The game of shooting is mostly mental, but what we practice the most are the physical elements, hoping that our mind goes along for the ride.
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The game of shooting is mostly mental, but what we practice the most are the physical elements, hoping that our mind goes along for the ride.
A young hunter stalks within easy range of a big antelope, but the buck is facing him and he’s shooting a 1700s-era patched round ball. Should he take the shot?
For years, MOA was the more popular of the two in the US, but now 80-90% of competition shooters are using mRad and (finally) more hunters are using mRad than MOA with 55% of Leupold’s sales being mRad.
Video interview with Zach Owens about controll
A traditional bowhunter is offered a mid-range shot at a moving bull elk. Should he take the shot?
The goal is perfection, but perfection in this game is unattainable. However, there is a way to ensure more grip-and-grins and fewer sob stories.
Absolutely nothing else matters if we can’t hold the rifle steady.
The author finds a good coues buck at last light. He has to sprint 1300 yards and then shoot steeply uphill through a thin screen of grass. Should he take the shot?
The author faces an edge-of-dusk opportunity at a huge buck, but he’s shooting an unproven prototype cartridge. Should he take the shot?
This is how I set up a scope so it can receive the maximum reasonable amount of damage and maintain its zero.