TradLife406
WKR
I have zero experience shooting in the mountains. I'm halfway decent on the prairie. But I know that goes out the window when it comes to reading thermals and mountain wind.
With the elk tag I've got I'm trying to scout about every weekend I can. Which cuts into range time. I don't want to go drive to a different mountain range just to shoot. Especially with the price of gas.
Any issue with packing a rifle (obviously suppressed) and shooting while waiting for the elk to appear? Or midday when things are slow?
Only issue I can see is the unit gets a ton of recreational use. So I'd have to be damn sure I'm not going to accidentally ground check some world class cougar in yoga pants. But on the plus side the elk and deer are used to humans. Just wondering if firing off a bunch of rounds will kill my glassing session.
I'll be buying a tikka 223 in a couple of weeks. But I've also got other rifles to train with until then. Maybe even just taking the 22 trainer and work on different positions with sub sonics?
I did take the 22 a few weeks ago. Some hikers came in from behind me and they were a little freaked out I was shooting. They asked what I was shooting at. Ha just rocks

Any drills or things to work on specifically? I've got a set of Wiser trekking poles connector thingers coming. So I'm planning on training a lot with the poles. I know I need to break the habit of always defaulting to a tripod. And I know I need to work on freehand shooting.
Maybe [mention]Formidilosus [/mention] has some advice?
With the elk tag I've got I'm trying to scout about every weekend I can. Which cuts into range time. I don't want to go drive to a different mountain range just to shoot. Especially with the price of gas.
Any issue with packing a rifle (obviously suppressed) and shooting while waiting for the elk to appear? Or midday when things are slow?
Only issue I can see is the unit gets a ton of recreational use. So I'd have to be damn sure I'm not going to accidentally ground check some world class cougar in yoga pants. But on the plus side the elk and deer are used to humans. Just wondering if firing off a bunch of rounds will kill my glassing session.
I'll be buying a tikka 223 in a couple of weeks. But I've also got other rifles to train with until then. Maybe even just taking the 22 trainer and work on different positions with sub sonics?
I did take the 22 a few weeks ago. Some hikers came in from behind me and they were a little freaked out I was shooting. They asked what I was shooting at. Ha just rocks


Any drills or things to work on specifically? I've got a set of Wiser trekking poles connector thingers coming. So I'm planning on training a lot with the poles. I know I need to break the habit of always defaulting to a tripod. And I know I need to work on freehand shooting.
Maybe [mention]Formidilosus [/mention] has some advice?