Newbie's experience
Posted: Mon Oct 15, 2007 6:15 pm
Hi all
this is what I have experienced since starting AP shooting, having begun about 2 months ago.
My background :
1) some mediocre target AR shooting about 20 years ago.
2) some decent target crossbow shooting (GB squad) about 18 years go
3) some decent compound archery shooting (1300+ FITA) shooting about 16 years ago
4) some intermittent general shooting up to now - sport AR, clays, etc
all you need to know is :
be humble enough to read the forums and believe that theres a lot of people that have some useful info, and you don't know jack.
Create a shot plan
Create a shooting diary - its great to see progress, and to note all the things that help. Also, as you meet targets (that you have written down) ticking them off is so nice !!!! Very motivating....
Believe in the basics : two breath cycles, settle, concentrate and focus on the foresight, squeeze...
Just to emphasise, concentrating and focussing on the foresight not the target adds points immediately.
decent equipment is a good investment (Steyr LP2 for me). Don't neglect optics, a decent pair of shooting glasses has made a real difference.
Believe that spending time on setting up your grip, sights, trigger finger position is time very well invested. Be prepared to try 6oclock and sub 6 aims until you find what works. Forget scores, perfect a pure process.
To do that, dry fire in a proportion at least 4 to 1 of real fire is well worth it.
I find that doing dry fire against an aiming point helps more than blank paper at this stage (sorry Steve S) but always concentrate on observing the process.
That's taken me from 480 to 540 in this time and I have belief that I can go further. (I seem to add 5 points to my PB ex 600 every week).
All in all I've really enjoyed my last two months or so, and big big thanks to everyone who has responded to my posts and helped me along.
regards
Ed
this is what I have experienced since starting AP shooting, having begun about 2 months ago.
My background :
1) some mediocre target AR shooting about 20 years ago.
2) some decent target crossbow shooting (GB squad) about 18 years go
3) some decent compound archery shooting (1300+ FITA) shooting about 16 years ago
4) some intermittent general shooting up to now - sport AR, clays, etc
all you need to know is :
be humble enough to read the forums and believe that theres a lot of people that have some useful info, and you don't know jack.
Create a shot plan
Create a shooting diary - its great to see progress, and to note all the things that help. Also, as you meet targets (that you have written down) ticking them off is so nice !!!! Very motivating....
Believe in the basics : two breath cycles, settle, concentrate and focus on the foresight, squeeze...
Just to emphasise, concentrating and focussing on the foresight not the target adds points immediately.
decent equipment is a good investment (Steyr LP2 for me). Don't neglect optics, a decent pair of shooting glasses has made a real difference.
Believe that spending time on setting up your grip, sights, trigger finger position is time very well invested. Be prepared to try 6oclock and sub 6 aims until you find what works. Forget scores, perfect a pure process.
To do that, dry fire in a proportion at least 4 to 1 of real fire is well worth it.
I find that doing dry fire against an aiming point helps more than blank paper at this stage (sorry Steve S) but always concentrate on observing the process.
That's taken me from 480 to 540 in this time and I have belief that I can go further. (I seem to add 5 points to my PB ex 600 every week).
All in all I've really enjoyed my last two months or so, and big big thanks to everyone who has responded to my posts and helped me along.
regards
Ed