Most common field position on big game animals?

Most common field position on animals?

  • Prone

    Votes: 72 43.9%
  • Seated

    Votes: 61 37.2%
  • Kneeling

    Votes: 14 8.5%
  • Standing

    Votes: 17 10.4%

  • Total voters
    164
Joined
Jun 12, 2019
Messages
1,668
Went on a pronghorn hunt with my father and both of us shot ours at 360 yards fully standing from my tripod (different situations/locations/days). First time either of us have shot game from the standing position. Last year I shot my coues deer at 380 yards from my tripod in the sitting position. I think my tripod is going to be the main shooting support I use from now on.
 
OP
huntnful

huntnful

WKR
Joined
Oct 10, 2020
Messages
2,107
Went on a pronghorn hunt with my father and both of us shot ours at 360 yards fully standing from my tripod (different situations/locations/days). First time either of us have shot game from the standing position. Last year I shot my coues deer at 380 yards from my tripod in the sitting position. I think my tripod is going to be the main shooting support I use from now on.
I admittedly have never shot a single shot from a tripod. I’m starting to feel like I’m missing out on something haha.
 
Joined
Jun 12, 2019
Messages
1,668
I admittedly have never shot a single shot from a tripod. I’m starting to feel like I’m missing out on something haha.
Keep in mind that I have a RRS TFCT-34L w/ Anvil head so it's an extremely beefy tripod for the primary purpose of shooting (it's like 5 pounds). I clip a RRS PT-Scout pan head into it for glassing that I can remove and replace with my rifle, via my rifle's ARCA rail, in about 5 seconds. But the tripod's main purpose is to be extremely stable for long range shooting, and it does that amazingly, but its weight reflects that. It's the next best thing to prone stability in basically any position even up to fully standing. And I'm still very much a tripod shooting novice with a hell of a lot to learn.

Would I be able to take it if I was sheep hunting? Absolutely not. I'd have to get one of their lighter versions. But for shooting/glassing that stability is amazing for the weight penalty.

Best of the West (I was as surprised as you probably are) put out a 6 part series of learning long range techniques for hunting with Phillip Velayo as a guest teacher. I'm not exaggerating when I say it's some of the best instructional content I've come across on Youtube. Tripods feature HEAVILY in it.


Edit: I also have a PDF that's too big to post here of various tips/tricks to using shooting tripods.
 
Last edited:
Joined
Apr 3, 2013
Messages
3,529
Location
Somewhere between here and there
My longest two shots in recent years were both wasted over the top of my pack. A couple others were seated over the top of my spotting scope on a tripod.

Standing/offhand are lease common. Prone does happen, but is often impractical because of vegetation.
 

JGRaider

WKR
Joined
Jul 3, 2019
Messages
1,825
Location
West Texas
99% if the time, vegetation doesn't allow for prone shooting where I hunt. Probably 75% of my big game kills are sitting, off of bipod, tripod, or some other structure (limb, tree trunk, rock, etc) for stability. The other 25% are mostly standing off of sticks.

I've killed several hundred big game animals, and way more hogs/'yotes than that. I've never once had a stop watch with me whether I'm hunting or guiding.
 
Joined
Oct 19, 2017
Messages
1,047
Shot one prone. A few standing up leaning against a rock or a tree. Majority has been off hand though
 
Joined
Jun 7, 2023
Messages
666
Location
Wyoming
Cool idea for a poll. It's interesting to see how the numbers break down. In Wyoming, nearly everything I shoot is prone. This year's deer, elk, and antelope were all prone with a Javelin bipod.

Growing up in western Washington, support was nearly always a stump or tree trunk. When I lived in the Midwest, however, you could say my tactics were a bit unorthodox.

hang.JPG
 

Shraggs

WKR
Joined
Jan 24, 2014
Messages
1,593
Location
Zeeland, MI
Cool idea for a poll. It's interesting to see how the numbers break down. In Wyoming, nearly everything I shoot is prone. This year's deer, elk, and antelope were all prone with a Javelin bipod.

Growing up in western Washington, support was nearly always a stump or tree trunk. When I lived in the Midwest, however, you could say my tactics were a bit unorthodox.

View attachment 778443
That is funny!

Hmm suggest a little more parallel torso on that position…

Love this thread too - except my last half dozen deer kills were elevated and don’t fit into ground based positions. But tree stands for legitimate long(er) shots is a positional challenge imo.
 
Top