the moment you pull the trigger?
In my limited experience it seems most everyone is glued to their scope while they're pulling the trigger. They might be looking up and down checking for changes in the condition, but always seem to go back to the scope at the critical moment.
Is this necessary?
It would seem that if you're trying to shoot a dominant condition throughout the card, you should have a pretty good idea of your hold off from bull to bull. Once you have your POA set why would you need to look through the scope again? Granted, there might be a subtle change in the condition that warrants a slight POA change, but once again, do you need to be looking through the scope when you pull the trigger?
I've actually been trying this "blind" approach in my practice sessions and have found that the bullet seems to go pretty much the same place whether I'm watching it through the scope, or have my head up watching the flags. Now, I'm not saying the bullet is going where I want it to, but how I watch it doesn't seem to make a difference.
I read a lot about folks missing a condition and throwing something less than desired. I wonder if this because they set their POA for a certain condition, look up and see it, but by the time they can get back to the scope, it's gone.
Thoughts?
In my limited experience it seems most everyone is glued to their scope while they're pulling the trigger. They might be looking up and down checking for changes in the condition, but always seem to go back to the scope at the critical moment.
Is this necessary?
It would seem that if you're trying to shoot a dominant condition throughout the card, you should have a pretty good idea of your hold off from bull to bull. Once you have your POA set why would you need to look through the scope again? Granted, there might be a subtle change in the condition that warrants a slight POA change, but once again, do you need to be looking through the scope when you pull the trigger?
I've actually been trying this "blind" approach in my practice sessions and have found that the bullet seems to go pretty much the same place whether I'm watching it through the scope, or have my head up watching the flags. Now, I'm not saying the bullet is going where I want it to, but how I watch it doesn't seem to make a difference.
I read a lot about folks missing a condition and throwing something less than desired. I wonder if this because they set their POA for a certain condition, look up and see it, but by the time they can get back to the scope, it's gone.
Thoughts?