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Thread: Long Range Beginner Courses around Auckland?

  1. #1
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    Long Range Beginner Courses around Auckland?

    Hi all,

    I am wanting to get into long range shooting, just got my firearm license sorted, so basically new.
    I was searching around the whole internet for long range fields around Auckland without any success. Some mentioned were like 2+ years ago, but I want some more recent suggestions post COVID.

    Closest ones to me are clevedon and maybe akarana city rifle club.
    What would equipment and knowledge do i need in order to start long range shooting?
    Are those ranges all beginner friendly and do they have specific courses for beginners like me?

    Thanks in advance!

  2. #2
    Member Bobba's Avatar
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    Hi Lemon, welcome to the forum and good on you for wanting to get into it.

    I'm not sure what your shooting experience is but if your just starting you are going to need a lot of practice at short range first 100m. Once you can shoot small groups consustantly at 100m then you can start thinking about 200m and so on on.

    NZDA Auckalnd has a great range at Riverhead out to 100m for public and 200 for club members if I remember correctly.

    Beyond that yes clevedon or best get friendly with a farmer.

  3. #3
    Member Bobba's Avatar
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    Sorry for the fat finger spelling

  4. #4
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    Thanks for letting me know!

    Good advice on starting at short range first! Will definitely look into it.

    As for equipment, what is the general rifle purchase path for short range to long range? For example starting off 100-300m with .22LR, and then upgrading to what for longer ranges?

    I've heard that getting into reloading can help when you go for longer shots, is that true?

  5. #5
    Member Marty Henry's Avatar
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    If you can shoot to 300 with a .22 you will have learned wind and holdover like no one else
    lau lau and Lemon like this.

  6. #6
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    22LR is a great place to start out - just make sure you get a good rifle with a great trigger.
    22LR can be practiced at smallbore clubs (Manakau Sporting Rifle Club would be an excellent start).
    22LR ammo is cheap and the rifles much cheaper than centrefire competition rifles. This allow you to spend more on a decent scope and more on ammo for trigger time.
    22LR can be shot on the NZDA 100m and 200m ranges. At distances past about 75m the wind gets really interesting and even more so at 200m and further - this'll teach really good wind fundamentals.

    With some travel there are 22LR practical rifle matches in the North Island (and in the South Island if you want to travel further). There is even a IPRF World Champs coming up in the UK next year.
    You can shoot them further than 200m - the Section22 matches down south regularly have a 300m+ target included.

    Centrefire long range is more expensive to get into. If you get to any level of serious about it you will want / need to get into a custom reloading set up. NRA / Fullbore at Clevedon would be an excellent start. Full bore will teach excellent fundamental shooting and wind skills. With thse sorted you could move into the "PRS" or practical rifle matches with a higher degree of confidence.
    Bagheera, lau lau, John P and 1 others like this.
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  7. #7
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    look into Long Range Academy.

    www.longrangeacademy.nz
    Lemon likes this.
    Good, Fast, Cheap....choose any 2.

  8. #8
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    As above 22LR is a great introduction and training for
    long range centerfire.
    You get to practice your fundamentals, trigger control and wind calls at a shorter distance.
    Lemon likes this.
    Using Tapatalk

  9. #9
    Member chainsaw's Avatar
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    There’s also the Akarana range south of Clevedon towards Kawakawa Bay which has 400-700 yd range.
    But first get proficient at 100 & 200 yards. Understand the capabilities of your rifle & your own skills.
    Lemon likes this.

  10. #10
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    Learning to shoot long range as a first shooting discipline is a bit like learning to drive in a F1 race car.

    While there are actually some benefits to starting from scratch (like not having to unlearn bad habits) it is a much bigger leap then just learning to shoot. Cost of equipment is inordanately more for shooting long range and reloading is a skill learned far more easily once you know you can shoot (When you reload you need to sample test your different loads for accuracy, if you don't have a benchmark of your own skill, or what your minimum accuracy should be, then your tests will be inconclusive and you will have wasted much in the way of time and reloading components). Also there are many purchasing choices to be made where you have to make trade offs, (weight vs accuracy vs expence vs versatility) these choices all come down to personal preference but you will have far better idea what that personal preference is once you have been doing a bit of shooting already, even if it is only at 100m.

    Basically as everyone else has said, start off with a .22, anyone with decent skill can consistently hit a gong with a scoped .22 at 200m if they know where to aim.
    If you get bored of target shooting with a .22 or if you don't enjoy it, then you will know that the same thing would happen with long range shooting, but you would have saved yourself thousands on dollars.
    Lemon likes this.

  11. #11
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    Thanks all for the advice!
    I have decided to practice with .22LR for now.

    Looking at Tikka T1X, and may go with a T3X 6.5CM if I decide to shoot further.
    Bagheera, Oli1102 and John P like this.

  12. #12
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    Quote Originally Posted by Lemon View Post
    Thanks all for the advice!
    I have decided to practice with .22LR for now.

    Looking at Tikka T1X, and may go with a T3X 6.5CM if I decide to shoot further.
    That is a logical and robust route to pursue. You won't waste much money with that plan.

    Nathan Foster is the man who literally wrote the book on long range shooting, have a read through his website.

    https://www.ballisticstudies.com/

    Have a read through some of the articles in the 'knowledgebase' tab of his website. If you like his writing style, you can't go wrong with buying one or all of his books, 'The practical guide to long range shooting' is a good start. I would suggest to anyone to read the book before spending any other money on long range stuff.

  13. #13
    Member Bobba's Avatar
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    Both good choices. When you get a 22 buy a few different brands off ammo to see what your rifle likes, it will likely shoot one better than the other.
    Lemon likes this.

  14. #14
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    I think you’re now on the right track.
    Gaining confidence in your rifle is important, shot placement shooting a rabbit will gain confidence, knowing the sound of a neck shot to head shot & the almighty gut shot
    Have you confirmed your eye dominance?
    Muscle memory will develop over time
    Sort out your breathing, sounds simple…that first deer through the scope, breathing turns to shit
    Lemon likes this.

  15. #15
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    What is long range?
    John P likes this.

 

 

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