@Formidilosus
I think a lot is lost in translation/verbiage. I can certainly see where my first quick comments could be ambiguous.
Short form, written media is difficult.
And, I do tend to tilt towards breaking the "traditional" and "backward" ideas that don't have merit. Or, at least break down the nuance of the "rules."
That’s fine as long as the traditional ideas are proven wrong or not optimum, and/or the “new” idea is proven better or correct in rigerous, extensive experimentation and testing.
Interesting that you found that "mashing the cheek" is the most repeatable to get into the eyebox. I can see how that could be true, and why you would say that as a general rule.
I wonder whether that is easiest and best overall, simply because it takes longer to practice other methods and is easiest to repeat without practice.
The easy way to understand why a smashed face is more consistently repeatable (again, not saying it is or is not optimum), is because the end of the travel is the end of the travel. If my face can go down 3 inches, then all the way bottomed out is 3 inches. Versus, my face can go down 3 inches, but I try to arbitrarily stop it at some mid point- say 2 inches. In that case it difficult to be certain it is 2 inches exactly, and not 2.25” one time, and 2.5” the next, and 1.9” the next, etc. A hard brick wall is a hard brick wall.
Some might be better in the long run, but if killing stuff is the goal, why mess with what works. I get that. I messed with it, and for me, I think indexing off my jaw works well and is repeatable.
Sore. Wasn’t intent to tell that you should do something else. Just that it’s not an overall statement for most people.
I will print your targets and run the drills. I've never tested it against that. I never really cared for the hunting I started with.
The thing about that drill is it is a known standard and when ran correctly (time, target, start position, etc) is is a very quick and accurate gauge of where someone is in general rifle shooting for hunting.
Everyone should be shooting known course of fire for testing and validation that incorporate time, distance, target size, and positions that are appropriate for their event- in this case, hunting.
The hunts I've been on in AZ are glass and then get close enough to shoot from the closest ridge or finger. I spent lots of time learning how to get up off the ground and use a tripod for long range shots to keep the cactus needles and thorns out of my belly...
What you are describing is way more similar to PRS than general mountain hunting. I have stated numerous times that Coues hunting with a rifle is about the only hunting I’ve seen that somewhat mimics the type of gear and shots a PRS match generally exhibits. So it makes sense that your choices or views are tilted that way.
What I would caution is in suggesting what works for that- which is relatively to extremely specialized, as an all around equipment and personal setup suggestion. I have extensive experience in dedicated long range shooting and hunting (20-80lb rifles, from a bench, return to battery tests, multiple spotters, and sighter shots in front or behind the animal, etc), however suggesting the equipment and style that works for that for anyone not doing that specific task is a disservice to them.
I am not saying you are doing a disservice in anything you write- it’s just an example of why information may not be directly or even indirectly transferable from one task to the next.
The NE woods deer hunter when giving advice about rifles and shooting at longer ranges, almost invariably is putting it through his lens of what he knows- which when it comes to western shooting and hunting past a hundred yards, is usually about worthless. Same with a guy that is used to getting off a 4-wheeler with his 28” barreled 7mm STW, and Hubble Zeiss scope to shoot deer under a feeder on a Sendero at 400 yards in Texas- his advice for a 5lb sheep rifle and the skill to use it probably isn’t there.
I know that I should learn to hunt and "get closer" but I am too old and too far behind the curve to care about "hunting right" and eating more than the three coues deer tags I've already eaten. I want to be a straight up coues killer, and my training/view/skill set is tailored to it for sure.
As above, sure. Thats just a very narrow view of hunting and what is specific and great for that, often will be a hindrance in most other areas.
I could be backwards, cause I went with the jaw index, because I found I was pushing my cheek too hard and that caused misses shooting prone and I couldn't repeat it as well in positional shooting. And, going with a little higher rings to get my head into a neutral position, which helped improve all my shooting.
The “neutral” position thing is what I am mostly referring to about the “higher mounted scopes”. Neutral in what? The only time are head is perpendicular to the earth is standing upright. The “heads up” position is only “natural” when our torso and up is perpendicular to the ground. Otherwise our heads barrel position is more forward the closer you me chest gets to the ground. A higher mounted scope- say 2.5” above bore from prone is anything but “neutral”. It’s bordering on extreme and you have to pull your head up and back straining to do so.
The “neutral” position for the head in the prone is to just stand upright and your whole body leans all the way down into prone- head is inline with spine, which is inline all the way down. Of course that doesn’t work because you are looking in the dirt. So you raise/tilt the head the least amount required to get a sight picture. Evwry other position is somewhere between the two- standing upright and laying flat prone. However, due to recoil control, most field positions are closer to torso parallel with the ground rather than perpendicular to it.
This is why the statement that “heads up natural”, is mostly BS. It’s only neutral/natural from standing.
Maybe I have 20 other things going wrong with my shooting form, so if I changed just 5 of the 20, I could use a cheek weld and improve overall.
It may not be worth changing. But, that doesn’t mean it’s optimum for both.
This is what image seen with lots of techniques, but specifically the “head up, higher mounted scope” one. First, it really came out of the complaint that due to chassis people couldn’t get scopes mounted low. If one was shooting and paying attention to the industry/social media when this change occurred, it was obvious that it didn’t start with “after rigorous testing measuring the difference between low, medium, high, and ultra high mounted scopes, best performance across the board came from high mounted scopes”. It started with high mounted risers and mounts for AR’s- which sucked then, and suck now for shooting. People in the industry took the talking points from that and applied it to bolt guns. While there is some level of truth there, there is also a whole lot of fuckery by people too.
What mostly happens is someone goes to a class, or more often watches an “authority” that tells them-
“high mounted scopes get your head more upright, natural, neutral head, no tension, looking through the center of your eyes, and with adjustable stocks and chassis there is no reason to care how high your scope is- it’s hunting fudd stuff”. Then they put the rifle on a barricade, tripod, or just hold it up and go “yep, he’s right, more comfortable”.
No measuring, no experimentation, no comparison with live fire and time, distance, targets, and positions, etc.
My wife teaches piano, and if a student comes to her studio from a bad teacher or is self taught, they always sound worse while she trains them with proper form. They miss notes and can't keep rhythm. If she had them for a one week camp with the intent of getting them to give the best performance, I don't think she would try to change very much, and would go with whatever works for them.
Do you have any of that working into the way you are getting hunters ready to shoot and kill?
Nope. In 5 days if someone wants to learn to be better, they can nearly be rebuilt from the ground up. The amount of hunters that are so ingrained and skilled in shooting a certain way that they can’t unlearn it and relearn something else in 5 days is staggeringly small. Now, with the way every long range class I’ve been to or seen conducts and teaches? No. But in a 3-5 day period of intensive of focused training and conditioning? Without issue.