S2H Winter Rifle Course Observations/lessons

Form, is there a liner glove, mitt that you would recommend. I have always struggled with my fingers, in fact often times it’s my limiting factor. I have used the surplus wool liner gloves for a long time and this year tried the Black Ovis down over mitts. They helped but I don’t think I would’ve been comfortable in this class with that setup.
My fingers are what concern me most when I consider trips in the conditions of this class.


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Well, there’s a few.


For the general purpose glove- Hestra Deerskin Wool Tricot, or a well fitted pair of deerskin or sheepskin work gloves.
For the mitts, I have used nothing that has worked better than these this past week-

IMG_5299.jpeg


Felt wool liner-
IMG_5300.jpeg

They’re heavier than down mitts, but they are durable and kept my hands perfectly comfortable in -15° F. Leather palm, fleece back hand for wiping your nose, the wool liner breathes and dries well, and the long gauntlets keep snow out and insulate your forearm- which helps greatly with bloodflow to the hands. I will be using these for all cold weather activities.
 
Alittle late but adding this from the original S2H thread.


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Shoot2Hunt University​

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S2H Winter University

I'll drop this here so all the S2H U stuff is in one thread.

First, we survived!

We got a good dose of winter for the Winter U.
It was 5-10 below zero several days with light snow during the day. We had some heavy snow at night and one night was -25! We did some inside learning that morning!
Everyone did great staying warm and focused on shooting though. After a few days it warmed up to freezing and then sunny and 45 which was really nice for snowshoeing/ skiing up in the hills to shoot.

As far as students, people from all over the country came with skills just as varied. One guy bought his first two rifles for the class. While even very experienced shooters will learn to improve, brand new shooters will skip YEARS of frustration and go straight to success without ingraining bad habits.
It was really cool to see everyone there put ego aside in order to have an open mind and learn regardless of previous skill and experience. Two students were returning students and it showed. Both said it was great doing it again. Like watching a movie twice, you pick up things missed the first time. Overall it was a good group of chill people and we all had a good time.

Form and the other instructor were great. The amount of experience they have is evident immediately. They both take the time to help everyone to make sure everyone is progressing to the next exercise.

The food and accommodations were great. Plenty of amazing food so we could keep the calories up and stay warm.

The fun stuff...
Form had a couple Marshall's for testing, the first UM suppressor and the RokStok Lite proof of concept rifle. Any attempt to get photos resulted in blurred images so Form can elaborate when appropriate.

I think all the new students were shooting RSS 223's with SWFA's or Mavin 1.2's. There were a few small problems, pretty much the usual for having that many rifles firing that many rounds.

I built a RSS 223 to try all the things. no cleaning, quick load dev, UM products, SWFA's, RokStok and other things.
on the coldest morning my fingerprints were freezing on my ammo as I loaded mags. That little bit of frost accumulated around the lugs causing hard extraction after several mags. Just pulling the bolt and wiping the lugs/bolt clean fixed it.
The factory mags gave me intermittent feeding issues, I was able to use a Mamba Mag after the first day which never gave me any problems.
I also swapped the trigger spring for the lighter one which resulted in a AD on the second to last day. fortunately it was the third round as I closed the bolt on a target. I'll be switching back to the factory spring before using it again.
I chose Hornady 73 ELDM's after testing a few bullets and powders. The 77TMK shot slightly better but was significantly more expensive since I bought 2k bullets and I want to save the TMK's for hunting.

I almost didn't go. My first inclination was to work on everything I have to do. I'm glad I decided to go knowing I would be challenged and become a better shooter.
I'm a pretty proficient shooter but as we went through the fundamentals, my groups opened up. I felt it was in my grip but couldn't figure out exactly what. They helped me figure it out and my groups immediately got even tighter than before.
As the exercises progress, consistency is built through repetition. Then repetition builds efficiency and doing things quickly. Part of the field exercises is just getting your mind to think about how to use your gear and/or surroundings to build the position you need for a good shot.

By the end, every person put bullets on target to 750 yards and was quickly smashing things from 400-550yds.

I've been in construction my whole life so feet and inches make sense to me. Out of that I was a MOA guy up until I heard Form explain Mils, quick drop and wind brackets. Mils is so much easier and faster there is literally no reason to use moa. Don't be dumb, just use mils!

To top it off, we did the re-warming drill on the last night. It wasn't nearly as bad as I thought it would be. It was a valuable experience though. Knowing how to handle the situation ahead of time if it happens might just save your life or someone you're with.

Overall, I can HIGHLY recommend any of the S2H courses for any shooter of any skill level who truly wants to get better.

Invest in yourself!

You are part of your rifle system!

Learn how to maximize your complete system!!

I plan on taking the extended range course as soon as I can.
 
Well, there’s a few.


For the general purpose glove- Hestra Deerskin Wool Tricot, or a well fitted pair of deerskin or sheepskin work gloves.
For the mitts, I have used nothing that has worked better than these this past week-

View attachment 846197


Felt wool liner-
View attachment 846198

They’re heavier than down mitts, but they are durable and kept my hands perfectly comfortable in -15° F. Leather palm, fleece back hand for wiping your nose, the wool liner breathes and dries well, and the long gauntlets keep snow out and insulate your forearm- which helps greatly with bloodflow to the hands. I will be using these for all cold weather activities.
Have you done a safety manipulation vid or post somewhere ? Or maybe it could be a form Friday topic if ymthats still a thing. Looks like that is something you are rly diligent and something i need to get better at as well as pass on to my 4 yo as we get started with bolt actions. Or maybe I'm over thinking it and it's as simple as bolt closed safety on until time to shoot. Or maybe there's some drills you do too (with the blister as evidence)
 
Have you done a safety manipulation vid or post somewhere ? Or maybe it could be a form Friday topic if ymthats still a thing. Looks like that is something you are rly diligent and something i need to get better at as well as pass on to my 4 yo as we get started with bolt actions. Or maybe I'm over thinking it and it's as simple as bolt closed safety on until time to shoot. Or maybe there's some drills you do too (with the blister as evidence)
You're over thinking it and it's that simple. ;)

You could do something as simple as when zeroing, manipulate the safety between each shot.
 
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