memtb
Well-Known Member
Don't leave your bolt at home.
I did it once
I hate it when that happens!! I have to leave the bench, and walk 35 yards back to the house! memtb
Don't leave your bolt at home.
I did it once
I know all the fundamentals and have taught rifle marksmanship... but when I shoot the best is when I REALLY relax. Settle down, think things through and enjoy. Don't rush your shooting. RELAX!
We've all been there. I have to go about a quarter mile when that happens. Actually about as often as not I get to my range and have to come back for something. At least I can play the "old age" card. A friend of mine got to the woods about 6 or 8 miles from here and discovered his bolt was back at the house. Embarrassing, but it happens.I hate it when that happens!! I have to leave the bench, and walk 35 yards back to the house! memtb
Exactly, if ur not practicing the right things won't help anything.Get a coach/mentor that knows what they are doing as all that practice-practice-practice can be instilling bad habits.
X2 on this. I owe most of my current "ability" to laying on the living room floor and dry firing on a deer sized object at 1,400 yards. You'll learn a lot about yourself while dry firing. The recoil of a rifle will hide a lot of your mistakesDry fire pactice. You can do it in your living room. Work on body position, trigger control, follow through, all of it.
Great point.. Getting comfortable behind the rifle!Spend the time setting up your position whether it's a bench rest set up, or afield set up.
Just stop by a Perkins, get a platter breakfast, the 24" round plate, scarf that down, if you are still awake in hour, you will be so lethargic your groups will look like 1 shot and really, you could care less.Law off the coffee and tobacco immediately before and while shooting. I can see my heartbeat in the reticle sometimes and usually have to chill out for 1/2 hour or shoot something that I don't care about shooting tiny groups with until my system metabolizes these accuracy affecting substances.