I was unaware of the fires burning in Ontario and in Quebec would affect the weather locally. When I got to the range on Tuesday, it looked like it was going to rain. The sky was overcast and it was hazy at 100 and 200 yards. It made focusing the scope difficult. At the time, I was unaware that Environment Canada had put out this statement. I read it when I got home. This was for our local area. As the crow flies, it is about 200 miles from Orillia to Ottawa.

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Special Weather Statement

High levels of air pollution have developed due to smoke from forest fires.

Smoke plumes from forest fires in Quebec and northeastern Ontario have resulted in deteriorated air quality. Poor air quality will persist into the weekend. Wildfire smoke can be harmful to everyone’s health even at low concentrations.

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[Linked Image from i.imgur.com]

IMR 4198, H322 and N120.

The groups wanted to be smaller, but the wind and conditions wouldn’t let that happen. I couldn't get my scope to focus. It was like there was something wrong with the optics. The group shape was encouraging however, and the worst group of the nine powders shot averaged 1.35 inches. Here is a picture of the three best powders of the 3 five shot groups shot that morning.

The group average – 20 shots (4×5 shot groups) – was as follows:

IMR 4198 – 1.07 inches
H322 – 1.09 inches
N120 – 1.18 inches

This was the worst five shot group shot that morning with N530. Things will improve without the haze and a small change in OAL.

[Linked Image from i.imgur.com]


Safe Shooting!
Steve Redgwell
www.303british.com

Get your facts first, then you can distort them as you please. - Mark Twain
Member - Professional Outdoor Media Association of Canada
[Linked Image from i.imgur.com]