PanhandlePilgrim
Lil-Rokslider
- Joined
- Feb 22, 2018
- Messages
- 263
I thought that white truck looked familiar. HahaCouple of uncivilized fellas in that firing line...just sayin’.
I thought that white truck looked familiar. HahaCouple of uncivilized fellas in that firing line...just sayin’.
A lot of practical tips on Nathan's website I reckon! Do you leave the bipod attached or only attach it in the right terrain?I practice off a pack and that is what I use hunting. I have a lightweight spartan carbon bipod, but often using it in grass, etc. it's not high enough and too slow to setup on deer moving off quickly.
Like you, shooting off a pack is much faster. Sitting I do the same keeping the pack vertical. Much faster than sticks and just as accurate. I practice out to 800m but furthest off a pack I've shot is maybe 500m on a deer.
Nathan Foster uses a shooting position where your non shooting hand is "overhand scope" hold. Basically, place your non trigger hand on top of the scope with slight down pressure to control recoil. Make sure barrel is free of touching the pack. This can make good groups vs. free recoil off a pack.
This.There are many good and not so good ways to shoot off a pack - not to mention what’s in the pack and how it’s stuffed together. A springy light weight roundish or lumpy pack is the worst - it moves with the slightest movement and you’d be better off resting your gun on an empty one gallon milk jug.
A comment -
I think that I can get the Spartan bipod on the rifle and into shooting position as fast or faster than just getting my pack off. And I think more stealthily. It rides in my chest purse.
That stated, I think that I can make rest adjustments with the pack faster once into shooting position, if that makes sense. The bipod is slower to adjust, if needed.
I like having both options.
You want to use the overhand with slight pressure to keep the forend stable if you are not able to hold it. It's just there to give a second point of contact vs. allowing the forend to bounce off the pack. I put my hand just in front of the turret because I guess I'm superstitious about potential pressure on the bell of the optic throwing things off. However I only shoot NF scopes so the tubes are pretty thick and unlikely to flex much unless you are gorilla gripping it.Honestly I’ve never even tried holding down on the scope - it probably Is something worth experimenting with. I’ve had a shot resting the rifle in a narrow gap and there wasn’t a great way to hold the forend. A scope would have to be pretty stiff or the point of aim would definitely move.
The Spartan is very fast being a magnetic mount you just slip it into. I have the Pro Hunt Tac version with rapid adjusters. The older version with spin locks was much slower. I carry it in my cargo pocket if I need it fast, but more and more never bring it out and now just forget to bring it as often as I remember and don't miss it much.A lot of practical tips on Nathan's website I reckon! Do you leave the bipod attached or only attach it in the right terrain?
I know quite a few guides here in New Zealand and hear a bunch of stories of hunters.The biggest cock ups are the guys trying to use loads of gear and blow the shot.One scenario/target was a 240 yard 12”x15” target in a gully- two people hit it in 40 seconds. Most misses or failures were due to taking an unbelievably long time to “setup” or having too much crap causing confusion in a simple task. That’s bad. Really bad, especially because everyone there except one or two were “experienced” and accomplished hunters. There is a fundamental flaw for nearly everyone in how they approach shooting. It’s present across nearly all the precision fields- hunting, PRS, etc. That flaw is getting ingrained deeper and deeper due to marketing and influence. It’s the belief that you can buy your way out of a problem by removing the human, and that your current problem can be solved with “this” gadget.
What is your go to for seated height shooting? Seems that scenario pops up quite a bit when hunting - not a good enough angle or vegetation in the way for prone.No doubt. There is nothing wrong with bipods, tripods, or any of it. They are all just a tool laying there. It’s the manner in which they are integrated into our lives that cause problems.
As an example: that picture that Ryan showed had half the people starting that week believing with all of their heart that they needed a bipod or tripod to hit a target. So much so that they were dependent on it. In going through 5 scenarios that we had on animals last year and having them shoot them blind as a “pre test”, we had Ryan go 3 for 5, and I believe two other RS’ers go 2 for 5. Everyone else was either 1 for 5 or 0 for 5.
One scenario/target was a 240 yard 12”x15” target in a gully- two people hit it in 40 seconds. Most misses or failures were due to taking an unbelievably long time to “setup” or having too much crap causing confusion in a simple task. That’s bad. Really bad, especially because everyone there except one or two were “experienced” and accomplished hunters. There is a fundamental flaw for nearly everyone in how they approach shooting. It’s present across nearly all the precision fields- hunting, PRS, etc. That flaw is getting ingrained deeper and deeper due to marketing and influence. It’s the belief that you can buy your way out of a problem by removing the human, and that your current problem can be solved with “this” gadget.
I would bet money I shoot as many, or more rounds from bipod equipped rifles per year than anyone on this board. I don’t mean that crappy- just that I am not “railing against” something I don’t use. I also shoot thousands of rounds a year from tripods. So why am I not using them regularly for hunting? It isn’t ego or because I like or dislike anything. It’s because they aren’t needed, and their use comes at a cost for things that are. Once the decision to shoot has been made, it’s about killing that animal as cleanly and quickly as possible. Anything that is not required to do so, is just a distraction from the real event.
The base idea for killing skillfully in the largest possible amount of scenarios- is that simple is better all else being equal. That means that if I can do a task with a sufficient outcome in two different ways, the simpler way will, across time and space, have a higher success rate. If a task can be accomplished in two different ways, with one way requiring less “stuff”, than it will, across time and space, have a higher success rate than the way that requires more “stuff”.
I am not anti gear- I am anti unneeded bullshit. I can shoot to sub 1.5 MOA regardless of conditions with a rifle using a pack as a rest (it is no better with a bipod, and in fact vertical errors tend to be more with one), and so can others when trained and practiced.
Being that when hunting I have a pack with me, and it’s nearly a sin to ever leave your pack behind, immediately that frees me from one more piece of equipment. So I have no broad spectrum loss in capability with pack versus bipod, I get to remove one piece of equipment that is now extraneous, which means I both free my mind up from a possible decision and I reduce some weight carried, and I save time attaching it, and I can now spend that $100-$300 on something that actually matters… potentially.
It isn’t just me either. I know of two people in dozens that have learned to correctly or optimally use a pack as the people from the picture did, that still generally use a bipod. In some cases bipods/tripods/whatever make a lot of sense. In a lot of cases, most especially spot and stalk mountain hunting, they generally don’t. At least not as a first choice option.
Mods, please change @BAKPAKR's name to "SilverFoxxyMcDreamy."Look at all that gray hair.
Would it be too much of a bother to ask for a consolidated thread/post with photos of field shooting positions/tips for "tightening them up", or is there a reference to point to? Big ask I know. The practice vs equipment thread has some if I remember correctly and I've watched the THLR videos (bipod mostly). For example, prone off pack I've found I can spot shots better if I keep some pressure on top of scope vs rifle resting on pack with left hand at rear of the stock/rear rest, but hit rate is better with the latter. Really I should spring for a course and get direct feedback.No doubt. There is nothing wrong with bipods, tripods, or any of it. They are all just a tool laying there. It’s the manner in which they are integrated into our lives that cause problems.
As an example: that picture that Ryan showed had half the people starting that week believing with all of their heart that they needed a bipod or tripod to hit a target. So much so that they were dependent on it. In going through 5 scenarios that we had on animals last year and having them shoot them blind as a “pre test”, we had Ryan go 3 for 5, and I believe two other RS’ers go 2 for 5. Everyone else was either 1 for 5 or 0 for 5.
One scenario/target was a 240 yard 12”x15” target in a gully- two people hit it in 40 seconds. Most misses or failures were due to taking an unbelievably long time to “setup” or having too much crap causing confusion in a simple task. That’s bad. Really bad, especially because everyone there except one or two were “experienced” and accomplished hunters. There is a fundamental flaw for nearly everyone in how they approach shooting. It’s present across nearly all the precision fields- hunting, PRS, etc. That flaw is getting ingrained deeper and deeper due to marketing and influence. It’s the belief that you can buy your way out of a problem by removing the human, and that your current problem can be solved with “this” gadget.
I would bet money I shoot as many, or more rounds from bipod equipped rifles per year than anyone on this board. I don’t mean that crappy- just that I am not “railing against” something I don’t use. I also shoot thousands of rounds a year from tripods. So why am I not using them regularly for hunting? It isn’t ego or because I like or dislike anything. It’s because they aren’t needed, and their use comes at a cost for things that are. Once the decision to shoot has been made, it’s about killing that animal as cleanly and quickly as possible. Anything that is not required to do so, is just a distraction from the real event.
The base idea for killing skillfully in the largest possible amount of scenarios- is that simple is better all else being equal. That means that if I can do a task with a sufficient outcome in two different ways, the simpler way will, across time and space, have a higher success rate. If a task can be accomplished in two different ways, with one way requiring less “stuff”, than it will, across time and space, have a higher success rate than the way that requires more “stuff”.
I am not anti gear- I am anti unneeded bullshit. I can shoot to sub 1.5 MOA regardless of conditions with a rifle using a pack as a rest (it is no better with a bipod, and in fact vertical errors tend to be more with one), and so can others when trained and practiced.
Being that when hunting I have a pack with me, and it’s nearly a sin to ever leave your pack behind, immediately that frees me from one more piece of equipment. So I have no broad spectrum loss in capability with pack versus bipod, I get to remove one piece of equipment that is now extraneous, which means I both free my mind up from a possible decision and I reduce some weight carried, and I save time attaching it, and I can now spend that $100-$300 on something that actually matters… potentially.
It isn’t just me either. I know of two people in dozens that have learned to correctly or optimally use a pack as the people from the picture did, that still generally use a bipod. In some cases bipods/tripods/whatever make a lot of sense. In a lot of cases, most especially spot and stalk mountain hunting, they generally don’t. At least not as a first choice option.
No doubt. There is nothing wrong with bipods, tripods, or any of it. They are all just a tool laying there. It’s the manner in which they are integrated into our lives that cause problems.
As an example: that picture that Ryan showed had half the people starting that week believing with all of their heart that they needed a bipod or tripod to hit a target. So much so that they were dependent on it. In going through 5 scenarios that we had on animals last year and having them shoot them blind as a “pre test”, we had Ryan go 3 for 5, and I believe two other RS’ers go 2 for 5. Everyone else was either 1 for 5 or 0 for 5.
One scenario/target was a 240 yard 12”x15” target in a gully- two people hit it in 40 seconds. Most misses or failures were due to taking an unbelievably long time to “setup” or having too much crap causing confusion in a simple task. That’s bad. Really bad, especially because everyone there except one or two were “experienced” and accomplished hunters. There is a fundamental flaw for nearly everyone in how they approach shooting. It’s present across nearly all the precision fields- hunting, PRS, etc. That flaw is getting ingrained deeper and deeper due to marketing and influence. It’s the belief that you can buy your way out of a problem by removing the human, and that your current problem can be solved with “this” gadget.
I would bet money I shoot as many, or more rounds from bipod equipped rifles per year than anyone on this board. I don’t mean that crappy- just that I am not “railing against” something I don’t use. I also shoot thousands of rounds a year from tripods. So why am I not using them regularly for hunting? It isn’t ego or because I like or dislike anything. It’s because they aren’t needed, and their use comes at a cost for things that are. Once the decision to shoot has been made, it’s about killing that animal as cleanly and quickly as possible. Anything that is not required to do so, is just a distraction from the real event.
The base idea for killing skillfully in the largest possible amount of scenarios- is that simple is better all else being equal. That means that if I can do a task with a sufficient outcome in two different ways, the simpler way will, across time and space, have a higher success rate. If a task can be accomplished in two different ways, with one way requiring less “stuff”, than it will, across time and space, have a higher success rate than the way that requires more “stuff”.
I am not anti gear- I am anti unneeded bullshit. I can shoot to sub 1.5 MOA regardless of conditions with a rifle using a pack as a rest (it is no better with a bipod, and in fact vertical errors tend to be more with one), and so can others when trained and practiced.
Being that when hunting I have a pack with me, and it’s nearly a sin to ever leave your pack behind, immediately that frees me from one more piece of equipment. So I have no broad spectrum loss in capability with pack versus bipod, I get to remove one piece of equipment that is now extraneous, which means I both free my mind up from a possible decision and I reduce some weight carried, and I save time attaching it, and I can now spend that $100-$300 on something that actually matters… potentially.
It isn’t just me either. I know of two people in dozens that have learned to correctly or optimally use a pack as the people from the picture did, that still generally use a bipod. In some cases bipods/tripods/whatever make a lot of sense. In a lot of cases, most especially spot and stalk mountain hunting, they generally don’t. At least not as a first choice option.
Are you teaching them to lay the pack sideways instead of long ways? I made the switch to long ways about 10 years ago now after learning how to better shoot long range off the hood of vehicles (ATV/Jeep) and for me, it's a night and day difference.