gunsaholic
CGN Ultra frequent flyer
- Location
- Winnipeg, Manitoba
That's a good one! Ah, to be young again and the "first time"-----------with a gun!
A tip... If you mount a bipod use one that mounts to the stock via the sling swivel hole. The ones that mount to the barrel can give you serious accuracy problems. Infact anything putting unequal pressure in the barrel will give you accuracy problems, including any form of benchrest, always rest the gun on the stock not the barrel.
Form/breathing/trigger control is very very important. Focus in this order... Breath, you have to keep breathing. Dont try to hold your breath or that will cause you to be even more unsteady, rather try to align your crosshairs with the target when you are at the end of an exhalation. After you exhale your body takes the longest natural pause of the breathing cycle so that is when you want to squeeze off the shot. Take several breaths and when the sights return to the target every time at the end of the breath you are ready for the squeeze.
With trigger pull, it is a fairly common thing to see people grip the stock like it's goin to jump out of their hand. You want to keep a fairly loose grip with your shooting hand and let the buttstock take the recoil. Try to focus on using your hand ONLY for squeezing the trigger and not for gripping the rifle. I find it best to use only the very tip of my finger on the trigger and place my thumb directly opposite my trigger finger on the back of the grip. When the breathing is right, you want to put an equal amount of pressure on your thumb as you put on the trigger finger. This will prevent any jerking or twisting of the stock during the shot.
Also, one of the best things I have been taught in regards to shooting accurately is to let the shot going off surprise you. If you are bracing in anticipation of the shot you are a billion times more likely to twitch and instinctively counteract the recoil by pulling the gun off to one side. It's one of those things that you don't even realize you do, but it is happening.
Lastly, make damn sure your scope is on really good and tight (without stripping the screws), be sure to use a good solid rest, infact i would reccomend a harris bipod if you must use a bipod, or even better a proper caldwell rifle rest, and practice those fundamentals a LOT.
These techniques are true for all calibers and trust me, trying to keep the fundamentals with larger calibers is not easy and very counter instinctive, but believe me they work.
Happy shooting!
Something cheap would suffice. I like the caldwell rests, like this;
ht tp://ca.wholesalesports.com/storefront/range-accessories/gun-rests/handy-shooting-rest-nxt-/prod242552.html
But honestly all you need is a small bean bag pillow, or sack of rice/sand would work for all intents and purposes.
Thanks.
Should I spring the extra $15 and get this one instead? I can take it down to 2 pieces if need be.
http://www.battenfeldtechnologies.com/caldwell/catalog.asp?product=matrix&tab=specs
Nice! I absolutely LOVE boxes shaped like that...they usually have heavy, gunny stuff in them.![]()
Congrats on your new toy! Can we get some close ups of the box? Maybe some different angles of the bag would be nice too.

Yes, I managed to make it to the range for 2 hours.




























