The shooting system you use at the range,you should use out on the field.Replacate everything you do,then yr rifle will repeat the same results or very near it.
Solid hold,na yr recoil will fight you.Relaxed hold and youll absorb some recoil.
The shooting system you use at the range,you should use out on the field.Replacate everything you do,then yr rifle will repeat the same results or very near it.
Solid hold,na yr recoil will fight you.Relaxed hold and youll absorb some recoil.
Hunt safe, look after the bush & plug more pests.The greatest invention in the history of man is beer.
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https://youtu.be/2v3QrUvYj-Y
A bit more bang is better.
With one caveat.
For initial zeroing, ammo testing, load development, there's no reason so not get the best shooting position as possible, a stable rest/bipod+rear bag will net better results than some junky shooting sticks or shooting off your pack.
After zeroed/ammo selected/load development is complete, by all means only practice with the setup you intend to use in the feild.
Many people can shoot well with a bipod and sand bags, but if you aren't going to use them in the feild then you shouldn't train yourself to rely on them.
IMO a shooting sling + pack is the best solution for hunting/field shooting. There are some nifty bipod out there now that are very good (but expensive), downside to the sling is you need to practice with it.
Even if just practicing getting into a shooting position without actually shooting will help a lot, but you will still need to do some practice with it
Hunt safe, look after the bush & plug more pests.The greatest invention in the history of man is beer.
![]()
https://youtu.be/2v3QrUvYj-Y
A bit more bang is better.
Agree with the caveat. The purpose at that point is to test the rifle/load and to eliminate as much of the shooter's adverse input as possible.
Yes, do your final check zero using your most likely field position, otherewise, practise practise practise. Particularly offhand. Out in the sticks you may get to shoot off a pack but also maybe standing on tip toes to see over long grass, around the right side of a tree, around the left side of a tree (right handed hold but sometimes lefthanded out of necessity), steeply up hill or downhill (your millimeter correct cheekweld goes out the window in those situations) and so on.
I'm an old school bush hunter. We never had fancy bi-pods back then. The most we had was rifle slings and they are not that practical nowadays if using a flexy plastic stock.
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