Ab
I have always been a "hunter and picker", working the sighter, taking the full seven minutes for just about every group. Several shooters have told me that watching me shoot is 'darned near painful'.
Of course, there are conditions when this works great, but it is brutilly obvious that when the condition presents its self, you have to be able to get rounds on the target, and I simply cannot do this with the style of shooting that I have used for years.
First, you need a good ejector action. Getting the Rifle loaded and back on aim as quickly as possible is paramount. Second, I have to teach myself to stay on the rifle, and be willing to use the last shot as a sighter, being willing to hold and follow the condition, having faith that the Rifle will do it's part.
I told my wife that I wanted to set a bench up in our den, so I can practice cycling the Rifle, keeping one eye on the flags, and one in the scope.
This is not going to be easy, I tend to be a creature of habit. But it is either evolve, or be left behind...........jackie