You are assuming someone will shoot in less than ideal conditions. With a scope on the gun its awful hard to miss a wind change at 600 yards. I do miss one sometimes while on iron sights though I'll admit that. But I don't hunt with iron sights. In a scope you have all the info you'll ever need to see the wind shifting.

So what do we do about taking a 100 yard shot on an animal thats alert and just as you shoot another person shoots in the canyon over and the animal you are firing at, ducks, lunges, whirls or starts to run.

Nothing is 100% in control. Wind changes are very visible. Even ones that move my 223 bullets at 600 only 3-4 inches are very visible in a scope.

It only requires lots of practice time and dedication.


We can keep Larry Root and all his idiotic blabber and user names on here, but we can't get Ralph back..... Whiskey Tango Foxtrot, over....