I wouldn't expect that wind was an issue. I was in a low lying wooded area. The rifle is in a hs stock that has the bedding block in it. I was wondering about seating depth. I have them loaded longer than saami spec. Should i go back to saami spec and try or try longer?
As stated by others, if your desire is to obtain <.5" 100 Yd. groups, wind is a
BIG issue.

A rifle which
will shoot, "under 1/2", at 100 Yd., without the shooter paying attention to flags, is capable of a LOT better than 1/2"!
In my experience, via ,
before/after comparison, though the manufacturer states, no bedding required (actually don't do it), following bedding, rifles stocked with the HS Precision stocks have always shown improved grouping.
The list of potential precision robbing attributes is long, and easily hunted down. The fundamentals of precision: barrels;bullets;bedding. Always bed.
Seating depth: pick a recorded, repeatable location - jam, or, jump - it's just a reference point, and changing only the one variable (bullet location), shoot groups. Move the bullet either toward, or, away from the lands, as your starting point dictates, in a measurable, defined increments, until the rifle shoots it's best.
I like increments of 0.010", and always begin with a "full jam", working away from the lead. (Note: my "full jam" is the length required to cause bullet set-back, or, deeper seating, when the bolt is locked-up). Then, around the best 'spots', will split the increments (frog hairs sometimes matter). SAAMI spec. sometimes works: for best precision, not often.

RG