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Offhand shooting, need some help

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koauke

40 Cal.
Joined
Jun 14, 2014
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I've been glued to the bench too long with my flintlock and have been trying to work at offhand shooting.

This is 5 shots at 25 yards from the bench.
jvbu0ap.jpg


and this is 5 shots at 25 yards offhand. I consistently hit several inches to the right when shooting offhand. I don't know if I'm anticipating recoil or what.
It might be difficult to assess without seeing me shoot, but any ideas, advice, suggestions?
WRQhOuy.jpg
 
If you are right-handed, my guess would be you are yanking the trigger rather than squeezing. This could pull your shots to the right...
 
I typed out a big long explanation but didn't figure anyone would understand it....so I erased it....

Simply put, you hold the gun different on the bench than you do off hand....this changes where the bullet goes.
 
Without knowing more about the gun itself, the two answers above just about cover it along with your comment about anticipating the shot. It just requires practice and uniformity.
 
Looks a lot like your "jerking" or "slapping" the trigger. Some of us shoot rifles with VERY light trigger pulls. Some are so light that a shooter doesn't want to rest the tip of the trigger finger on the trigger while acquiring the target and sight picture. This can lead to "slapping" the trigger which will pull a right handed shooter's p.o.i. to the right.
 
Try this-

Spend lots of time "dry firing" at a target. Do it about 15 minutes each night at home, focusing on what happens to the gun AFTER the trigger breaks. I'm betting at first you'll see the sights moving right. If you're simply anticipating the boom at the range, steady dry fire practice will help that too.

You'll quickly discover another likely cause. If you're using the joint of your finger to pull the trigger (and you're right handed), it's very easy to pull the gun right. You'll see it in your dry firing. The solution is to focus on pulling the trigger straight back, and probably using the pad of your finger rather than the joint to pull the trigger.
 
koauke:

All good information here, and most of it very helpful. The standing, or offhand shooting position is difficult to master, particularly if you have not had good instructions/coaching. Not having watched you shoot, I can only diagnose the two targets you provided.

I believe you are not aligning your "stance" to the target before you shoot. Finding your "natural point of aim" is essential to good offhand (and most other) shooting. You should be facing 90 degrees from the target with feet about shoulder-width apart. Your support hand and elbow should be directly under the gun and the gun as close to your chest as possible. Your trigger-side arm should be at a 90 degree angle from your body.

When you take this position, you should be able to look down the sights at the target, then close your eyes for 10 seconds and still be aligned with the target when you re-open them. If not, adjust your feet until you realign and check again. Once you establish your natural point of aim, moving your feet will cause you to loose it.

Not aligning your stance to the target result in you body naturally shifting in the direction your skeletal structure's alignment in the brief delay between when the trigger breaks and the shot leaves the barrel. In your case, to the right.
 
curator said:
...aligning your "stance" to the target before you shoot....

That's a very good point.

Try this:

Get comfortable, then raise your rifle and aim at the target. Now close your eyes for 5-10 seconds. Open them again and see where you're pointing. Do it again to see if the results are the same. Surprise!

Dollars to donuts, your natural relaxed pose leaves you pointing somewhere else. Adjustments in stance needed.
 
Don Steele said:
Looks a lot like your "jerking" or "slapping" the trigger. Some of us shoot rifles with VERY light trigger pulls. Some are so light that a shooter doesn't want to rest the tip of the trigger finger on the trigger while acquiring the target and sight picture. This can lead to "slapping" the trigger which will pull a right handed shooter's p.o.i. to the right.


Amen, Bro.
My guess also. A heavy trigger, such as is found on CW rifled musket repros, can/will do that. I like a light trigger that, with practice, seems to go off at just the right moment without even consciously thinking about it. Takes a lot of shooting to get there, but, then, that is the fun part.
 
Hits to the right like that are from flinching, (for a righty) and particularly so if they hit in the 4 o'clock area. Try slowly exhaling and moving forward toward the target (shifting your weight forward) as you are making your trigger break. As the trigger is actually breaking (or you are getting conscious of it's imminance) then increase the rate of your exhale. That should increase your focus on the target, and away from the impending ruckus of ignition.

Yes, it seems the sights are off slightly.

Yes, the rest of what is said above also applies, A solid natural point of aim is fundamental to shooting. How is your offhand shooting with a modern gun, like a .22 l.r.?
 
Try standing more toward the left of your target. Move your rear most foot forward just a bit so your skeletal frame is more tension neutral.
Stand as you normally do, close your eyes and raise your rifle without looking to where you feel neutral in muscular tension. Now open your eyes and see how you are orientated to the target. Repeat several times and adjust your stance to get the average then try your group again.
 
Well, everything posted is right ... or wrong, but I myself do NOT think it is from flinching. If shooter related, you aren't following through and are 'pulling' the shot off the mark before or as the ball is still leaving the barrel.

But I have witnessed MANY arms and firearms of ALL types, from 1600 to 2010 designs, shoot differently whilst offhand than they do off the bench, due to how the arm was supported on the bench and barrel harmonics.

TRY THIS - Shoot from bench, tall support, with a gloved hand on the rest, so you are mimicking your offhand stance. Another check that hunter's often use for sighting in, to see if gun or shooter, is to shoot from a sitting position; your arms supported off your knees.
 
Here is a gozillion year old rendition and likely the links are worthless.

Stumpkiller's School of Offhandedness


Daniel Webster was a fly-fisherman, not a rifle shooter, as his definitions for "offhand" are contradictory. His dictionary lists "without pre-meditation or preparation" as one choice, and "without rest or support" as the other. I maintain that if you don't prepare for an offhand shot, you won't be any good at them when you need it. Shooting from a benchrest only trains your mind and body to be able to shoot well from a benchrest. Only the eyes and trigger hand have any common tasks between a shot from offhand vs. from a bench. Certainly the eyes and trigger hand have critical jobs, but the rest of your body does as well. I hope to make you aware of what needs to come together to be consistent and accurate in your offhand shooting.

As I'm writing this specifically to help you keep three shots on a 3" X 5" card at 50 yards, I'll tell you the first thing you need to do is get that card so you can see it. After drawing the lines through the diagonals with a ball point pen to locate the center, forget about them. If you can see them at 50 yards I hate you. From now on they're just to help in the final scoring. I zero my rifles so that the balls strike 2" high at 50 yards. This gives me a point blank range of about 100 yards on whitetail, but that's not important now. It does mean I have to establish an aiming point 2" below the where the pen lines cross in the center of the card. I use a 3-3/4" diagonal black diamond with a white center (a free download from www.USPALMA.com - the one called "2 Medium Diamonds") for load development and zeroing in because I find it an easy target to aim at. Unfortunately, when I put this over the card it became very difficult to score, as the aiming face took the hit and the "skid marks" of the ball, leaving the card behind torn and without well defined edges to the holes. What you need is a way to produce contrast behind the card so you can focus on it as a target. Claude presented a solution of affixing the card in the center of a 6" (or larger) circular bull's-eye target (also downloadable free at USPALMA - See Figure 1). This helps increase the contrast and make the card stand out. But this means you can not use the bottom of the card as an aiming point unless you adjust your sights. You can either do your best to estimate how far your sights must intrude into the white of the card for a center shot, or stick a 1" target plaster (or piece of black masking or vinyl tape) at the proper spot on the target based on your sighting targets. Be warned that if you are zeroed at 50 yards, you'll be beck to the problem of having the tape mess up the holes, or even tear the card when being removed. If you hit it, I recommend you leave it as long as the center of the "X" is still visible. If the other two shots tore the "X" out, send it in tape & all, Tiger! You could also use an orange plaster and draw the lines over it.


Figure 1


You ran a lube dampened patch down the barrel to prep it and then assembled a load, and are all primed or capped. You step up to the line, or your 50 yard stake. Now what? First you must establish a solid platform to support the gun. The shot begins at your hips. "He's knutz" you're telling yourself. Think on this: when you're standing for an offhand shot, you have to be able to control your body's tendency to sway (it's there, even when you're sober). Being the amazing, bipedal creature that you are, your brain has developed a stream of commands to keep you from falling over. It is sending constant input to your feet, ankles, knees, and back muscles based on visual and inner-ear cues. Without getting into the metaphysical aspects of it, I can tell you that your body, like any car, boat or airplane, has a center-of-gravity. Right in there behind your belly-button somewhere. What you need to do is get your feet and legs well set under that point. The closest flexible joints to that central spot are your hips (in Karate, that famous board breaking punch is actually thrown by starting with a hip swing). The biggest muscles in your body are from the hips up, and down, and in most situations it is best to use the biggest muscles first. We'll assume you are right handed for all examples. Stand with your left side facing the target. Set your feet angled about 45º from each other and the heels about as far apart as your outside shoulder span. Your right foot should be about perpendicular to the target and the toes of your left foot pointing somewhere to the right of the target. The legs, back and neck should be straight, but not rigidly locked. Your head upright and centered right over your navel. I'm assuming you're shooting a moderately loaded medium or small bore rifle, so you won't be needing to bend your left knee and lean forward into the recoil to keep from toppling backwards. Your stance has to be open enough that you can root the butt plate solidly in the pocket between your arm and collar-bone. (A closed stance is when the toes of both feet are in line with the target: º \=O=/ ). A good way to set yourself into position is to stand in the closed stance, and then move your left foot back half a foot. Swivel at the hips a bit to re-center your hips and shoulders over your feet and you're ready to mount the rifle.

Look at the target and bring the rifle up and then pull the butt plate back into the shoulder pocket with your right hand. The left hand supports the fore end and adjusts for aim. The position of your left hand is determined by barrel length, stock geometry and your arm shape. Your elbow should be as close to directly below the rifle as you can get it without tensing your back and upper arm muscles. Right elbow should be held out horizontal to the ground; again without fighting clothing or muscles.

Both eyes open, one eye closed? That is up to you. I use both eyes open for all hunting shots and most target shooting. I found with the taped card described above I did better with one eye closed. I think it is easier for your brain to determine the center of the card, or a circular target, with both eyes open. Focus on the front sight. With your master eye (we'll assume it's your right). If you are left handed with a right master eye, or right handed with a left master eye: sucks to be you. You'll probably have to end up closing the eye on the opposite side of your nose from the gun. There are too many sight variations to describe here, but let's take a common blade front, rectangular notched rear as our example. The target should be aligned so that it appears to rest on the front sight (6:00 hold) or in the center of the target, front sight aligned in the notch so that the top of the front is level with the upper surface of the rear, an equal amount of light showing on either side of the front blade in the groove of the rear notch. I focus on the front sight, and at the final instant I shift my focus to the target. I think this is a "fault" caused by conditioning from hunting and traditional archery/bowhunting. I'm just blazing my full concentration on THE SPOT that I have chosen as my target. But we're not quite ready in this seminar to shoot, yet.

Breath control is perhaps the most mentioned and least understood of the shooting techniques. We've all been told: Take three deep breaths, let out half of the last one and then shoot." What happens then is that your body is agonizing for breath, your sights are oscillating in ever increasing arcs across the target, and you finally yank the trigger before gasping for sweet air. "7:00 in the four ring" says your spotter, loud enough so the whole line hears him.

So what's a better system? Properly done, breath control not only allows you the motionless moment for final sight alignment, but also calms your muscles and can even slow your pulse. All the little internal maintenance activities your body performs even when you'd like a little quiet. Tense muscles not only oscillate as they pull against each other to remain in equilibrium, but the blood coursing through them causes a bounce, which is more easily absorbed in a loose muscle.

Your breathing drill should begin as soon as you uncase your rifle. As you breathe in, imagine a coil spring in your belly, like the mainspring in an old pocket watch, winding tight. As you exhale, imagine that spring relaxing. In a short article like this, I can't begin to explain meditation and breathing techniques in any detail. Ask a vocalist or Karate instructor. The diaphragm is second only to the heart in keeping you alive, and you have a lot more voluntary control over it. Practice taking slow, deep breaths while trying to be conscious of that muscle raising and falling below your lungs. For those that don't know, when that muscle drops it is the vacuum created that draws air into your lungs. Your lungs have no muscles of their own. That's why a diaphragm puncture on a deer will drop it quickly even though the lungs may not be heavily damaged. It can't breathe. You know the feeling if you've ever taken a punch to the solar plexus that caused your diaphragm to spasm. Ideally, your mind and muscles should be as relaxed as possible, so that if you do flinch a bit, it will take an instant for the muscles to contract that much further, hopefully giving the ball a chance to be past the muzzle before it can be effected.

The Okinawans have a phrase for mental preparation, which I'll now misspell for you: "miso no kokora". Literally, this means "consciousness of bee paste", which is nonsense. But if you were an Okinawa school child centuries ago it would bring to mind the smoothing of the wax writing tablet in preparation of the next lesson. What we would describe as "clearing your mind." In Karate the mental illusion of imagining yourself smoothing out a sheet of wax is meant to help you clear your mind and focus on the present. At any moment we are thinking about work, problems at home, did the dog get his before being shut in with the new carpet, a million things. Imagining a tossing sea that gradually subsides to a calm one also works, as does imagining the face of a loved one or pet. But don't try recalling your version of Ol' Yeller's face or you may find the target will get misty and blurred.

In a hunting situation adrenaline will be pumping into your system, giving the body it's fight-or-flight boost to get you up that tree a bit faster when that bad ol' sabertooth tiger is on your heels, or to throw your rock farther and harder than the enemy throws his. With the rifle now doing all the hard work, you need to mentally counteract the hormonal rush and regain composure by clearing out all the clutter that this increase in mental clock-speed brings with it. The famous "pick a spot and focus on it" drilled into bowhunters applies in and to this situation. Another tip: if you are within 75 yards of a deer NEVER make eye contact with it. If you look at their face, chances are the deer will perceive you as a predator. They have some responses hardwired into their systems too. Once you've determined this is a target animal, look away and continue to observe them with peripheral vision, until the moment you put that front sight over it's heart. Keep you mind busy on choosing a shooting lane (if you're in cover) and the path the deer is taking. Whenever possible, make vertical slope and lateral movement corrections for moving game, or game above or below you, by leaning or twisting at the hips and not by twisting your arms or upper torso.

Now see how much easier it's going to be just shooting at a blind and motionless 3" X 5" card?

The final facets are trigger control and follow through. You've got your breathing down, you're calm and focused. The gun is loaded and at your shoulder. Muzzle pointed downrange and the hammer eased back into full-cock. You have you feet placed and your weight is balanced between them. You take a breath and your left arm and shoulder move slightly to position the front sight. While letting out a bit of breath and then halting, you begin to gently squeeze the trigger. Some will tell you "The gun should surprise you when it goes off." Me, I assume every gun will go off if I were to pull the trigger. I think it is better to say that you should squeeze with slow, evenly applied pressure until the gun goes off. And then, and this is important, you should hold your position a full second before lowering the gun or finishing the release of your breath. Follow-through will prevent some fliers caused by jerking your head at the last moment. In a hunting situation, the movement may also give the animal a visual on a predator to run from, instead of just the bafflement of the sudden cloud of smoke and unpleasant sensation of being shot. Often they'll take a couple bounds and then slow to a trot, and even pause to look back, if you have remained motionless. You're doing these steps properly if you have a dud ignition and the gun doesn't "hop" off target when the hammer drops. If you have an assistant, let him prime and then hand you the gun; with the instructions to use a dead cap or leave the pan unprimed randomly at his whim. Back to breathing and trigger control work if the gun recoils without going "boom."

When sighting in, shoot at least three shots before adjusting your sights. You have to establish a group before you can move the center of the group with sight adjustment.

Good shooting
 
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Thank you for all the input, it is really helpful. I've definitely got some work to do and I'm determined to shoot this thing well offhand.

I do notice I flinch when the rifle fails to go off, but I don't notice a flinch when the rifle fires. Maybe the recoil covers up the flinch.

Just to fill in some of the blanks, this is my TVM Virginia rifle. It is .50 caliber with a 42 inch swamped B weight Rice barrel. I'm using a .495 round ball with a .018 ticking patch and 60 grains of 3F Goex. The rifle has a very light set trigger.
 
Sounds like a solid platform...I don't think it's gun related...

Over the years I have noticed every time I walk away from my muzzleloaders for a while, It takes me about 50 rounds to dial myself back in....I always think it's the gun at first...but it's not.....it's just me....

You are shooting to the right...keep practicing until your group size shrinks near bench size....Then if it is still shooting to the right you can adjust the sights for windage.
this might take a 100 rounds....
 
koauke said:
I do notice I flinch when the rifle fails to go off, but I don't notice a flinch when the rifle fires. Maybe the recoil covers up the flinch.
That may tell you what's the basis of what's happening. One way to overcome it is to have someone else prime or not prime the pan. Have another person do it in an random order and see if you're actually flinching in anticipation. I've used this a couple times through the years and it does help identify that problem. It just requires patience and practice and the ability to concentrate on the sights and target and mentally ignore a small explosion four inches from your nose! :wink:
 
Stumpkiller said:
Here is a gozillion year old rendition and likely the links are worthless.

Stumpkiller's School of Offhandedness


Daniel Webster was a fly-fisherman, not a rifle shooter, as his definitions for "offhand" are contradictory. His dictionary lists "without pre-meditation or preparation" as one choice, and "without rest or support" as the other. I maintain that if you don't prepare for an offhand shot, you won't be any good at them when you need it. Shooting from a benchrest only trains your mind and body to be able to shoot well from a benchrest. Only the eyes and trigger hand have any common tasks between a shot from offhand vs. from a bench. Certainly the eyes and trigger hand have critical jobs, but the rest of your body does as well. I hope to make you aware of what needs to come together to be consistent and accurate in your offhand shooting.

As I'm writing this specifically to help you keep three shots on a 3" X 5" card at 50 yards, I'll tell you the first thing you need to do is get that card so you can see it. After drawing the lines through the diagonals with a ball point pen to locate the center, forget about them. If you can see them at 50 yards I hate you. From now on they're just to help in the final scoring. I zero my rifles so that the balls strike 2" high at 50 yards. This gives me a point blank range of about 100 yards on whitetail, but that's not important now. It does mean I have to establish an aiming point 2" below the where the pen lines cross in the center of the card. I use a 3-3/4" diagonal black diamond with a white center (a free download from www.USPALMA.com - the one called "2 Medium Diamonds") for load development and zeroing in because I find it an easy target to aim at. Unfortunately, when I put this over the card it became very difficult to score, as the aiming face took the hit and the "skid marks" of the ball, leaving the card behind torn and without well defined edges to the holes. What you need is a way to produce contrast behind the card so you can focus on it as a target. Claude presented a solution of affixing the card in the center of a 6" (or larger) circular bull's-eye target (also downloadable free at USPALMA - See Figure 1). This helps increase the contrast and make the card stand out. But this means you can not use the bottom of the card as an aiming point unless you adjust your sights. You can either do your best to estimate how far your sights must intrude into the white of the card for a center shot, or stick a 1" target plaster (or piece of black masking or vinyl tape) at the proper spot on the target based on your sighting targets. Be warned that if you are zeroed at 50 yards, you'll be beck to the problem of having the tape mess up the holes, or even tear the card when being removed. If you hit it, I recommend you leave it as long as the center of the "X" is still visible. If the other two shots tore the "X" out, send it in tape & all, Tiger! You could also use an orange plaster and draw the lines over it.


Figure 1


You ran a lube dampened patch down the barrel to prep it and then assembled a load, and are all primed or capped. You step up to the line, or your 50 yard stake. Now what? First you must establish a solid platform to support the gun. The shot begins at your hips. "He's knutz" you're telling yourself. Think on this: when you're standing for an offhand shot, you have to be able to control your body's tendency to sway (it's there, even when you're sober). Being the amazing, bipedal creature that you are, your brain has developed a stream of commands to keep you from falling over. It is sending constant input to your feet, ankles, knees, and back muscles based on visual and inner-ear cues. Without getting into the metaphysical aspects of it, I can tell you that your body, like any car, boat or airplane, has a center-of-gravity. Right in there behind your belly-button somewhere. What you need to do is get your feet and legs well set under that point. The closest flexible joints to that central spot are your hips (in Karate, that famous board breaking punch is actually thrown by starting with a hip swing). The biggest muscles in your body are from the hips up, and down, and in most situations it is best to use the biggest muscles first. We'll assume you are right handed for all examples. Stand with your left side facing the target. Set your feet angled about 45º from each other and the heels about as far apart as your outside shoulder span. Your right foot should be about perpendicular to the target and the toes of your left foot pointing somewhere to the right of the target. The legs, back and neck should be straight, but not rigidly locked. Your head upright and centered right over your navel. I'm assuming you're shooting a moderately loaded medium or small bore rifle, so you won't be needing to bend your left knee and lean forward into the recoil to keep from toppling backwards. Your stance has to be open enough that you can root the butt plate solidly in the pocket between your arm and collar-bone. (A closed stance is when the toes of both feet are in line with the target: º \=O=/ ). A good way to set yourself into position is to stand in the closed stance, and then move your left foot back half a foot. Swivel at the hips a bit to re-center your hips and shoulders over your feet and you're ready to mount the rifle.

Look at the target and bring the rifle up and then pull the butt plate back into the shoulder pocket with your right hand. The left hand supports the fore end and adjusts for aim. The position of your left hand is determined by barrel length, stock geometry and your arm shape. Your elbow should be as close to directly below the rifle as you can get it without tensing your back and upper arm muscles. Right elbow should be held out horizontal to the ground; again without fighting clothing or muscles.

Both eyes open, one eye closed? That is up to you. I use both eyes open for all hunting shots and most target shooting. I found with the taped card described above I did better with one eye closed. I think it is easier for your brain to determine the center of the card, or a circular target, with both eyes open. Focus on the front sight. With your master eye (we'll assume it's your right). If you are left handed with a right master eye, or right handed with a left master eye: sucks to be you. You'll probably have to end up closing the eye on the opposite side of your nose from the gun. There are too many sight variations to describe here, but let's take a common blade front, rectangular notched rear as our example. The target should be aligned so that it appears to rest on the front sight (6:00 hold) or in the center of the target, front sight aligned in the notch so that the top of the front is level with the upper surface of the rear, an equal amount of light showing on either side of the front blade in the groove of the rear notch. I focus on the front sight, and at the final instant I shift my focus to the target. I think this is a "fault" caused by conditioning from hunting and traditional archery/bowhunting. I'm just blazing my full concentration on THE SPOT that I have chosen as my target. But we're not quite ready in this seminar to shoot, yet.

Breath control is perhaps the most mentioned and least understood of the shooting techniques. We've all been told: Take three deep breaths, let out half of the last one and then shoot." What happens then is that your body is agonizing for breath, your sights are oscillating in ever increasing arcs across the target, and you finally yank the trigger before gasping for sweet air. "7:00 in the four ring" says your spotter, loud enough so the whole line hears him.

So what's a better system? Properly done, breath control not only allows you the motionless moment for final sight alignment, but also calms your muscles and can even slow your pulse. All the little internal maintenance activities your body performs even when you'd like a little quiet. Tense muscles not only oscillate as they pull against each other to remain in equilibrium, but the blood coursing through them causes a bounce, which is more easily absorbed in a loose muscle.

Your breathing drill should begin as soon as you uncase your rifle. As you breathe in, imagine a coil spring in your belly, like the mainspring in an old pocket watch, winding tight. As you exhale, imagine that spring relaxing. In a short article like this, I can't begin to explain meditation and breathing techniques in any detail. Ask a vocalist or Karate instructor. The diaphragm is second only to the heart in keeping you alive, and you have a lot more voluntary control over it. Practice taking slow, deep breaths while trying to be conscious of that muscle raising and falling below your lungs. For those that don't know, when that muscle drops it is the vacuum created that draws air into your lungs. Your lungs have no muscles of their own. That's why a diaphragm puncture on a deer will drop it quickly even though the lungs may not be heavily damaged. It can't breathe. You know the feeling if you've ever taken a punch to the solar plexus that caused your diaphragm to spasm. Ideally, your mind and muscles should be as relaxed as possible, so that if you do flinch a bit, it will take an instant for the muscles to contract that much further, hopefully giving the ball a chance to be past the muzzle before it can be effected.

The Okinawans have a phrase for mental preparation, which I'll now misspell for you: "miso no kokora". Literally, this means "consciousness of bee paste", which is nonsense. But if you were an Okinawa school child centuries ago it would bring to mind the smoothing of the wax writing tablet in preparation of the next lesson. What we would describe as "clearing your mind." In Karate the mental illusion of imagining yourself smoothing out a sheet of wax is meant to help you clear your mind and focus on the present. At any moment we are thinking about work, problems at home, did the dog get his before being shut in with the new carpet, a million things. Imagining a tossing sea that gradually subsides to a calm one also works, as does imagining the face of a loved one or pet. But don't try recalling your version of Ol' Yeller's face or you may find the target will get misty and blurred.

In a hunting situation adrenaline will be pumping into your system, giving the body it's fight-or-flight boost to get you up that tree a bit faster when that bad ol' sabertooth tiger is on your heels, or to throw your rock farther and harder than the enemy throws his. With the rifle now doing all the hard work, you need to mentally counteract the hormonal rush and regain composure by clearing out all the clutter that this increase in mental clock-speed brings with it. The famous "pick a spot and focus on it" drilled into bowhunters applies in and to this situation. Another tip: if you are within 75 yards of a deer NEVER make eye contact with it. If you look at their face, chances are the deer will perceive you as a predator. They have some responses hardwired into their systems too. Once you've determined this is a target animal, look away and continue to observe them with peripheral vision, until the moment you put that front sight over it's heart. Keep you mind busy on choosing a shooting lane (if you're in cover) and the path the deer is taking. Whenever possible, make vertical slope and lateral movement corrections for moving game, or game above or below you, by leaning or twisting at the hips and not by twisting your arms or upper torso.

Now see how much easier it's going to be just shooting at a blind and motionless 3" X 5" card?

The final facets are trigger control and follow through. You've got your breathing down, you're calm and focused. The gun is loaded and at your shoulder. Muzzle pointed downrange and the hammer eased back into full-cock. You have you feet placed and your weight is balanced between them. You take a breath and your left arm and shoulder move slightly to position the front sight. While letting out a bit of breath and then halting, you begin to gently squeeze the trigger. Some will tell you "The gun should surprise you when it goes off." Me, I assume every gun will go off if I were to pull the trigger. I think it is better to say that you should squeeze with slow, evenly applied pressure until the gun goes off. And then, and this is important, you should hold your position a full second before lowering the gun or finishing the release of your breath. Follow-through will prevent some fliers caused by jerking your head at the last moment. In a hunting situation, the movement may also give the animal a visual on a predator to run from, instead of just the bafflement of the sudden cloud of smoke and unpleasant sensation of being shot. Often they'll take a couple bounds and then slow to a trot, and even pause to look back, if you have remained motionless. You're doing these steps properly if you have a dud ignition and the gun doesn't "hop" off target when the hammer drops. If you have an assistant, let him prime and then hand you the gun; with the instructions to use a dead cap or leave the pan unprimed randomly at his whim. Back to breathing and trigger control work if the gun recoils without going "boom."

When sighting in, shoot at least three shots before adjusting your sights. You have to establish a group before you can move the center of the group with sight adjustment.

Good shooting






Thanks for posting SK

That’s a good read with great tips :thumbsup:
 
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