



MG5150 wrote:Hi All
I've read and been told conflicting advice on breathing.
Do you squeeze the trigger on the exhale?
Or hold your breath and fire when ready?
Or is it unique to every individual and you just need to find out what works for you?


mchughcb wrote:Why do you ask? If you aren't shooting benchrest competition it makes zero practical difference when hunting.

Blr243 wrote:I can’t shoot very well at all. The best 3,shot group I ever did was 17 mm at 100 with a scoped browning lever 243. My reticle wobbles allover the place ( bench with front and rear bags ) It’s never steady I see other people shooting clover leaf groups Is there anyone else as bad as me ? I tried shooting between breaths.

MG5150 wrote:Hi All
I've read and been told conflicting advice on breathing.
Do you squeeze the trigger on the exhale?
Or hold your breath and fire when ready?
Or is it unique to every individual and you just need to find out what works for you?


Wapiti wrote:mchughcb wrote:Why do you ask? If you aren't shooting benchrest competition it makes zero practical difference when hunting.
Surprised you asked that mate, he asks because ignoring your breathing can make a huge difference.
It's not just benchrest comps, it's ensuring your bullet goes exactly where you want it, whether you're sighting in a rifle, testing loads for your rifle, or don't want to blow the jaw off an animal in the bush because you are wobbling all over the place from walking all morning.


Fester wrote:Did you do the basics by starting with a .22lr and shooting heaps of rounds for the first year?
That's how I developed a great start to rifle marksmanship.
mchughcb wrote:
Why do you ask? If you aren't shooting benchrest competition it makes zero practical difference when hunting.


MG5150 wrote:Fester wrote:Did you do the basics by starting with a .22lr and shooting heaps of rounds for the first year?
That's how I developed a great start to rifle marksmanship.
I did 50 shots at the SSAA range every week for a quarter of a year before applying for my license, then went straight to a 30-06 for deer hunting. I didn't have any coaching, didn't understand groupings or what I was doing, just aimed at the bullseye and squeezed the trigger. It wasn't until after I got more into the hobby I started trying to improve my accuracy and shooting technique.
For context, most of my shooting is deer hunting, or thermal fox hunting from a tripod, but when it comes to sighting in I'm on a bench with bipods and backrest, and I'll be trying to be as accurate as possible when zeroing.mchughcb wrote:
Why do you ask? If you aren't shooting benchrest competition it makes zero practical difference when hunting.
Might not make much of a difference on a Sambar under 100m but I've missed a dozen foxes by a whisker and maybe my breathing was the difference? Doesn't hurt to ask. (I watched your big long driven fox hunt compilation last night, awesome stuff!)




mchughcb wrote:
Are you sure you missed? If you are shooting off a bipod or tripod, the room for error by breathing on fox size targets is not much. There coud be other things at play. Like your hold,the wind, grass, elevation, fox moves while refresh rate is 30-50Hz. List goes on.

fnq22 wrote:
Doing 15-30 minutes 3-4 times a week on the fundamentals neccessary to shooting is guaranteed to get you to the point where all the things like breathing, trigger control, stance, grip or mounting the gun will become 2nd nature through development of muscle memory...
Dont just go through the motions though because its important to be very self analytical in everything you do and then practise those things during occasional lessons to give confirmation that what you are learning translates into your actual shooting and then work on your deficiencies.....I often use a shot timer for speed and to better gauge whether I'm getting better, faster etc...I even sometimes record myself on the phone doing various drills to be able to better analyse what I am doing and make improvements..
Seriously do some googling and jump on youtube and see how the good shooters do it and try it for a month or 2 ....its just as applicable to rifles as it is to handguns...and as a hunter it will give you much greater confidence to take that shot knowing where you are going to hit before the bullet even hits your target..
Like me when people taking it seriously start seeing outstanding results it becomes a bit addictive but very annoying for the wife to see all manner of targets stuck on the walls all around the house..I even set up stages around my yard for ISPC practical training...


mchughcb wrote:Well if the clip on thermal isn't aligned and is off by quite a few inches that will explain it. I've had scope mounts come loose a few times that had me scratching my head why I was shooting so bad. Tightened them up and all of a sudden I hit what I'm aiming at.
Shooting foxes with 22LR at 70-100m is probably going to result in a few run off's. You may or may not hear the thud of a hit but the animal may run like it hadn't been hit.
