sometimes more than others .. theres nothing like that one-shot shutdown, especially if theres alittle real distance involved ..
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Are you talking about offhand ? If so yes practice can surely help. If supported ( bench, tripod ) I think you are what you are.My desire to be better lead me to competition. It was a steep learning curve to start, with hours of weekly practice to get competent. Once you know what to do to be successful, you don't have to put 100 rounds down range daily. 10-20 deliberate shots a day will keep you sharp. If you can shoot more than that and maintain proper form, feel free. Once you notice fatigue, improper form or poi change, put down the gun. You don't want to develop poor form shooting fatigued when it's not necessary.
I shoot Field Target, world class. Mostly it's shooting off the knee, seated. There are also kneeling, and standing lanes. During the late fall and winter, I shoot 50 foot small bore(22rf). For the prone portion I shoot off the knee, otherwise it's two cards standing(old man league). After a late start, I was able to achieve a 280/300 for my best single night score this past season, and made the scoring line for all but the first match attended. I was invited to shoot 200yd center fire this month(standing, unsupported) but my schedule didn't allow it.Are you talking about offhand ? If so yes practice can surely help. If supported ( bench, tripod ) I think you are what you are.
Bench, f-class prone 300 & 1000 yards with centerfire reloading skills, wind. 22lr bench has been ahhh well I’ll say it easy haaa.
Now put all that into competing in NRA rimfire silhouette and my bench accuracy is out the window I suck. Did it for about 5 years straight. Actually the first time I shot as a guest I hit 26 ( out of 40 ) thought this will be fun. I’ve equaled but never bettered. So you guys that can shoot offhand find a local match and give it a shot. An Airgun that can hit at 100 yards could
compete for fun, I don’t know about legality as far as scores counting.
I have done my share of shooting like that. I'll be 80 in a few months and find that style more convenient and rewarding than setting up my bench with front rest and rear bag. I often shoot a pistol the same way. My chair is not the most conducive to shooting small groups as it has a slight rocking motion but it's still fun that way.I have a very unorthadox shooting style....Simply sitting in a comfortable chairView attachment 560342View attachment 560344View attachment 560343 left arm braced on my knee....Comfortable for me and I can shoot accurately to my satisifaction...most times. Bullpups and short carbines and compacts work best for me. My Bobcat and four Veterans are my favorites. Been shooting this style since 2010....started with a springer and lots of pratice. I can usually hold my groups to around .5" at 50 yds....wind permitting...I've been trying to arrange a "shooting session" with an AGN member to wittness some of my groups...difficult to set up, so far, but still trying. This 5 shot group was at a measured 47.5 yards with a Taipan Veteran compact .22 with JTS 18 grain pellets from my chair...been wowed by this compact with a 350mm barrel! Pushes the JTS 18s at 840fps. I'm older too just turned 70 but still passinate about printing small groups.
I hear you, I shot competition many years back and honestly it was not what I would call fun. I enjoyed and still enjoy shooting, anything, but did not care for the pressure and stress. My soda cans and swinger targets are much more fun than paper, who cares for tiny groups, there is something very satisfying about seeing the target jump or move.Anytime I get a chance to send a few rounds downrange? I’m happy and distracted from the day to day grind. The results on paper, critters or inanimate objects are irrelevant to my amateur backyard plinker status… So yes, I am very happy with the way my guns shoot…