![]() ![]() At shortish ranges my parallax setting is not that critical to me as I tend to work edges of my targets rather than the center. I pretty much only shoot on square ranges these days and have all friggin day to get and maintain a sight picture. If you do not have adjustable parallax, you will only have the ability to see both but sharp focus must be on one or the other. You can really only focus on both if the parallax on your scope is set correctly. The goal was to hit the golf ball and see it happen. So the goal was not to hold on the ball and squeeze the trigger. When shooting golf balls I was simply getting set up correctly and shooting the golf ball. ![]() I realized that when shooting groups I was trying too hard to hold on the target and squeeze the trigger and be perfect. I would nail golf balls most of the time but groups at 400 were three times the size of golf balls. It sounds cliche, but it is true "Don't try, do." I found this out when I noticed the difference in by shooting between shooting groups at 400 yards and shooting golf balls at 400 yards. The hard part is as soon as you start thinking your subconscious goes out the window and you are "trying" again. Obviously you need some decent technique to start with but that is just learning positions and practice. Hold, trigger pull, recoil management, etc. If your subconscious knows the goal is to watch the bullet hit the target and you allow it to make that happen all areas are covered. ![]() You are seeing that the reticle is on the target but you are not focusing on it. I shoot my best when I am not focused on anything except watching the bullet hit the target. My breakthrough happened when I stopped trying to focus on either one. ![]()
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |
AuthorWrite something about yourself. No need to be fancy, just an overview. ArchivesCategories |