Change the powder charge. If it continues to string, then it's not the load.
If stringing ceases when you can he the powder charge, then return to the same powder charge, if it begins to string again, then it might be the load.
Close range vertical stringing CAN be a result of shooting a velocity such that the barrel was on the downward moving portion of its vibration when the bullets exit the barrel. When this is the case, even small velocity variations can cause vertical spread because slightly fast shots exit when the barrel is pointing up and slightly slow shots exit when it is pointing down. If you change the velocity such that the bullet exits while the barrel is changing direction between going up and going down, you can have a much larger velocity spread result is much less vertical. This is what short range ladder tests identify. This effect dissipates greatly as range changes. Many short range shooters claim their best loads at 100yds have high velocity spreads and aren't nearly their best loads at 200-300yds. It just happens that the most consistent loads for their gun fail to land on a 100yd node. For F-class or other long range disciplines, tuning primarily at ranges other than 100yds can be more productive because you won't dealing with the variables that make 100yds finicky, and you won't find yourself accidentally messing with one of those loads that only works great at 100.