You may have noticed I’m on a forward-looking trend right now. Between posts about hunting lotteries and ordering custom hunting gear, I guess my mind’s already in the woods with the bugs gone and the leaves turning.
Thinking ahead’s useful, especially in the mental/physical chess match that is hunting, so I’m going to roll with the trend and see where it leads us.
Today’s topic takes the planning out of the mind and puts it squarely on the range. It’s probably not a bad time to get out the rifle(s) and sight things in for the fall hunting season.
Wait a minute, you might say: it’s June, and it’ll be months before I crack a shot at a deer or squirrel.
True, but here’s where thinking ahead is really going to pay off.
Marksmanship, like any skill, gets better with practice. Since you owe it to your quarry to be able to hit the vitals on the first shot, it stands to reason that the more pre-season range time you get, the better.
Plus, there’s something tremendously satisfying about a long day at the range punching holes in bullseyes, or an afternoon spent plinking match boxes and spent shells in a rural back yard.
First and foremost, you need to sight in your rifle or handgun. This is something that’s wise to do whenever the firearm has been put away for a while – something may have gotten bumped, and the routne will help reacclimate you to good shooting form.
There are plenty of sighting-in instructions out there, but here are the basics that work for me. First, get a solid rest. It could be sandbags, a dedicated shooting rest or the like, but I prefer something that lets me hold the rifle, rather than clamping it into position. I don’t carry a hunting bench into the field, after all.
With a solid rest that will keep the gun from hopping around, I like to start at a reasonably close distance (25 yards works, since it’s the de-facto short distance at most ranges) and make sure things are reasonably close. Is the bullet/pellet hitting relatively close to where the crosshairs sit? If not, I make sure I have the tools to check/repair my scope mounts, and I try to keep myself patient and moving slow. A large error is annoying, but so is chasing it around with the elevation and windage dials.
Move toward accuracy in small steps. If a shot lands high and left, fix the high first, then the left. Don’t try to adjust for both at once, or you may end up chasing your tail.
Once the gun’s shooting consistently on target at the shorter distance, I like to move out to the distance I expect to encounter most game animals. This varies – it’s a heck of a lot closer for squirrel than deer. I repeat the sightng-in process on the sandbags, then move to less- and less-stable shooting positions. Does everything stay reasonably accurate as I do this? If not, I go back to the sandbags and make sure something hasn’t come loose. This progression also helps me isolate errors in my shooting technique. Do I jerk the trigger more in sitting position than when standing? Am I canting the rifle funny when prone? Identifying these problems in early summer gives me a lot of time to correct them before I’m out where it counts – in the fall fields, zeroing in on the vitals of a game animal. That’s a wonderful place to be, but not one I ever want to go into without full confidence in my shooting skills.