J. Williams said:
Without a doubt the best method of shooting any gun- flintlock, percussion, centerfire, rifle, pistol, etc. is to let the the gun surprise you when it goes off.
My personal thoughts, reflecting my personal experience and training: Surprise is the LAST thing I want popping up in the middle of a shooting solution.
My rifle will fire PRECISELY when I command it to. I can't/won't submit something so critical to whims of the Universe, games of chance, voodoo, etc.
Calculating the settling of the sights between heartbeats is a good example. If the shot is a surprise, how do you know the weapon will discharge when you are in a relaxed state?
This is not offered in any way as a reproach, BTW, just an alternate concept of the way things can be done. In other words, think about it...
As always, YMMV.
You raise some very good questions...
When you think of a gun going off as a surprise, that does sound a bit haphazard and almost irresponsible doesn't it.
But you have to understand the surprise I am talking about. It is a controlled, expected surprise. It's not just closing your eyes, holding your breath, being scared by the blast that you don't know when is coming.
You asked about controlling breath... That all comes with practice, learnig your rifle and trigger. You need to time the pressure increase on the trigger with your breathing so the gun fires precisely when your sight post is at the exhale point. Even though you get the feel of how much pressure to apply, because you are concentrating on the sight picture and breathing, and not paying attention to pan flash or expecting the kick, the firing comes as a "surprise".
Basically, I say all this to differentiate from just yanking the trigger to make the gun go off all in one sudden motion. I don't care who you are, the second your brain consciously sends the signal to your finger to pull the trigger in one motion, your reflexes will kick in and expect a reaction.
I try to apply the same technique hunting or at the range. First of all, any gun that you hunt with you should shoot exactly the same way at the range. In hunting situations with your heart racing and your fingers half frozen, you need to fall back on automatic consistency. But then again, I can't testify to hunting situatons because I have never killed a deer. Sure it's a lot hard in the field, but a patient, disciplined shot must be taken just like at the range.
Anyway, this is how I was taught in the military and what works for me. Of couse, if yanking the trigger impulsively works for you, by all means yank away. :wink: