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Shooting in the rain

While I do not shoot at the distances this fellow does but in my varmint hunting obsessive days when I was a much younger man, I have hunted in moderate rain with a 222 Remington 700.

I discovered that it had no effect trajectory wise on my performance. Using those see through Bulter Creek scope covers kept the reticle clear and visible.

One of the most successful varmints hunts I ever had was after a moderate rain event. I was deep in the field during the rain and decided to remain posted up rather than walk back to the truck, several hundred yards away. After the rain stop, ground hogs came out places I had never seen them before along the tree lines and in the field. The action was fast and furious. Hogs everywhere!

However, I would not recommend it especially if there is lightning and thunder in the area. "Bad idea". But I was young, dumb, and fearless in those days.

Like most deer hunters, I have also hunted in the rain and snow. When you are deep into the woods far off the beaten path, sometimes you have no choice. Never found it to be an obstacle to success.
 
We shoot in the rain quite often at Ridgway rifle club in Pennsylvania. Sometimes the snow! Out to 1000 yards I’ve never seen it have any effect.
 
I have shot a lot of matches in light rain, heavy rain, snow and rain, and just snow. Generally speaking, if I could see the target, I could hit it or miss it with the same frequency as when it was clear. I only saw one case where the rain directly altered the bullet's flight. In that case, about 48 years ago I was watching while another competitor was shooting. It was raining quite heavily and John (whose last name escapes me) had three shots in a decent cluster at 100 yards. Just as he touched off his fourth shot, an absolute torrent of water came off the roof. There was a cloud of spray, and the bullet hit about four inches out of the group. WH
 
If you're a serious elk hunter here, rain, snow or sleet can be expected during season in the high country. The mamma's boys, Gen Z types need not apply. I think if they see any foul weather in the forecast, they stay home with their Play Stations.

I'm not sure any of those namby types hunt anyway. One thing for sure, the elk don't seem to mind, and all my .338 Nosler 210gr Partitions have hit right where they were aimed during rain, snow or sleet.
 
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I must respectfully disagree,,, I have seen many bullets go astray while shooting in variations of rainstorms at 100 and 200 yard Benchrest events,,,, if you're shooting at a target as big as a bulls butt, you won't miss it but if you're trying to shoot groups quarter inch or smaller, you can see it affecting the group size distinctly..... Roger
I do agree that watching the rain angle is a good wind indicator and that the atmosphere conditions have a lot less to do with the flight of the bullet then what the wind does at any distance
 
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