A minimum of shooting skills shoud be mandatory for hunting....

While doing my things @ the range, my left hand shooter started to speak to me about is rifle shooting everywere, except on the 24X24 target.... Range officier was real busy, so i took a few minutes to help him out... Now he bring is rig over my table. the rifle is a Sako Grey wolf in 7mm mounted by a Zeiss 3X9X50 with Optiloc setup, his ammo, Remington A-frame 160 gr, good ammo... Started to check the zero tru the bore over the bag, zero is right on, ask the gentleman if i can shoot it, so i proceed and it give me a nice cluster of one inch left, 2 inch high.... For me elevation is right on, just click 5 times to the right and proceded again with 3 more shots, nice clover dead on for a 200 yards bullseye shot...
Now the gentleman just go back to his place( did charge him 10.00 to put in the range officier coffee mug ) and go about is things, i start to shoot my rifle again and completly forget about this person...
20 minutes or so after at the break away from the tables, he come to show me a target 24X24 with more of a buckshot pattern than any groups at all, like a 20 MOA group there was 6 hits, he told me he had fired 15 times @ that target... WOW...
After we could shoot again i intend to be sure, just had a fresh target set up @ 100 metres, so i asked him to shoot the first one, for me to look and what i expected occur, ( i loaded the rifle single shot with an empty case, just before )... A massive mega flinch just before the clic, at this point the gentleman understood that the rifle had nothing to do with the very bad shooting, he was almost out of ammo but he told me he was coming back in a couples of days with fresh ammo... I told him to make sure to buy the same ones.... After that i resumed my shooting and it was getting late, hope if i see him again, hope he will have worked out is trigger control, cuz this gent, the way he is now is not a danger to the Whitetails population... PS: This is the second time in my life i do the empty case trick but by far the worst one... JP.
Sounds like he should be shooting a 260 or 7/08 instead. Probably be happier with the results.
 
Years ago in NL to get a moose licience you had to pass a shooting test.
Now all you have to do is the firearms safety course and the basic hunters course.
There's just too many wounded animals from poorly sighted in firearms and people that just don't know how to shoot.

They used to have that in New Brunswick as well. You had to put two out of three in a 16 by 16 inch target AT 50 YARDS!!! You were allowed to shoot offhand, kneeling, sitting or even prone!! Not much of a shooting test but apparently it was introduced to discourage non hunters from applying for a license and have someone else shoot the moose. Either way it is long gone. I watched a lady take hers and she was using a Remington 742 auto. She put five rounds in the rifle, fired the first shot, hit the bolt release and pulled the bolt back ejecting live round number two, fired her second shot and manually ejected live round number four. Then fired her third shot and of course the rifle locked open being empty. Passed the test though. I wondered at the time who her shooting instuctor had been.
 
While at the Nanaimo Range a number of years ago, a man fired one shot with his 300 Winchester Magnum at 100 yards. I spotted for him and said he missed the target. That was not good enough, he had to walk to the 100 yard line and check for himself. He fired a second shot, and it was one inch high. I then asked if he was going to shoot at 200 yards, and was informed, "This is the 300 Winchester Magnum, the flattest shooting gun ever. It is one inch high at 100, 1 inch high at 200 and dead on at 300. Last year I shot a deer in the head at 500 yards. I held on the tip of the nose, raised up to the top of his head, and fired".

As a RSO, a shooter was hitting the target next to his, was challenged, and when I went to the 100 m. targets, there were no hits on his target so I showed him where his hits were. He had fired 10 rounds at 50 and 10 at 100 so thankfully he was out of ammo.

Another time two men sighting in a rifle had one round hit the target at close range. On checking the target it had key holed. They could not get it sighted in last year either. The "fire formed brass had the shortest neck" I had ever seen on a 7mm RM. It was sold to them as a 7mm RM. Checking the barrel proved it to be a 300 WM.
Another hunter at coffee told me he missed a moose at 400 yards. Shot low. Turned his scope up to 400 yards and missed. On questioning, the rifle was sighted in for 100 yards. Do you have a bullet drop compensator? Well yeah, on the front of the scope. Turning up an AO does nothing to make the rifle change its point of impact. "So you never read the instructions?"

I should have kept a journal.
 
Many hunters shoot at the bench and call it good, I set up an 8" pie plate at different yardages and shoot from field positions, if I can't hit the plate 5 out of 5 times from a given position I know it is too far for that position. I have seen too many hunters who can't hit $##t on paper but claim they are deadly on game. My hunting buddy is not a good shot but knows his limits and doesn't throw random rounds at game.
Exactly right. Shooting from the bench tells you how well your rifle is shooting. Getting off your ass and shooting off-hand, prone, sitting and braced tells you how well you can shoot your rifle.
 
The odd part of this thread is you charged him $10 to "help" him even if the money did go to the range. The part about the guy that was not a good shot is totally normal and happens every day, especially this time of year.


Weird!
The range officer need is money ( good time of year for them ), just helped two fellows at the same time, for myself i would not asked for nothing... JP.
 
Curious how many (if any) provinces and territories still have a basic shooting test as part of their hunting license qualifications?
 
The best one I ever saw. I was shooting at the range and the guy next to me was shooting a 300 Win. He had a spotting scope and fired about 10 shots and then said to that's perfect. I looked through my scope and saw one hole dead center. I asked what happened to the rest of the shots to which he replied "It only takes one shot to kill em" I couldn't argue with that logic
 
The best one I ever saw. I was shooting at the range and the guy next to me was shooting a 300 Win. He had a spotting scope and fired about 10 shots and then said to that's perfect. I looked through my scope and saw one hole dead center. I asked what happened to the rest of the shots to which he replied "It only takes one shot to kill em" I couldn't argue with that logic

Good one.

I once saw a guy with about $3000 invested in a Weatherby Mk V package, chambered in 300 Weatherby, take seven shots over about five minutes to hit a typical black bear at under 100 yards. There was no rush on at all, the bear wasn't going anywhere, and plenty of good quality, field expedient rests available, etc. I was a young man at the time, and had listened intently to his earlier bragging about his rifle package, as well as his (self-assessed) extensive skill and experience as a bear hunter.
 
One needs to pass a shooting test on a moving target in order to hunt moose or bear in most Scandinavian countries.

From the Swedish hunting regs;

"Hunters who want to go hunting for moose in Sweden should arrange through their host to visit a moose-hunting training range before the hunt.

Many landowners and hunting hosts makes it a requirement that moose hunters must have passed a recognised test at the bronze level before they take part in the hunt.

During the test, hunters shoot at a life-size figure of a moose at a distance of 80 metres in the standing position with no other support than shooting sticks or rifle sling. The

test involves shooting at the figure both while it is stationary and when it is "running"."
 
One needs to pass a shooting test on a moving target in order to hunt moose or bear in most Scandinavian countries.

From the Swedish hunting regs;

"Hunters who want to go hunting for moose in Sweden should arrange through their host to visit a moose-hunting training range before the hunt.

Many landowners and hunting hosts makes it a requirement that moose hunters must have passed a recognised test at the bronze level before they take part in the hunt.

During the test, hunters shoot at a life-size figure of a moose at a distance of 80 metres in the standing position with no other support than shooting sticks or rifle sling. The

test involves shooting at the figure both while it is stationary and when it is "running"."

We'd probably nearly halve the number of hunters here if this was law. Unbelievable the number of unprepared and unpracticed people heading out into the woods (or thinking that an open truck window is 'in the woods'). I was at the archery lane near my place about a week before season throwing arrows at about twenty yards (I try to make it down there twice a month at least) when a guy shows up, wipes a thick layer of dust off his bow and fires three arrows. One hit the ceiling and the other two were about 10 inches off the target, high on opposite sides. We walked down to retrieve our arrows, I put five into about two and a half inches just above the bull. He says 'I just need a little warmup before hunting' and proceeds to shoot another two foot group, avoiding the ceiling this time. That was apparently close enough, he packed up and left. That poor deer...
 
We'd probably nearly halve the number of hunters here if this was law. Unbelievable the number of unprepared and unpracticed people heading out into the woods (or thinking that an open truck window is 'in the woods'). I was at the archery lane near my place about a week before season throwing arrows at about twenty yards (I try to make it down there twice a month at least) when a guy shows up, wipes a thick layer of dust off his bow and fires three arrows. One hit the ceiling and the other two were about 10 inches off the target, high on opposite sides. We walked down to retrieve our arrows, I put five into about two and a half inches just above the bull. He says 'I just need a little warmup before hunting' and proceeds to shoot another two foot group, avoiding the ceiling this time. That was apparently close enough, he packed up and left. That poor deer...

Got to be brave to shoot in an unknown area these days..
 
While I despise the thought of any more government meddling in our lives. A basic proficiency test should be mandatory for hunting licenses. I know so many people who shoot deer on their father's/mother's/wife's tag. If the actual license holder had to do a basic shooting test every 5 years it would weed out a lot.

One guy I know shot 4 on family tags last year and I didn't even get to see a tail.
 
One needs to pass a shooting test on a moving target in order to hunt moose or bear in most Scandinavian countries.

From the Swedish hunting regs;

"Hunters who want to go hunting for moose in Sweden should arrange through their host to visit a moose-hunting training range before the hunt.

Many landowners and hunting hosts makes it a requirement that moose hunters must have passed a recognised test at the bronze level before they take part in the hunt.

During the test, hunters shoot at a life-size figure of a moose at a distance of 80 metres in the standing position with no other support than shooting sticks or rifle sling. The

test involves shooting at the figure both while it is stationary and when it is "running"."

It is a fun test with good moving targets. All timed. I didn't get a chance to go hunting the last time I was on tour in Sweden but I wanted to warm up for hogs in Germany. Lots of fun real situation shooting practice.
 
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