Ledd Slinger
Silver $$ Contributor
Thanks all for your input. William, is this helping you also ??
I would also add that you don't have to use a big caliber hunting rifle to do all of your off hand shooting practice. Using a good 22LR to shoot at small targets is excellent for practicing off hand.
As a child, my brother and I use to have all kinds of shooting competitions in the woods with a Ruger 10/22. Kind of like playing "HORSE" in basketball. We would make a shot and the other would have to match it. If you missed, the other person got the point. 5 points won the match. Of course off hand shots were always the hardest and shooting at smaller targets added to the difficulty. We would shoot little film canisters at 50 yards, small douglas fir tree pine cones, rocks, etc... We were finely tuning our shooting skills and didn't even really know it at the time. To us, we were just having fun.
If you like to shoot gophers, ground squirrels, or prairie dogs, start taking a bunch of your shots off hand. Anybody can hit varmints sitting on a bench with a rest. Off hand shots on small varmints is an excellent challenge. I have shot many prairie dogs and gophers at 20-150 yards. Of course I don't hit them every single time, but the practice makes me better and adds a fun aspect to your outing. A ground squirrel is about the size of a deer's heart, give or take. If you can even get good enough to where you are consistently hitting really close to them at 100 yards (hitting the dirt at their feet or missing by an inch or two to the side) , you can bet you'll be in the kill zone of a deer at that distance. Eventually you'll get to where you hit them fairly consistently. Again, pulling up and shooting fast with the weapon in motion is what works best for me.
Also just getting a nice shotgun and joining a club to shoot clays is excellent practice. If there's no clubs around, buy your own clay thrower and go out with a buddy. Clay shooting is some of the best off hand shooting practice you can get for moving targets. When we are done shooting, we will walk out in the field and shoot all of the missed clays or big parts of partial hit clays. During this part, ill usually load 3" BB rounds and a full choke then try to take all my shots at no closer than 50 yards. So then I am getting off hand practice on stationary targets as well.
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