I (probably like many here) shoot on public land, in my case - in the middle of the forests of Southern Oregon; which categorically means lots and lots of topographical change within the confines of a small physical area.
These topo features act like a funnel, except it is really more like 5 different funnels all dumping out in the flite path. Any shift in wind at the big end of any one the funnels is amplified at the other end.
Here is an example from yesterday:
Yesterday I was shooting at @ 1,540 yrds. Wind was .25 to 2.75 MILs, and intra 5 shot string wind holds could change by as much as 1.5 MILs.
I typically shoot by myself.
How can I better learn to pick up subtle wind changes which can make a big shift at the target.
** I have a wind meter, I shoot with a suppressor - so I can hear the wind changes. What is frustrating is the 1/2 MIL + shifts that happen intra string when I can not feel, see, or hear any difference at the shooting position. While I can look through my spotter 2/3s of the way down range between each shot - by the time I get back to my rifle optic and ready to fire a subtle change can occur.
Sadly at these distances a lot of my hits come from bracketing the wind with my rounds, but the shifts come fast and at these distances a very small change in wind means more than the width of my target (17.75").
Thanks in advance for thoughts and tips on being able to recognize these subtle shifts.
Good luck
These topo features act like a funnel, except it is really more like 5 different funnels all dumping out in the flite path. Any shift in wind at the big end of any one the funnels is amplified at the other end.
Here is an example from yesterday:
Yesterday I was shooting at @ 1,540 yrds. Wind was .25 to 2.75 MILs, and intra 5 shot string wind holds could change by as much as 1.5 MILs.
I typically shoot by myself.
How can I better learn to pick up subtle wind changes which can make a big shift at the target.
** I have a wind meter, I shoot with a suppressor - so I can hear the wind changes. What is frustrating is the 1/2 MIL + shifts that happen intra string when I can not feel, see, or hear any difference at the shooting position. While I can look through my spotter 2/3s of the way down range between each shot - by the time I get back to my rifle optic and ready to fire a subtle change can occur.
Sadly at these distances a lot of my hits come from bracketing the wind with my rounds, but the shifts come fast and at these distances a very small change in wind means more than the width of my target (17.75").
Thanks in advance for thoughts and tips on being able to recognize these subtle shifts.
Good luck