Well, on the last day of October I manage to get to the range to shoot my October targets. Trick and treat.
The treat. Fired my wife's AR first. I still love it. If I were an infantryman in close combat I would take this rifle any day. Rapid reaquire, light weight, dead on accurate. Four sighting shots on an NRA 100 yard high power target. I assumed that the rifle would fire high at that short a range so aimed really low on the first two. Imagine my surprise when the bullets hit right where I had pointed the rifle. Two more to double check and good to go on the match.
Now for the trick. Same deal with my M-14. Two sighting shots. Fires high and about 2 inches right. Ok, I can deal with that. One click of the sight and two more sighting shots. About 1.25 inches right. OK, two more clicks and because I am a lazy so and so who doesn't currently own a spotting scope and can't see holes in targets at 25 yards on a dim evening, I decide that that will be good enough and I will shoot my targets.
The good news is that the grouping was great. Five sets of two shots each from an offhand position and I got them all in pretty much the same area. The bad news is that I should have walked down range and checked my last two sighting shots. Every shot just off to the right. One click probably would have done it. I had no targets left (important note, take spares) and it was getting dark so no opportunity to drive home and print a new set.
Oh well, maybe this will be my worst score drop.
Either way however, I have to say that this match was the most fun I have had at the range in a long time. There wasn't anyone there to see my shooting big fat rifles on the 25 yard range, hopping from knee to feet and firing like a madman but I sure wish that there had been. It would have been fun explaining the principle behind this month's match.
Thanks very much for putting this on, looking forward to getting out for the November shoot, hopefully a little earlier.