Most common range and shooting positions for blacktail

. Do any of you know of any local shooting courses you’d recommend?

Just go shoot....Offhand. Rockpit...chase every shotgun shell, clay chips etc you see outta sight with a 22.

Slipping around old clearcuts/rimrock killing squirrels and rocks with your hunting guns isnt a bad way to get freshened up either.

Also getting a gun up, on target, and a round off in a timely matter is just as important to practice IMO
 
Practice shooting quick off hand shots and also some long range shots. Since you are mostly confined to the logging roads I feel you either get really close quick shots or really long shots canyon to canyon.
 
Not Washington but Northern California. I hunt on timber land that I work on and high country wilderness. My timberland bucks have been 30-150 offhand or a hasty natural rest (tree, rock etc) and our wilderness bucks have been 250-400 but it’s possible to get closer. Growing up shooting ground squirrels with a 22 was probably my biggest skill builder for being able to get quick offhand shots off and quickly getting into stable positions for longer shots.
 
It’s amazing how much faster my friends and I are at getting ready compared to people who didn’t grow up burning bricks of 22. It’s still my favorite spring activity. Turkeys or trout in the morning and ground squirrels after lunch.

Ive a few old clear cuts with old log decks and some rimrock that I harass the squirrels in. Its not the action you get in an alfalfa field but I have a ball. Damn good practice, both for rifle and pistol.
 
It’s amazing how much faster my friends and I are at getting ready compared to people who didn’t grow up burning bricks of 22. It’s still my favorite spring activity. Turkeys or trout in the morning and ground squirrels after lunch.
Seriously my GF and I have gone through 1000rds of .22 one morning on an alfalfa field. Nothing has helped my shooting more.
 
yes, finding them is the key. Stay focused, they have a way of showing up right when you space out.
I swear right when you loose focus is when you hook the biggest fish or see that big buck.

This fall I ran right into a bear when I wasn't paying attention. The thing was no more than 10 feet away. We both looked at eachother suprised and the thing took off.
 
After living in Western Oregon for five years & watching the general rifle season, I’d say the most common position is out the window of a truck @ 200 yards. Practice rolling the window up or down to rest your rifle. They actually make a foam window rest.

Fish and Game puts life-like targets up on busy roads for people to practice before daylight and after dark :)

Joking aside, most of the shots we took were 2-4 hundred yards across clearcuts. I’m sure further is possible, but they are tough to see. Also be prepared for still hunting in the timber and re-prod… close quick, off hand shots.


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