what would you say one needs to do to become a good shooter, besides practice? what little things does one need to pay attention to and master?
I'm currently reading Jeff Coopers book on being a rifleman and most of the information is common sense, tho there are some lil tidbits in there that are nice.![]()
Refers to an old quote, and I forget by who, perhaps Col. Townsend Whelan.
As opposed to your front legs?
Refers to an old quote, and I forget by who, perhaps Col. Townsend Whelan.
"Stand up on your hind legs and shoot like a man"
Can also be found in the IHMSA rules:
""Standing" means just that. Stand up on your hind legs and shoot like a man (or woman)! None of that sissy laying down supported stuff."
http://www.msa-ihmsa.com/cbook.htm

it's quite amusing everyone sitting back and saying that their fellow hunters are garbage shots (that's loosely summing up the bulk of the posts)...basically everyone's talking about each other in here...as i said before...arrogance abounds at CGN.
OK look at it this way,the killing area of a Moose is about the size of a 45 gal drum.Can you hit a 45 gallon drum at 300 yds?????? or the killing area of a deer is about the size of a 5 gallon pail,can you hit it at 300yds??? It ain't easy!!! especially offhand.I have alot of horses at the farm and use a range finder to see distances, then "dry-fire" to see sight picure. At 300yds a horse isn't that big, and its close to a moose in size. I always use a good "steady" for my hunts and won't try long(300yds+++) without one . Just my opinion JITC
Nicely put!To become a good shooter, pistol or rifle, learn proper trigger release. To vastly improve your shooting skill a very simple excercise is all that's needed. Get a fellow shooter to take your rifle, work the action and carefully give it back to you.
You aim and release the trigger, but it may, or may not, have a cartridge in the chamber.
After some flinches from the hammer falling on an empty chamber, you will quickly learn how to get the trigger properly released!
You will learn more in a couple of hours of this than you will in months of practice, practice, practice (at yanking the trigger.)
It is not just a case of jumping from the recoil, either. A 22 pistol held at arms length and fired with one hand, is just as hard to control (the trigger) as a 38 Special, or even a 357. I will wager that anyone who has shot competitively with a revolver has spent hours at partly loading the cylinder, preferrably by someone else, so he/she doesn't know if the hammer is going to fall on a primer, or an empty cylinder.
Accomplished target shooters will have any number of little methods they will use to get a proper release of the trigger. Any competitive target shooters reading this will know the one single word, most often silently said, as they release the trigger, is, "Follow through."
Which Jeff Cooper book were you reading(Mr. Friendly)/recommending(Boomer)?
e.g.
- "A Rifleman Went to War"
- "Art of the Rifle: Special Color Edtion"
- "To Ride, Shoot Straight, and Speak the Truth"
I've missed every standing shot I've ever taken.
With sandbags I've never missed a groundhog.
I'm joining a 50 yard shooting range -- I'll try sandbags, but at only 50 yards I don't think it'll be any fun/sport unless I put the sandbags aside and stand.
it's reasoning like that I can honestly appreciate. I have a friend who is a very responsible hunter. so responsible in fact that he takes a rifle that is enough to kill the animal, but just enough. he doesn't take a shot unless he knows it's a kill.In my 25 yrs of deer hunting I've never shot a deer much past 100yds. I don't reallly see a need in Ontario. Too many people seem to think that if they can shoot "minute of Bulls#$@" at 250 yards from a benchrest at the range then they can take a 250yd shot at a running deer. I think I'm an "average" shot, I just don't take a lot of the stupid shots people take.
I was taught to breath in, and then exhale half a breath and hold that, and then squeeze the trigger.Boomer said:You should breath prior to each shot, and you should break the shot at the natural pause between the breath out and the next breath in.
Mr Friendly and Boomer:
I've ordered a copy of "Art of the Rifle".
Murf: You're right. Amazon has it on the list as "A Rifleman Went to War by H. W. McBride and LTC Jeff Cooper", but on the one-book-detail page it's exactly as you say "A Rifleman Went to War (Hardcover) by H. W. McBride (Author), LTC Jeff Cooper (Foreword)".
I was taught to breath in, and then exhale half a breath and hold that, and then squeeze the trigger.
I'll try it your way, including the coin.![]()




























