j3butch
WKR
For those of you that have taken a shot on a Dall ram…what’s the most common shooting position you’ve been offered. For context, I’ll be hunting in NWT this August and ramping up my training/readiness. Thank you for sharing.
For those of you that have taken a shot on a Dall ram…what’s the most common shooting position you’ve been offered. For context, I’ll be hunting in NWT this August and ramping up my training/readiness. Thank you for sharing.
Good stuff!To expand on that, only two rams have been prone.
The first was on a steep side hill with brush. This was in 2017 and I had thankfully put together a tripod setup to shoot off of. Without the tripod it would have been very difficult. 200 yards.
A handful of other sheep were taken off of rocky shooting positions where it was nearly impossible to have a front and back rest simultaneously and also the shooting positions were very awkward and not lined up directly behind the rifle. These ranged from 300-500+ yard shots.
My advice would be to make sure you’re comfortable shooting prone and get your DOPE dialed in. Then, practice shooting in crappy, non ideal positions. Anyone can make prone shots. Not everyone can make shots that put tension in your body in all the wrong ways, where you are having to use significant core strength to hold yourself in position on the steep slope, often shooting downhill and inputting the least amount of torque into the rifle, all the while keeping it steady and squeezing the trigger with a steady finger and not forcing the shot.
Images below are all real shooting positions where a ram died. The bottom shooting position had my body hanging on one side of a knife edge ridge, perpendicular to the shooting direction. My toes could barely hold myself up while my upper body bent forward over the rifle and taking the 30 degree downhill shot.
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A tripod that you can shoot off of prone, as well as a multitude of other positions, would be more useful in my opinion.Same boat here with my first Dall hunt coming up in August in AK... Since there appears to be a lot of prone shooting, would you bring a bipod?
I've been debating bringing mine and adding extra weight or leaving at home and just shooting off the pack. I see a mix of pictures posted here with and without.
Prone. Everything I shot in NWT was of the pack.For those of you that have taken a shot on a Dall ram…what’s the most common shooting position you’ve been offered. For context, I’ll be hunting in NWT this August and ramping up my training/readiness. Thank you for sharing.
Back pack is ideal….anything to reduce weight.Same boat here with my first Dall hunt coming up in August in AK... Since there appears to be a lot of prone shooting, would you bring a bipod?
I've been debating bringing mine and adding extra weight or leaving at home and just shooting off the pack. I see a mix of pictures posted here with and without.
To expand on that, only two rams have been prone.
The first was on a steep side hill with brush. This was in 2017 and I had thankfully put together a tripod setup to shoot off of. Without the tripod it would have been very difficult. 200 yards.
A handful of other sheep were taken off of rocky shooting positions where it was nearly impossible to have a front and back rest simultaneously and also the shooting positions were very awkward and not lined up directly behind the rifle. These ranged from 300-500+ yard shots.
My advice would be to make sure you’re comfortable shooting prone and get your DOPE dialed in. Then, practice shooting in crappy, non ideal positions. Anyone can make prone shots. Not everyone can make shots that put tension in your body in all the wrong ways, where you are having to use significant core strength to hold yourself in position on the steep slope, often shooting downhill and inputting the least amount of torque into the rifle, all the while keeping it steady and squeezing the trigger with a steady finger and not forcing the shot.
Images below are all real shooting positions where a ram died. The bottom shooting position had my body hanging on one side of a knife edge ridge, perpendicular to the shooting direction. My toes could barely hold myself up while my upper body bent forward over the rifle and taking the 30 degree downhill shot.
View attachment 709434
View attachment 709433View attachment 709432
View attachment 709435