Dang it! No VHA anymore to submit those long shots to. My previous record of 1820 yards was in the Fall 2016 Varmint Hunter magazine. In case you missed it, my post about that is here;
http://forum.accurateshooter.com/threads/i-did-it-1820-yard-pd-with-vha-witness.3846054/
When my best friend Rick from my teenage years showed up on my doorstep after 44 years last November, we got re-acquainted and I showed him that article and a lot of photos on my computer. "I usually go around the end of May", I told him. "We can go if you want." "I've never done that", he said, "Let's do it!"
We made the trip and he watched as I set up the gun (same 284 Shehane with a new barrel) and zeroed in on some mounds. It took less than 50 shots total, including zeroing, to make the hit. He was impressed by bullet flight times and started timing them while watching through my big spotting scope. When the dog flew off the mound at 2200 yards and thrashed around on the ground, he excitedly exclaimed, "You got him! It took seven seconds." I had plenty of time to put the gun back in place and watch the hit myself.
Rick made a couple of hits at 750 yards the next day. He is a Vietnam vet and the only dogs he had ever killed before were the two legged kind, but he did that as a helicopter tail gunner. He had no experience with long range rifles. We settled in to close range slaughter for the rest of the trip. He was a good student and had the best kill to shots fired ratio of anyone I have ever taught, but I think all the blood and guts may have stirred up his PTSD a bit. He told me a lot of war stories in the evenings after a day of shooting. I'm really glad I didn't have to go over there.
Ron
http://forum.accurateshooter.com/threads/i-did-it-1820-yard-pd-with-vha-witness.3846054/
When my best friend Rick from my teenage years showed up on my doorstep after 44 years last November, we got re-acquainted and I showed him that article and a lot of photos on my computer. "I usually go around the end of May", I told him. "We can go if you want." "I've never done that", he said, "Let's do it!"
We made the trip and he watched as I set up the gun (same 284 Shehane with a new barrel) and zeroed in on some mounds. It took less than 50 shots total, including zeroing, to make the hit. He was impressed by bullet flight times and started timing them while watching through my big spotting scope. When the dog flew off the mound at 2200 yards and thrashed around on the ground, he excitedly exclaimed, "You got him! It took seven seconds." I had plenty of time to put the gun back in place and watch the hit myself.
Rick made a couple of hits at 750 yards the next day. He is a Vietnam vet and the only dogs he had ever killed before were the two legged kind, but he did that as a helicopter tail gunner. He had no experience with long range rifles. We settled in to close range slaughter for the rest of the trip. He was a good student and had the best kill to shots fired ratio of anyone I have ever taught, but I think all the blood and guts may have stirred up his PTSD a bit. He told me a lot of war stories in the evenings after a day of shooting. I'm really glad I didn't have to go over there.
Ron