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Ruminations and rifles in the teeth of winter

The days are short and the nights are long.
Time spent cradling a rifle into ones shoulder is limited and precious this time of year.
Our thoughts turn to other aspects of the rifleman’s art.
We think about indoor activities such as the ammo we should load.
We think about cleaning and organizing our loading bench, sorting though all the brass, bullets and assorted “things” we need to practice our art.
We think about the next rifle we want to buy or build.
We take rifles from our safes and clean them, again, running our hands over the wood and steel, remembering the rifles voice.

A day here, a day there, we’ll steal up to the range in hope that it will be warmer than 20 degrees.
We’ll only bring one rifle with us, maybe two.
We’ll shoot at short range.
Our range will be covered in snow and to reach the longer range target stands will involve a trudge through knee deep resistance.
The time we spend will be short.
Cold temperatures, wind and weak sunlight will take it’s toll on us.
The bench will be cold, the ground frozen.
Hands will be gloved until the trigger is needed.
The cold metal will steal the feeling quickly and the light pull will become erratic.
Loads that performed well during the summer may be different.
Our scope settings will be off.
Groups will be larger perhaps and not a precise as we‘d like.
Ejected cases will land in the snow and melt their way out of sight, forcing us to dig for them.

Some of our more hardy friends will be there with us.
We’ll take breaks, with hands deep in pockets or wrapped tightly around a hot coffee.
We’ll talk about our Christmas and New Years and our dreams for the upcoming season.
And after some time spent stamping feet and rubbing fingers, we’ll return to our rifles and send a few more down range before the sun fades.

As we head home, the warmth from the heater will feel good and we’ll smile.

For we are Riflemen

45BPCR
 
Nice. I just came in from shooting my AR15, doing a little service rifle practice at 100. 19 degrees, light snow falling. Brrr! But it was still fun.
 
HUUUUH???? Its 60 deg. , theres not a cloud in the sky, and there's not enough 'wind' to even mention it.
 
Wow, 45.... that was good! Like you read my mind.....

Got a heat wave going today... 33* oat. I gotta couple days off I was going to sneak out and end up exactly like paragraph 2. But temps gonna go single digits most of this week.. So will see....

Oh well, plenty project to do downstairs...

Good read my friend, you captured it well!!

Rod

ps- Shortgrass u suk!! ;D
 
well said but I have to say that the babby girl and I went on our first ever coyote hunt today.we took out two and the temp was around 38* today.our story/hunt is in the varmint forum if you want a giggle or two.
 
Damn, thats pretty good 45. I was working in my basement late today thinking of an old poem a mentor used to quote, he passed about 4 years ago, it went something like this. "To ride hard, shoot straight and speak the truth.This was the ancient law of youth. Old times are past,old days are done. But the law runs true oh little son."
 
Boogershooter, I googled that quote and it came from Boy's Life January 1923. (and they quoted it from C.T. Davis of the Arkansas Gazette. It's a really neat poem, look it up.
 
Well tomorrow it's going to be a little cool down here in Texas as the high only going to be 64 degrees. So I guess I'll wait until Monday before heading to the range as Monday's high is predicted to be 73 with only a 20% chance of precip.

All you Yankee's keep them Long-John handy, LOL!
RJ
 
45bpcr well put-
4 months 'till we have the temps that you gents in the lower 48 states are sniveling over!!

-45 deg F ambient today didn't deter a couple of us from bench shooting today.

Accuracy,velocity,load development weren't the main concerns-the clean air & sunshine w/ light ice fog.

NO MIRAGE!!!!!
 
Dans40X, You bring back memories! Eilson AFB was my place of employment for 5 1/2 years. I lived on base and in North Pole. I can remember my first year there and the kids were trick or treating at 35 below zero. The next day it dropped to 40 below and for the next six weeks it was between 40 and 47 below zero and the ice fog was so thick. 70 below was the coldest I experienced. I keep telling people here who complain about it being cold, if its 30 below or warmer, its going to be a good day.
 
-20 F here this morning. This cold weather makes me feel sorry for all you southerners who don’t have an off-season when you get to prepare yourselves properly for a new season. Granted, southerners might get time to do some of these things when they are grounded by their wife but for the most part these are some of the things you might be missing, in no particular order:

• Clean all your rifles, dies, presses, the floor, the table, the ceiling,
etc (start with ceiling).
• Polish everything you can get your hands on (except matt finishes).
• Anneal everything you can get your hands on (except bolts, receivers and barrels)
• Lube everything you can get your hands on (except scope lenses).
• Read each issue of PS a minimum of 10 times to make sure you didn’t miss anything (including all back issues).
• Write a business plan for each of your rifles.
• Check the ES and SD of kernel (or flake) weights for each powder you have on hand (minimum sample size of 1000). Do a write up of your findings for your forum friends.
• Organize all your empty bullet boxes in case you might need to find one quickly.
• Analyse all your old targets to see if there is any dispersion caused by attention deficit or other psychological issues.
• Cross check the number of bullet holes in the targets with the number of primers and bullets purchased and in stock to validate your ongoing round count per barrel. Don’t underestimate how precision in your bookkeeping can show up on the target.
• Explain to each of your bullets individually how to fly straight and cheat the wind.
• Visualize buying a lathe and tools for rebarreling and chambering a rifle. Visualize learning to become a gunsmith and having everything within .0000001’’. Caution: You might end up with a headache so go slow and watch a lot of videos.

Such stuff is what makes us northerners such good shooters. I am sure there are other things that we do to get an edge on the competition but are tight lipped about it. You can tell me however as I will not tell anybody else.
 
"Write a business plan for each of your rifles."

Whats wrong with doing that? ??? Whats really fun is composing future expansion ventures.. ;D

Rod
 
This is a good thread and I am not doing some of the things Tozguy states I should be doing. I will let you know the ones I will be picking up just after I complete a scope and feasibility study for each of them. This shouldn't take toooo long. ;D
 
Tozguy said:
-20 F here this morning. This cold weather makes me feel sorry for all you southerners who don’t have an off-season when you get to prepare yourselves properly for a new season. Granted, southerners might get time to do some of these things when they are grounded by their wife but for the most part these are some of the things you might be missing, in no particular order:

• Clean all your rifles, dies, presses, the floor, the table, the ceiling,
etc (start with ceiling).
• Polish everything you can get your hands on (except matt finishes).
• Anneal everything you can get your hands on (except bolts, receivers and barrels)
• Lube everything you can get your hands on (except scope lenses).
• Read each issue of PS a minimum of 10 times to make sure you didn’t miss anything (including all back issues).
• Write a business plan for each of your rifles.
• Check the ES and SD of kernel (or flake) weights for each powder you have on hand (minimum sample size of 1000). Do a write up of your findings for your forum friends.
• Organize all your empty bullet boxes in case you might need to find one quickly.
• Analyse all your old targets to see if there is any dispersion caused by attention deficit or other psychological issues.
• Cross check the number of bullet holes in the targets with the number of primers and bullets purchased and in stock to validate your ongoing round count per barrel. Don’t underestimate how precision in your bookkeeping can show up on the target.
• Explain to each of your bullets individually how to fly straight and cheat the wind.
• Visualize buying a lathe and tools for rebarreling and chambering a rifle. Visualize learning to become a gunsmith and having everything within .0000001’’. Caution: You might end up with a headache so go slow and watch a lot of videos.

Such stuff is what makes us northerners such good shooters. I am sure there are other things that we do to get an edge on the competition but are tight lipped about it. You can tell me however as I will not tell anybody else.
All the extra trigger time we get doesn't account for anything, does it? I've tried linin' up ammo boxes an' takin' inventory of the reloading components I DON'T use (I always keep an eye on those I DO use). It just doesn't do much for my scores or the number of coyot's I take.
 
Shortgrass,
Maybe all that stuff only works below a certain temperature. Could be that trigger time is the next best thing on the southern plains.
Shoot one for me, with regards
 
We pay for these mild winters with brutally hot summers. Not unusual for temps to top out at 110+ deg (F) from the last two weeks of July 'till the end of August. If ya' shoot in the summer, ya' need to be on the range at 7AM and leave by 9:30 (be sure and take the water jug, 'dry' heat). Evenings don't work, my range runs east and west, west being the target end. What goes around comes around. You pay big heating bills, we pay for AC. Can't imagine Mississippi! HOT and HUMID!
 

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