My buddies and I set out to expand our shooting capabilities this Labor Day weekend. Instead of practicing at our square range, we drove up to a nearby National forest and scouted a good place for some long distance shooting.
We were lucky enough to find some rolling hills that allowed for a considerable distance. We set up the steel at the furthest point from our shooting position and then we practiced ranging it with our scopes before engaging it. (we ended up with about a 600 meter shot)
We soon discovered however that the prone position that worked so well at the range was basically useless in these conditions because the vegetation was too tall. We were forced to stack our bipods on top our ruck sacks as well as stomp down some of the tall stuff in order to get off a shot.
This experience obviously begs the question about what professionals would do in this situation. Are there preferred methods for handling this? If prone is not allowed, what is the best second choice? Sitting and using a sling? Sitting with a tripod?
Any comments would be appreciated. I'm just trying to make the most of that trip by learning about what I might try the next time.
Thanks
We were lucky enough to find some rolling hills that allowed for a considerable distance. We set up the steel at the furthest point from our shooting position and then we practiced ranging it with our scopes before engaging it. (we ended up with about a 600 meter shot)
We soon discovered however that the prone position that worked so well at the range was basically useless in these conditions because the vegetation was too tall. We were forced to stack our bipods on top our ruck sacks as well as stomp down some of the tall stuff in order to get off a shot.
This experience obviously begs the question about what professionals would do in this situation. Are there preferred methods for handling this? If prone is not allowed, what is the best second choice? Sitting and using a sling? Sitting with a tripod?
Any comments would be appreciated. I'm just trying to make the most of that trip by learning about what I might try the next time.
Thanks