Keep in mind guys, that you can use a rifle scope as a spotting scope if you feel the need for a reticle.
I made an adapter from a 6 inch length of 1/2 inch square aluminum and drilled and tapped a 1/4-20 hole in the center.
I then drilled and tapped it for a length of picatinny rail I bought cheap on ebay and fitted that.
Now I use it with a cheap Chinese QD one piece mount, so I can quickly attach a scope and fit to a camera tripod head. I can also pull a scope off a rifle if I want and use that as a spotting scope.
Once you get this far, there is another benefit. You can use the rifle scope to compensate for refraction. This is where humidity in the air at different temperatures and wind speeds cause the target image to displace.
When this happens, if you don't compensate for that shift, you are no longer aiming at where the target actually is, but a refracted position.
If the shooter constantly aims for the location on target where the spotting scope is pointing, he will be shooting through refraction and taking that out of play.
If you fit a cell phone to the ocular lens of the spotting scope, the shooter can reference that with his left eye while behind the rife with his right eye looking through the rifle scope.
Not understanding what I'm saying here is why so few shooters are capable of shooting small groups as group size is more a reflection of the amount of refraction that occurred during the shot string than the true accuracy of the rifle.
Now, it's important to have a super stable tripod that does not get pushed around by muzzle blast or shifted by a wobbly bench for this to be effective. I made a one piece welded tripod with spiked feet to stab into the ground for this purpose.
The scope mount used in this video has been replaced by what I described above.