in the Olympics. It had considerable recoil. I could handle it fine, but it was different than shooting 115 grain training rounds. My 9mm handgun is one of the few that can handle P+P ammunition. When I bought self defense ammunition at a Bass ProShop the guy in the gun department told me my 9mm could handle P+P ammunition. But I decided just to get the standard self defense ammunition. It is more like the 115 grain field ammo that I shoot most of the time to train with.
People are told to train the way they would actually fight. I go to the range on a regular basis and practice. Not just with my 9mm but also with my .45.
If you don't have a plan you would be in trouble in an actual situation. And if you had to defend yourself and your family from an intruder, that is going to be different than shooting at paper targets.
One good thing about a pump action shotgun or a AR-15 is that the intruder might just run when he finds himself looking down the barrel of one of those. Which would be fine. Because then you don't have to shoot somebody.
With proper training a person should be able to function in a situation. And training is obviously necessary to be able to handle the gun.