Neil Molendyk
AH fanatic
- Joined
- Jul 23, 2014
- Messages
- 610
- Reaction score
- 1,480
- Location
- Alberta Canada
- Media
- 22
- Member of
- SCI,CCFR
- Hunted
- Alberta Canada,Saskatchewan Canada, Namibia, Limpopo RSA, Eastern Cape RSA
Excellent practise, very similar to what I used in my African hunts. Add a couple of other practises (I used these as well and they were both beneficial). Set up your sticks on a target, then retreat a hundred yards from them, then run up to them, set up on the sticks and take your shot immediately, see how you do. Another practise is to approach your target using the Hoover Manuever as described in Kevin Robertson book, Africa Most Dangerous. I have a cattle operation so I had plenty of opportunities to try it, I would use it to approach mature cows equivalent to mature Cape Buffalo in size, approach them with my rifle on my legs, then set my sights on the intended target and dry fire. I would then get up and step out the distance to the bovine, It gave me a lot of practise on quietly approaching the animal and great for estimating distances. But it is critical to keep the firearm unloaded.I have been prepping for Africa for over one year now and will soon be off to the dark continent. Looking forward to the adventure. I was and am an experienced hunter and rifleman but was not accustomed to shooting from tri-pod sticks. I do often use a simple mono-pod for hunting squirrels with a rimfire rifle but that was not the same. While prepping for the trip, I bought a tripod to practice with and found that I can shoot better than expected from them but it is still not the solid rest I get from a bipod or rucksack rest. To build muscle memory and confidence with the sticks, I went to the range often to test ammo, dial in new optics and tune the two rifles I plan to take on this trip. A matched pair of FN Browning Hi-Power bolt action rifles in 308 and 375HH. However, one can only afford to shoot these so much. Most range sessions were 10-20rds each and then done. I practiced at 100/200/300 yds. But the range is a 1hr drive and it eats up half a day or more when I go. To keep sharp and supplement my actual rifle practice, I also began a 2nd practice regimen.
A few times each week, I get out a silenced 22lr that is of similar size and weight to my 375HH and shoot it from sticks at very small targets from a distance of about 35y. Why? Well, the 35y is the distance from my garage door to a large pile of dirt in my yard. This acts as a bullet stop even though there is not much down range beyond the dirt pile, there is a street out there and I want to keep safety in mind as well as the peace of mind of my neighbors. Using subsonic 22lr ammo, the rifle is no louder than a pellet rifle. Standing from sticks I have been shooting 1/2" diameter DumDum suckers with the 22. Normally from prone or a bench, I can hit these most shots out to 100y with this rifle. Standing from the sticks, it usually takes me 7-10 shots to break 5 DumDums in a practice session. But I am extremely close with every shot. Today, I shot 10 of them using 18rds. It only takes about 10min to get in a short practice session and each time, I can feel my marksmanship improving.
My wife asked me why use the little 22? You may be thinking the same. Well, the mechanics of hold, aim, working the bolt and pressing the trigger are all very similar to the larger rifles and while the report and the recoil are much less, the benefits are quite the same as if I was blasting thru my supply of magnum ammo. It is similar to dry firing a pistol to practice draw, presentation, sight picture and trigger pull. You don't have to use a silencer, but it helps if you have neighbors close by. My plan is that when the sticks go up, I want to be able to place and balance the rifle upon the sticks and have my sight picture within 3sec. After that, conditions such as distance, cover, awareness by my prey, etc will determine how quickly I may or may not need to send the shot. If very close and staring at you, I would say shoot NOW. If further away and/or unaware, then there is more time to fiddle with things like range finder, power zoom setting, reticle hold over if needed, etc. Most of my shooting will be between 50-350y.
If you are still learning how to shoot from sticks, you might want to try this approach.
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Another thing to consider is practising with a noise suppressor on your rifle. Here in Chinada (formerly the great Dominion of Canada) they are deemed as illegal so I had zero experience until my hunt in the Eastern Cape. I found them cumbersome when shooting off sticks, the whole balance of the rifle was off for me IMHO. Have a great hunt.