Hey! Those are my relatives you’re making fun of!!!I like the one about using a car jack... visions of bib overalls bare feet and music from deliverance danced through my head...
-Red, known to pick a banjar at times…
Hey! Those are my relatives you’re making fun of!!!I like the one about using a car jack... visions of bib overalls bare feet and music from deliverance danced through my head...
That's actually a pretty nice rest: excellent choice.I ended up ordering the adjustable Caldwell front rest after messing around with building one out of scrap 2X's and a sandbag style one out a hunting sock and air soft pellets. Both would work in a pinch but in end having one that's adjustable won out. Here's my set up (and one of my critters).View attachment 219693
Yes, shooting sticks where the distance will likely be long. I just stuff them down the back of my shirt or coat when not in use. Great for groundhog hunting. Makes me imagine i'm out on the Plains getting buffalo meat for my Native American woman or for a fur-trade fort. I reckon we all might pretend a bit. Or a lot.
Sorta glad I'm around today and not back when as the sport is different . Mine is MOA andFrom 1492 to cr 1700 rifles were few and far between in America. Smoothbores were the go to. Even by 1750 even hard core longhunters were more often than not sending ball home from a smoothie.
Rifle guns were popular after the revolution, in parts of America, not too much in Canada. When the fur trade started in the Rockies it was said French, Indian ( eastren tribes men who came to work our west) Mexicans ( that included the Spanish population of Louisiana, plus guys out of New Mexico) all shot a fusil, while ‘Americans’ wanted a rifle.
You bought a rifle you got a mould. You didn’t try .526, .527, .530, .535 in your new gun.
Powder charge was rule of thumb. Cover a ball in the palm of your hand with powder.
You didn’t try five grain differences until you got the best load.
Boone liked 400 count linen but I bet most people patched with what ever the trader had, or old shirts and pants.
This is our sport.
I like your corn idea better than bags of rice.I use old lead shot bags filled with deer corn. Makes them lighter than sand bags and pliable enough.
Works great for me! A rolled up shooting mat with a hard rubber insert to keep roll from collapsing!
They were out of stock of that exact one, but just bought a similar one. Where did you get the rifle loading brace clamped to the left side of the stand?I’ve had always used the sand bags & shooting block at the range. Then I found a rest from Buffalo arms and liked it. ( the one on the bottom is the one from Buffalo Arms.)View attachment 220024View attachment 220025
Home madeThey were out of stock of that exact one, but just bought a similar one. Where did you get the rifle loading brace clamped to the left side of the stand?
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