Jon Bischof
Well-Known Member
JohnWess: The phrases "just a hunting rifle", "good enough for hunting", and my personal least favorite: "minute of squirrel" all belong in the same category of thinking. Usually voiced by a person who used to hunt but doesn't anymore, or a person who never hunted--their attitude toward it shows they don't know much about it or don't care much about it.
All my target shooting is geared toward making my hunting better; even when I shoot in matches, I only do it to improve my hunting shots. Many who punch only paper don't consider hunting a worthy pursuit. But for me, hunting is the pursuit and punching paper is just a necessary preparation for hunting.
Benchrest, sillouette, competitive shooting are all nice sports; good sports. But sometimes those who don't hunt really don't understand what we are about as hunters. And sometimes I look at these bench-sitting target rifle shooters and silently wonder to myself..."Does this guy know the true purpose of a rifle?" I'm talking about folks who have never killed anything with a rifle and then look down on those who do as though they aren't real riflemen. Well, to them I'm thinking, "It's only paper, so what does it really matter?"
All my target shooting is geared toward making my hunting better; even when I shoot in matches, I only do it to improve my hunting shots. Many who punch only paper don't consider hunting a worthy pursuit. But for me, hunting is the pursuit and punching paper is just a necessary preparation for hunting.
Benchrest, sillouette, competitive shooting are all nice sports; good sports. But sometimes those who don't hunt really don't understand what we are about as hunters. And sometimes I look at these bench-sitting target rifle shooters and silently wonder to myself..."Does this guy know the true purpose of a rifle?" I'm talking about folks who have never killed anything with a rifle and then look down on those who do as though they aren't real riflemen. Well, to them I'm thinking, "It's only paper, so what does it really matter?"