Precision tripod for varmints??
Posted: Sat Jan 05, 2019 8:59 am
Has anyone used a tripod for varmint hunting?
I've seen systems used by PRS (and similar style) shooters so it must offer a reasonably accurate platform.
While it would be inherently less stable than prone with a bipod it would give the advantage of getting the shooter a couple (or three) feet higher. When I lived in Alberta, it was easy enough to find a hilltop to set up on and cover a decent patch of ground. But now I am back in the prairies, prone shooting really limits the range of what I can see.
Typically I set up in the morning with my swivel bench on a vantage point (sometimes in the bed of my truck) and take advantage of the ground squirrels morning feeding (8:00-10:30 AM) and relative calm winds to do my longer distance shooting. Then do the same in later afternoon (3:30-5:00) when they are more active as they feed again at the end of the day.
Mid-day I will grab an intermediate range rifle (typically a 17HMR) with a bipod and go "walk-about", exploring for new shooting areas and bagging a few gophers that venture into the mid-day heat. As I mentioned previous, when in the foothills of the Rockies it was easy to find a slight vantage point where I could cover a broad area with a bipod. Now on the flat prairies, prone shooting areas are much fewer, especially after the pasture or hay field has matured a bit.
I doubt that this season I will have time to go this route, (am still getting back into shooting after a few years away) but I think a decent tripod would fill a niche in my system.
Any thoughts or experience?
I've seen systems used by PRS (and similar style) shooters so it must offer a reasonably accurate platform.
While it would be inherently less stable than prone with a bipod it would give the advantage of getting the shooter a couple (or three) feet higher. When I lived in Alberta, it was easy enough to find a hilltop to set up on and cover a decent patch of ground. But now I am back in the prairies, prone shooting really limits the range of what I can see.
Typically I set up in the morning with my swivel bench on a vantage point (sometimes in the bed of my truck) and take advantage of the ground squirrels morning feeding (8:00-10:30 AM) and relative calm winds to do my longer distance shooting. Then do the same in later afternoon (3:30-5:00) when they are more active as they feed again at the end of the day.
Mid-day I will grab an intermediate range rifle (typically a 17HMR) with a bipod and go "walk-about", exploring for new shooting areas and bagging a few gophers that venture into the mid-day heat. As I mentioned previous, when in the foothills of the Rockies it was easy to find a slight vantage point where I could cover a broad area with a bipod. Now on the flat prairies, prone shooting areas are much fewer, especially after the pasture or hay field has matured a bit.
I doubt that this season I will have time to go this route, (am still getting back into shooting after a few years away) but I think a decent tripod would fill a niche in my system.
Any thoughts or experience?