Everyone knows that practice makes perfect and that is no truer than in shooting, where practice at the rifle range does, indeed, make you a better shooter. But there is more to it than that. When you are in the field, hunting white-tailed deer, can you make that 100-yard uphill shot at a buck walking through thick timber? Can you make a 300-yard shot on a pronghorn that's moving rapidly and about to disappear into that swale? Or how about that bull elk down in the canyon that's following his harem of cows; the wind is gusting where you are, and swirling down below. Can you make that shot? Bright light, low light, mottled shadows -- can you shoot accurately in all of those situations?As you can see, shooting accurately is more than just placing the crosshairs on a stationary bull's-eye 100 yards away and squeezing the trigger. It's actually being able to adapt, to read each situation and adjust accordingly.Much depends on what you are shooting. Does your 30/06 shoot accurately with 165-grain bullets or with 180-grain bullets? Your 270: Does it shoot more efficiently with Federal cartridges, or Winchesters . or something else? Do you shoot a 300 Win Mag more accurately than a 338 Win Mag, simply because the perceived recoil is different?In "The Hunter's Guide to Accurate Shooting," firearms expert Wayne Van Zwoll tells you exactly how to shoot your big-game rifle accurately.
Taking into consideration every pertinent factor, Van Zwoll leads you on a step-by-step analysis of shooting and hunting with the big-game rifle.This is a book that all shooters -- all hunters -- will want to read, and read again. Your hunting success could depend on it.