When you first get into this precision sport, you never really know what to expect—what kind of shot groups you should have or at what distance. There are no manuals, no absolute truths. You can buy the most accurate rifle on the market and expect to shoot hole-in-hole at 50 meters, but the reality is quite different... and then you buy another rifle, and another, and another… always chasing the dream of 10 shots landing in the same hole.
It's not a sport for people with OCD… or maybe it is, but you'll end up frustrated and spending a lot of money trying to achieve something that never quite arrives: absolute precision and going home with a satisfied look on your face. And if you're lucky, you come back the next day, do the exact same thing, and your groups have opened up… it’s the moderator, or the bad chemistry between the barrel and the pellet, like a marriage gone wrong.
In the end, this is a sport, a very entertaining hobby—but a very, very expensive one. And after a few months into it, learning a lot, I still don’t really know what a good group is at 25, 50, or 100 meters. And there's always something to blame when the group opens up… the wind, the rest, humidity, the moderator, the regulator pressure, the weather…
Maybe that's the beauty of this hobby—its a beauty "imperfect perfection".
It's not a sport for people with OCD… or maybe it is, but you'll end up frustrated and spending a lot of money trying to achieve something that never quite arrives: absolute precision and going home with a satisfied look on your face. And if you're lucky, you come back the next day, do the exact same thing, and your groups have opened up… it’s the moderator, or the bad chemistry between the barrel and the pellet, like a marriage gone wrong.
In the end, this is a sport, a very entertaining hobby—but a very, very expensive one. And after a few months into it, learning a lot, I still don’t really know what a good group is at 25, 50, or 100 meters. And there's always something to blame when the group opens up… the wind, the rest, humidity, the moderator, the regulator pressure, the weather…
Maybe that's the beauty of this hobby—its a beauty "imperfect perfection".