Thanks for the great post. I agree with what you have said as well. You can't shoot well if you don't have the right equipment to complete the task. The most important part to me is the practice. I know guys that every year go to the range the weekend before the rifle season check their 100 yard zero and then think they are good to "infinity and beyond". My buddies and I shoot 20-30 weekends a year and fortunately for us we can shoot out to 600 yards at the local range. This practice in invaluable when the time comes to pull the trigger on game animals. Unfortunately for me a few years back I made the mistake of thinking I was the 1000 yards shooting god and shot and lost a beautiful spring buck in South Africa. I knocked it off it feet with a 180 grain Berger out of my LRM at 916 yards. Myself and my two friends, one being the PH as well as the two trackers were so excited at the shot I had made that nobody kept their eye on the prize. The spring buck must have gotten up and ran into the brush. It was wide open country with lots of small acacia. We looked for two days to no avail. It absolutely made me sick. All the practice and preparation down the tubes because I didn't do my job as a hunter and keep my eye on the animal. Great equipment is a big part of it but practice, practice, practice, in my opinion is really what brings home the bacon. Now I do not shoot at game beyond 600 yards. At that distance I know I am 100 percent proficient at the range shooting from the sitting, kneeling and prone positions. Thankfully all of that practice has transferred to my field shooting as well.