Can you please post a link to the collapsible sticks?Each encounter seems to be different and I would suggest practicing off hand standing, sitting, kneeling and prone, then add natural supports (trees, rocks etc.) I like collapsible shooting sticks which work well for sitting, kneeling and prone if you keep them collapsed. I wear them on my belt and they are light weight and quick to deploy with practice.
Thank you, this seems something that I need to practice at the field without wasting too much time to get into the position.One of the things that made a huge impact in how I view the world and hunt is a point made in Craig Boddington's "shots at big game"... to summarize he says to always be looking for a rest where you are and look for your next rest. After reading that it changed the way I move. Take a 2 step detour to be standing next to a rest or change your angle to have a good rest ahead or stop to glass where there is a rest rather than in the open. You aren't always going to have a rest, but if you are deliberate, you increase your percentage exponentially. It just feels natural to move that way.
what is BAR?All of my country is fairly steep. Given time I sit down and brace off my knees. In the trees, I've used trees but more often than not - offhand. Usually you don't have time for anything but hand to hand combat. The really tough ones are bracing for the gusts in 30 to 40 mph winds. I've had them stand for 3-4 shots with their head between two lodgepoles. You lead on the left one and blow the hell out of the right one. You are only missing by inches but guessing the gusts are tough. Usually they will turn and I get them as they walk through a bigger hole.
A lot of practice shooting standing and sitting helps. This is the reason I went to a BAR. It wasn't the number of shots but the reaction time between them. I hunt heavy dense timber and often I only have seconds for a second shot if the first is deflected by a limb or branch. Threading the needle through dense limbs at 40 yds is a real challenge.