603Country
New member
I'm firmly with JerryM. I don't care about somebody else's accuracy with my rifle (rifles) and I could care less what a mechanical device can do with my rifle. I only care about my ability to shoot the rifle, and the place I always start with a rifle is shooting groups. Gotta get the scope set up right and I need to see what powder/bullet combo works best and then find out what the rifle (and I) are capable of. Once I have it all set up, then I'm ready to go.
I think that it's a bad idea to even suggest to new hunters that might be reading these comments that a fellow doesn't need to shoot groups with his rifle. A misinformed fellow might just get his rifle boresighted and go to the woods. Once the rifle and scope and load are chosen, shooting groups is called practice. And yes, practice can include offhand and prone and seated, but it's best starting from a bench. And next season, when you want to check the sights on your favorite hunting rifle, how are you gonna do that? Shooting offhand just isn't going to tell you what you need to know about where the rifle is shooting. Again...a fellow has to start somewhere, and to me that's shooting groups from the bench.
It was a lame statement to say that ignoring groups is acceptable, and defending it isn't going to make it right today or tomorrow or the day before the season starts. It is however, Ok to say that shooting groups isn't the only practice a fellow needs to do.
I think that it's a bad idea to even suggest to new hunters that might be reading these comments that a fellow doesn't need to shoot groups with his rifle. A misinformed fellow might just get his rifle boresighted and go to the woods. Once the rifle and scope and load are chosen, shooting groups is called practice. And yes, practice can include offhand and prone and seated, but it's best starting from a bench. And next season, when you want to check the sights on your favorite hunting rifle, how are you gonna do that? Shooting offhand just isn't going to tell you what you need to know about where the rifle is shooting. Again...a fellow has to start somewhere, and to me that's shooting groups from the bench.
It was a lame statement to say that ignoring groups is acceptable, and defending it isn't going to make it right today or tomorrow or the day before the season starts. It is however, Ok to say that shooting groups isn't the only practice a fellow needs to do.