Originally Posted by Jordan Smith
Originally Posted by rcamuglia
Originally Posted by Jordan Smith
Originally Posted by Jordan Smith
Amen. Like basketball- even NBA players miss. All of 'em do it. They don't make 100% of their shots just because they take high-probability shots, have the skills, and practice hard.

Shooting a bullet at something is always an unknown to some degree. That's the risk we take when we decide to go hunting. The important thing is that we do our homework, and then take our misses to heart, learn from them, and try not to repeat the same errors in the future.


Rick,

I think this is the point you're trying to make, in short. If we miss because we've made an error in the moment of the shot, or overlooked a variable, that's human. If we miss because we failed to prepare properly and do our homework ahead of time, ethically, we shouldn't have taken the shot.



Exactly. Thanks for making it seem too simple. smile

Maybe I'm weird, but I don't assign the same value to a trophy class big game animal and a piece of steel.

If you're shooting at steel with the wrong data and poor positional skills, it matters little if your miss would have meant a wounded big game animal.


That's what steel is for! Nobody goes from rookie to expert in one shot. Misses on steel tell you what to do in order to go from "newbie" to "capable of shooting game animals at distance". It just takes a lot of hits and a lot of misses to figure that out *grin*



Right. The misses on steel show you the importance of making sure your data is correct. Misses on steel when shooting from positions other than prone show your shooting skill limitations.

Testing and finding out those things in the field on Big Game is the BassAckwards way of going about it!


Originally Posted by Bristoe
The people wringing their hands over Trump's rhetoric don't know what time it is in America.