Sporting clays
Twelve stations through hardwood and pine, top-to-bottom of the property. 100-bird and 50-bird rounds available. NSCA-style scorecards.
- 100-bird round
- 50-bird round
- Half-and-half (50 clays + half-day trail)
Concept demo: Northridge Off-Road Resort is not an operating business. The address, phone, hours, pricing, and trail names shown are illustrative. Built by Chimaera Co.
A sporting clays course cut through hardwood and pine, top to bottom of the property. A regulation skeet field at the clubhouse for warmup. 5-stand under the lights on Thursdays. Rentals, ammo, and NSCA-certified instruction on site.
Three ways to shoot at Northridge. Sporting clays is the destination amenity. Skeet is the morning warmup. 5-stand is for groups, leagues, and brand-new shooters.
Twelve stations through hardwood and pine, top-to-bottom of the property. 100-bird and 50-bird rounds available. NSCA-style scorecards.
A regulation skeet field next to the clubhouse for warmup, lessons, and casual rounds. Walk-up friendly.
Five-stand layout for groups, leagues, and first-time shooters. Each shooter sees the same presentations from different angles.
The clays course climbs from the clubhouse at the spring to the west overlook and back. Stations rotate presentation weekly so the course never reads the same twice.
Two birds crossing left-to-right, second a half-beat behind the first. The warm-up station for every round, set up next to the spring at the clubhouse end.
First bird rolls flat across the cut; the second launches on report toward the ridge. Read the line of the battue or you miss both.
Two birds from behind, high and fast, lined out down the ridge. A station that punishes a low gun mount.
Single bird quartering away into the hardwood. Looks easy on paper, breaks far more rounds than you'd think.
Teal off the deck while a crosser cuts the line behind it. Read the timing or you eat the teal and miss the crosser.
Two birds coming at the shooter low over the creek. The station everyone overestimates their lead on.
Rolling rabbit across the saddle, crosser dropping in on the call. The only rabbit station on the course, and the one we get the most complaints about.
Two birds away from the shooter toward the overlook. Catches first-timers off guard because you swing through your own line.
One bird across, one dropping straight down through the cedars. The dropper is the one nobody breaks on their first try.
Two birds launched on the same beep, opposite directions, crossing in the middle. The station that decides who buys lunch.
Single bird arcing in over the bench, lit from the side in the last hour of light. The pretty station.
Closer station with three presentation options the trapper calls on demand. Built so the round closes warm, not cold.
Member rate available with the annual Northridge Pass (launches with the property). Guest rate applies for all open bookings until then.
Full sporting-clays round. Twelve stations, scorecard at the clubhouse, lunch ready when you walk back in. The headline ride for serious shooters.
Half round. Skip the bottom four stations or work just the ones you want to drill. Most weekenders book this one.
A box of 25 at the skeet field. Walk-up, no booking needed if the field is open. Good way to warm up before sporting clays.
Last rounds go out 90 minutes before close. Weather closures and league nights post to the homepage banner.
A 100-bird round on Saturday, a half-day on Sunday, a cabin between them. Priced cleaner than booking each piece separately.