Cross-posted from the S2HU thread, much of this has already been summarized by Form:
"Course was great, shot a lot, learned even more, and ate some delicious food! It was interesting to couple the course with several days of subzero temps and see how equipment, gear, and people did with the cold.
CLOTHING: Puff suits that are easy to access were really helpful, I think only two people there had warm feet the subzero days and they were wearing mukluks, everyone else had more traditional hunting boots. During the subzero days the instructors were kind enough to let us wear thin gloves while shooting, and it was interesting to see how it affected everyone's shooting just having that thin layer between you and the rifle. Leather shined compared to wool gloves for grip on the rifles. Some kind of large over-mitt to put gloved hands in to warm up when not shooting was quite helpful. Someone had a pair of handmade beaver mittens that looked incredibly warm, but no one else could wear them since they were made for her tiny hands.
The rewarming drill really showed us how our layers performed. I had merino base layers and a grid fleece midlayer on when I went in the water and couldn't dry them out by the four hour mark. I will definitely reevaluate my base layers and midlayers after that.
EQUIPMENT: Tikkas did fantastic in the snow firing thousands of rounds with minimal no issues as compared to a couple R700's that couldn't get more than two or a few rounds before having a malfunction. I was running some book max 243 loads without issue until we starting shooting in the snow. With the addition of a little water on rounds, in the action, chamber, etc I would occasionally blow primers which led to the bolt not seating or extracting. So moving forwards I'll stop "getting cute" with my loads and back them off a grain or two.
I had the opportunity to use a rokstok, and it ruined all other rifle stocks for me...
I hadn't paid much attention to suppressor tone until listening to the first UM prototype and all the other cans on the line. Some cans have a far more noticeable "ting", like a tuning fork, and others have less. I'd have to test it, but it also seemed like wrapped cans had less of that ting? From a tone standpoint, the UM prototype was more pleasant to listen to 200 shots a day than others. However, wrapped cans do not warm your frozen fingers up as well as unwrapped after 10 rounds...
Always tape your muzzle!
A rifle got knocked over and the SWFA gen 2 3-15 fell elevation turret down onto a concrete floor and bent the turret. After hitting the turret straight with a hammer and regluing the lower turret portion back on, we shot it and it held zero.
Generous eye relief on spotters is always nice, but is critical and far more important than glass quality when finding the target and spotting for your shooter under time.
We had some battery issues with electronics on the cold, which highlighted the importance of mechanical backups.
Some notes on making sure you equipment is set up properly at home: Someone brought a Tikka that didn't have the recoil lug properly set in the stock, and I used someone's tripod that didn't have a head loctited onto the tripod and it kept coming loose during timed shooting which was fun. A left handed guy brought a left handed rifle, and it wasn't until the second to last day it came out that he was actually right-eye dominant... That being said, he was shooting quite well for using the wrong eye the entire week!"
I forgot a couple things in my original S2HU post:
Good/poor vehicle maintenance and preparedness is highlighted in winter. A rental vehicle that was driven from the airport repeatedly had to be jump started and had no emergency equipment inside such as jumper cables, jump box, tow rope, etc. This is not a reflection on the user as it was a rental, but was a good lesson regardless.
Skis/snowshoes are orders of magnitude better than postholing. Skis are far more efficient than snowshoes. However, we did come across one of the unique situations where skis did not excel: a narrow logging road with several days of foot traffic to pack down the snow that melted and refroze into a slick track by dusk. That snow condition made it difficult to descend on skis like the hok/taos with a loaded pack without picking up too much speed, and turning to bleed off speed was made more difficult by the toe-only bindings, barefoot-style boots (no ankle control), and icy crust on the virgin snow on either edge of the logging road. I think it is possible to descend easily in those conditions with more practice, and am determined to work on that myself.