I don't have to win to have fun. In fact, I have only won once, and that was a win in the MK division, and I am still having a blast. Do I wish I won more? You bet! It helps motivate me. But I am shooting for fun and to improve.
I shoot F Class because I can't see iron sights anymore. Astigmatism, floaters the size of the Empire State Building, and now cataracts. Fuck me.
I started out with a .300WSM I got second hand but new, and shot off a Harris bipod and no rear bag. I only succumbed to rear bagness about a year and a half ago, but am still using Harris bipods on FO and FTR guns. I use a brick bag, not a bunny-eared board-mounted wonder bag. This is the way I want to do it, and my scores are continually improving. At some point I will probably decide to go Sinclair bipod and bunny bag, which seems to me to mostly reduce the game to ammo and wind reading. In fact, had I done this right up front, I could probably have concentrated more on learning wind reading and worried less about position and technique errors. I HAVE (once) shot master-level scores at LR using the technique described, with FTR. Rifle is an accurised 700, 26" Krieger, sitting in an AICS.
I have learned so much from being in the competitive environment. If you want to get good at something you can reinvent the wheel or you can hang out with people who are already good at it. They will both teach you and challenge you.
We DO obsess about reloading. For real.
Go shoot and have fun.
I shoot F Class because I can't see iron sights anymore. Astigmatism, floaters the size of the Empire State Building, and now cataracts. Fuck me.
I started out with a .300WSM I got second hand but new, and shot off a Harris bipod and no rear bag. I only succumbed to rear bagness about a year and a half ago, but am still using Harris bipods on FO and FTR guns. I use a brick bag, not a bunny-eared board-mounted wonder bag. This is the way I want to do it, and my scores are continually improving. At some point I will probably decide to go Sinclair bipod and bunny bag, which seems to me to mostly reduce the game to ammo and wind reading. In fact, had I done this right up front, I could probably have concentrated more on learning wind reading and worried less about position and technique errors. I HAVE (once) shot master-level scores at LR using the technique described, with FTR. Rifle is an accurised 700, 26" Krieger, sitting in an AICS.
I have learned so much from being in the competitive environment. If you want to get good at something you can reinvent the wheel or you can hang out with people who are already good at it. They will both teach you and challenge you.
We DO obsess about reloading. For real.
Go shoot and have fun.