I missed an enormous whitetail a couple years ago because I vapor locked on what shoulda been an easy 150 yard shot. I was out of practice. It's one of the low-lights of my hunting career, but my shooting has improved since then. In fact I haven't missed an animal since and I know that situation would be different today.
Practicing off-hand shooting is important.
Practice or prepare to quickly take advantage of available rests, whether it's dropping into your bipod or using a fence rail.
Practicing to rapidly shoulder, aim and fire... as long as accuracy is stressed/attained.
Practice following through on your target.
It's fun to have a buddy(s) with you too.
Use your .22, .17HMR, .223 etc... to practice. It's fun shooting and cheap. Just use the techniques you've practiced, when you've got that big buck in your sights.
it takes a real man to admit his f--k ups..i hope to learn more from you in many years to come






























It works for me because I am familiar with my gun and I have confidence not only to fire the first shot with my target eye open, but to recover from the shot quickly and reacquire the target and shoot again. For this type of shooting I like my autoloader, as it smooths recoil and makes recovery from the shot easy. Since I am focussed on hitting the target and not firing as fast as I can, I can shoot with reasonable accuracy, about a 4 inch group at 75 yds=dead deer.
. 100 rds of .22 handgun and 30 rounds of .270WSM.... just bench work and load development, but the trigger time can't hurt.
Loooook, this is our justice system!























