My $0.02, in order, after two years and five different rifles .22LR-6.5CM, half a dozen PRS-style matches, and a bunch of little club matches since last spring:
- Snipers Hide Online Training. $15/month, and you can stop it at any time. I am ambivalent about classes... I've had two. the first was a 1-day deal that didn't teach me anything I didn't already know from reading. The second was a 1-day, 1x1 class which concentrated on preparation for competition, after confirming my fundamentals were sound.
- 1A. A good rear bag. Game Changer, Tactical Udder, something like that.
- A ballistic app for your phone. I prefer Strelok Pro. I've tried others and definitely prefer Strelok. But that's me.
- 2A. Chronograph. You can get a Caldwell for $75 but with low cost comes correspondingly high setup and use annoyance. The preferred method is LabRadar or Magnetospeed. It's almost a religious fight over which is "best." Two good tools to do the same thing - read about them and choose the one you like.
- Good cleaning rod/jag/brushes, bore guide for that rod, and appropriate cleaning "liquids" and technique. Don't fubar your barrel with improper cleaning. Again, research the topic.
- A decent range bag. If I could, I would keep all my crap on a pallet and load it in my vehicle with a forklift. But I can't so I use a big 5.11 Gear bag to contain all my little crap. I leave everything in there - glasses, ear plugs, binoculars, all pistol mags, bipods, binoculars, you name it. It's more weight to load out, but I don't forget anything. Larger bits such as muffs, targets, paint (for steel), etc. and most of my bags stay in a large box in my SUV (which is garaged at home, not outside).
- Bringing up the distant rear are:
- Range finder. Handy, but 99% of the shooting I do is at known ranges.
- Kestrel or weather meter. A buddy of mine has a full-featured Kestrel 5700 which he just doesn't use and he loaned it to me. I found the thing to be horribly clunky to set up and unintuitive to use as a ballistics calculator compared to Strelok Pro. The weather bits are nice, but I've found data from nearby weather stations to be adequate (it's easy to convert weather stations' "sea level pressure" to station pressure using simple math with the altimeter feature on your phone). Wind speed... well, I have yet to shoot any further than 400-500 yards where the downrange wind was the same as firing line wind. You still have to use Mark I eyeball attached to central brain to evaluate downrange wind. THIS IS MY OPINION ONLY. I have friends who agree with me. I have others who find their Kestrels invaluable.
Welcome to the money pit of long range rifle!
EDIT re reloading: I've done it for over 50 years. I would just about as soon swab toilets as reload. I reload several thousand pistol rounds a year. I used to reload bottleneck rifle ammo; it is, TO ME, a royal PITA. I get 1/2-MOA groups with factory ammo, which is sufficient. With all that said, I will probably break down and start handloading my rifle ammo again, because it is indeed the way to get optimal performance from your rifle. But is it
necessary? No.