The last sentence is interesting, implies all sport is aggressive and designed to "push to the limits." The ideas of zen and the art of archery--or zen handgunning--appear to be completely foreign here, the idea that sport can be "an inducement to slow down and really take in my surroundings with all my senses" basically absent. Forget sailing also I guess.
Just in from a day huckleberry picking on the local mountainside. I t occurs to me that, for myself, gathering wild berries is not substantially different from hunting deer. i would class neither as a sport, but rather an attempt to step outside the "wage-earner" cycle, and however briefly, deal directly with the local environment to gather/take/harvest a portion of my food needs.
I read an interesting take on sport in a book about sea kayaking years ago. The author (George Dyson) was discussing the value of sport (in this case kayak racing), as an artificial means of creating the intensity of effort that might come naturally in a hunter/gatherer society. We trick our minds into thinking that it is REALLY IMPORTANT to paddle faster than the other guys in their boats. For myself, hunting is not an abstraction, designed to induce the inner sportsman to push himself to the limits. If anything it is the opposite, an inducement to slow down and really take in my surroundings with all my senses.
Reflections on all those things that make life interesting:
hunting, climate change, environmentalism, irony, animal rights, YouTube videos . . . all of it.
Monday, September 5, 2011
more on sport
From a comment on another blog:
Wednesday, August 31, 2011
Hunting as sport
Almost went a full month without a blog post, can't let that happen.
The "hunting as sport" meme has raised its ugly head again, I played my little part in a discussion that started on the Mindful Carnivore blog and spilled over onto other blogs, including Phillip's Hog Blog.
Someday I'll get around to working on my "Why Hunting is a Sport and Why It Matters" project.
The "hunting as sport" meme has raised its ugly head again, I played my little part in a discussion that started on the Mindful Carnivore blog and spilled over onto other blogs, including Phillip's Hog Blog.
Someday I'll get around to working on my "Why Hunting is a Sport and Why It Matters" project.
Sunday, July 17, 2011
Thursday, June 23, 2011
Saga of aging eyes: ongoing
After falling apart during the styrofoam cups event on Sunday morning (zero for . . . [cough] nine), I decided to make haste to my optician for some vision expertise. I can tell you that everything was a blur during that event--and I do mean EVERYTHING, targets, front sight, rear sight, everything. What concerned me most was the apparent double vision I had of the targets themselves . . . I couldn't blink them straight, I couldn't line up the front sight on a single isolated cup, nothing. That's never happened to me before. So off I went.
The optician I go to is a good one, and he's got several other customers who shoot. Half the problem he suggested was not having the right color shooting glasses to make the targets pop out of the green background a bit more. That made sense to me, so we talked about shooting glasses. We also talked about the need to focus on the front sight with my dominant (right eye). Ordinarily I've been shooting with bifocal contact lenses and clear non-prescription shooting glasses.
He suggested dropping down a diopter in my right contact lens and wearing a non-bifocal lens in that eye. He predicted that would give me good focus on the front sight at around 30 inches or thereabouts. So he gave me a couple of -3.75 lenses to try (my normal prescription is -4.75) in the right eye, with the instructions to keep my normal bifocal -4.75 in the left eye.
And I bought a pair of Bolle sport glasses with 4 different colored lens inserts: yellow, light brown, vermillion, and a polarized set for driving. These are polycarbonate so should work for shooting; he also sells the Wiley X brand but did not have any in stock, so I went with the Bolle. The idea here is to see if I can get the target image as sharp as possible against the various backgrounds and in different light conditions.
Went to the range yesterday morning before the rains came--put in the weaker contact lens in my right eye, wore the yellow lenses (cloudy conditions) in the shooting glasses, and shot 20 or so rounds at paper.
Results were encouraging: My first target put three just outside the black in one big hole; the second five shots were kind of all over; and the last ten shots put a number in the black.
Then I shot a half dozen or so shots plinking at blocks of wood against the backstop. This was the best thing I did: I probably hit 2 out of 3 shots on average for about ten shots total.
So hopefully this will be the next step in trying to figure out how to improve my musket shooting with aging eyes. The rains came a bit too quickly yesterday to shoot anymore at clays, but I'm going to make up some hanging clays to try with the vermilion lenses, which I understand really accentuate the orange. I'll let you know how that goes.
The optician I go to is a good one, and he's got several other customers who shoot. Half the problem he suggested was not having the right color shooting glasses to make the targets pop out of the green background a bit more. That made sense to me, so we talked about shooting glasses. We also talked about the need to focus on the front sight with my dominant (right eye). Ordinarily I've been shooting with bifocal contact lenses and clear non-prescription shooting glasses.
He suggested dropping down a diopter in my right contact lens and wearing a non-bifocal lens in that eye. He predicted that would give me good focus on the front sight at around 30 inches or thereabouts. So he gave me a couple of -3.75 lenses to try (my normal prescription is -4.75) in the right eye, with the instructions to keep my normal bifocal -4.75 in the left eye.
And I bought a pair of Bolle sport glasses with 4 different colored lens inserts: yellow, light brown, vermillion, and a polarized set for driving. These are polycarbonate so should work for shooting; he also sells the Wiley X brand but did not have any in stock, so I went with the Bolle. The idea here is to see if I can get the target image as sharp as possible against the various backgrounds and in different light conditions.
Went to the range yesterday morning before the rains came--put in the weaker contact lens in my right eye, wore the yellow lenses (cloudy conditions) in the shooting glasses, and shot 20 or so rounds at paper.
Results were encouraging: My first target put three just outside the black in one big hole; the second five shots were kind of all over; and the last ten shots put a number in the black.
Then I shot a half dozen or so shots plinking at blocks of wood against the backstop. This was the best thing I did: I probably hit 2 out of 3 shots on average for about ten shots total.
So hopefully this will be the next step in trying to figure out how to improve my musket shooting with aging eyes. The rains came a bit too quickly yesterday to shoot anymore at clays, but I'm going to make up some hanging clays to try with the vermilion lenses, which I understand really accentuate the orange. I'll let you know how that goes.
Thursday, June 9, 2011
Sunday, May 8, 2011
Ridley's Tourniquet Theory
Matt Ridley at http://www.rationaloptimist.com/blog/tourniquet-theory :
yep.
I call it my tourniquet theory and it goes like this: if you are bleeding to death from a severed limb, then a tourniquet may save your life, but if you have a nosebleed, then a tourniquet round your neck will do more harm than good. This metaphor can be applied to all sorts of scares and their remedies, but it is climate change that I have in mind. Over the past few years it has gradually become clear to me that climate change is a nosebleed, not a severed limb, and that the remedies we are subsidising are tourniquets round the neck of the economy.
Last month, the Government’s plan for a job-deterring carbon price floor, and an Australian official’s admission that even if the world stopped emitting carbon dioxide tomorrow, the temperature would not drop for several hundred years, reminded us that the pain could well outweigh the gain. Two new peer-reviewed scientific papers ram the point home. The first makes it clear just what a mild nosebleed climate change is proving to be; the second just what a lethal tourniquet climate change policy is. Note that this is different from arguing about whether climate change is real. Nosebleeds are real.
The nosebleed paper appeared in the Journal of Coastal Research (salute the web, in passing, for its extraordinary capacity for giving us access to such sources) and it concludes: “Our analyses do not indicate acceleration in sea level in US tide gauge records during the 20th century. Instead, for each time period we consider, the records show small decelerations that are consistent with a number of earlier studies of worldwide-gauge records. The decelerations that we obtain are . . . one to two orders of magnitude less than the +0.07 to +0.28 [millimetres per year squared] accelerations that are required to reach sea levels predicted for 2100 by [three recent mathematical models].”
To translate: sea level is rising more slowly than expected, and the rise is slowing down rather than speeding up. Sea level rise is the greatest potential threat to civilisation posed by climate change because so many of us live near the coast. Yet, at a foot a century and slowing, it is a slight nosebleed. So are most of the other symptoms of climate change, such as Arctic sea ice retreat, in terms of their impact. The rate of increase of temperature (0.6C in 50 years) is not on track to do net harm (which most experts say is 2C) by the end of this century.
The tourniquet paper is from the Journal of American Physicians and Surgeons; its author, Indur Goklany, concludes: “The production of biofuels may have led to at least 192,000 additional deaths and 6.7 million additional lost disability-adjusted life years in 2010. These estimates are conservative [and] exceed the World Health Organisation’s estimates of the toll of death and disease for global warming. Thus, policies to stimulate biofuel production, in part to reduce the alleged impacts of global warming on public health, particularly in developing countries, may actually have increased death and disease globally.”
In short, biofuels are doing more harm than good by pushing people into malnutrition, which makes them more vulnerable to disease: a tourniquet round the neck of the poor. Not far from where I live, there is a biofuel plant on Teesside, and to my disgust I find that some of the wheat grown on my farm goes there after it’s sold. About 5 per cent of the world’s grain production is now going to make motor fuel rather than food, with the result that rich farmers like me get better prices, but poor Africans pay more for food.
Yet that 5 per cent of world grain has displaced just 0.6 per cent of world oil use, so biofuel is hurting the patient without even stopping the nosebleed.
Almost every other climate change policy suggested so far is similarly futile. Wind: costs a fortune, kills eagles and does not even reduce carbon emissions because of the need for fossil fuel back-up. Solar: the tariff paid for energy fed into the grid is so high that you might even make money if you shine off-peak electric lamps on your panels at night. Tidal, hydro: far greater impact on natural habitats than climate change. Wave: does not work.
As the world begins an historic switch from coal and oil to abundant natural gas (which the International Energy Agency now says will last for at least a quarter of a millennium), carbon emissions are bound to start falling in a decade or three. Electricity from gas produces 37 per cent of the carbon dioxide that electricity from coal produces, and cars running on natural gas produce 25 per cent less carbon emissions, not to mention costing half as much to run.
As the climate nosebleed dribbles down our collective chin, we will look back in horror on those who proffered a tourniquet for our collective neck.
yep.
Monday, April 11, 2011
a target I meant to post earlier. After a long day of shooting, multiple guns, multiple trips to the range, here is the last target of the day. That last bull (top left) is a 42-4x . . . offhand. Hard to say when THAT will ever happen again.
Wednesday, March 23, 2011
Snow day trigger work
Spent the snow day working on the triggers of my CZ 452s. First up was the American, which got the green YoDave shim tube between the sere and the barrel, and the third heaviest spring. Shot a couple of targets with it earlier in the afternoon--not quite a hair trigger, but very, very light and virtually no creep. Pretty impressive, actually.
Came home and did the UltraLux. This one got the thinnest (blue) tube, and although I was going to put on the heaviest spring, it was longer than the factory spring and felt like it would stiffer than the factory spring. So I opted for the #2 spring (second lightest). Got everything back together, shot a couple of targets. Managed the following target offhand, one of my better efforts. The Ultra trigger is not quite as light as the American, but comfortable with the BRNO sights.
Other than falling apart on the fourth bull (I was getting pretty tired at that point), this was pretty good offhand shooting for me with the aperture sights.
Came home and did the UltraLux. This one got the thinnest (blue) tube, and although I was going to put on the heaviest spring, it was longer than the factory spring and felt like it would stiffer than the factory spring. So I opted for the #2 spring (second lightest). Got everything back together, shot a couple of targets. Managed the following target offhand, one of my better efforts. The Ultra trigger is not quite as light as the American, but comfortable with the BRNO sights.
Other than falling apart on the fourth bull (I was getting pretty tired at that point), this was pretty good offhand shooting for me with the aperture sights.
Tuesday, March 15, 2011
You'll see on this first benchrest target where I got stuck after the first three bulls (clockwise from the sighter) just a hair to the right of the x-ring. Messed with the screws, pushed/nudged the windage knob gently but firmly for the next two bulls, finally dialed in on the sixth bull:
I'm pretty pleased so far. Offhand shooting seems easier with these sights, at least for the Ultra -- I've always struggled to shoot the Ultra as well as I shoot the lighter Trainer. The first bench target with the thing dialed in yielded the following results:
That's pretty good for me--I generally can't do that consistently with my scoped American. (and yes, I always seem to fall apart on the third bull . . . don't know exactly why that is. but I usually finish strong.)
enough for now. As soon as I'm done with this post I'm going to attack the sights with some Kroil to loosen things up, and then a good cleaning and oiling.
I'm pretty pleased so far. Offhand shooting seems easier with these sights, at least for the Ultra -- I've always struggled to shoot the Ultra as well as I shoot the lighter Trainer. The first bench target with the thing dialed in yielded the following results:
That's pretty good for me--I generally can't do that consistently with my scoped American. (and yes, I always seem to fall apart on the third bull . . . don't know exactly why that is. but I usually finish strong.)
enough for now. As soon as I'm done with this post I'm going to attack the sights with some Kroil to loosen things up, and then a good cleaning and oiling.
Monday, March 14, 2011
Finally got the BRNO sights on the UltraLux today, with pictures below. I have to say, the BRNO target sight photos thread on rimfirecentral was very helpful, particularly the photo of the modified screwdriver to seat the nut holding the front sight to the ramp. I did exactly that with a Dremel tool and it worked great, whole thing only took 10-15 minutes.
Took the gun down to the club tonight, but also had Sophia with me trying her new 22 as well, so I only got to shoot a couple of targets with the new sights, but I was in and around the black pretty quickly. Offhand didn't seem to difficult at all, and first three sighters off the bench went into a single hole--that got me pretty cranked up.
Took the gun down to the club tonight, but also had Sophia with me trying her new 22 as well, so I only got to shoot a couple of targets with the new sights, but I was in and around the black pretty quickly. Offhand didn't seem to difficult at all, and first three sighters off the bench went into a single hole--that got me pretty cranked up.
Sunday, February 20, 2011
Wednesday, February 16, 2011
Caldwell Rock front rest on sale at Cabelas
Just ran across this sale, the Caldwell Rock BR 1000 is on sale at Cabelas for $89. Normally this lists for $199 and tends to sell online for $160-170, so this is a good deal. Here's the info:
Caldwell® Rock BR™ 1000 Shooting Rest
- Magnum size for heavy rifles and extreme-distance shooting
- Massive, 24-lb. frame supported by a wide 18" footprint
- Precision, ball-bearing elevation system
- Includes two forend bags
Unleash the full potential of your rifle and ammunition. The the magnum-sized BR 1000 is extra wide and heavy, perfect for taming hard-hitting long-range rifles. With features like a fine-adjustment ball-bearing elevation system, windage-adjustable cradle and customizable bag tensioning, it's built to meet the high expectations of competitive bench-rest shooters. The two-stage elevation adjustment reaches up to 11-1/2". It includes a 3" three-lobe bag and a 5" three-lobe bag. Stable, recoil-soaking 18" cast-iron footprint. Long-life stainless steel components. Accepts any of the Caldwell Deluxe front rest bags.
Weight: 24 lbs.
Saturday, February 12, 2011
Seven Steps To Better Shooting
Seven Steps To Better Shooting
From http://www.shootingtimes.com/longgun_reviews/mark_091306/index1.html
1. Do you jerk the trigger? Adjust the grip of your shooting hand so that your thumb doesn’t wrap around the wrist of the stock. Sometimes eliminating your ability to “grip” the stock will solve the problem.
2. Riflescope magnification higher than 6X can hinder offhand shooting. If you have trouble seeing the target with low magnification, get a bigger target.
3. Coarse open sights can be difficult to align on a target. Use a six-o’clock hold: hold at the bottom of the target. This provides a much more defined aiming point with open sights.
4. To help steady the rifle raise your shooting elbow so it is parallel to the ground or at a 90-degree angle to your body. This will pinch the rifle between your shoulder and cheek providing a rigid shooting platform.
5. The best offhand shot I know often says, “If you hold long, you hold wrong.” Don’t struggle to hold a position for more than eight or 10 seconds. If you haven’t fired by then, lower the rifle and relax.
6. Do most of your live fire practice with a quality rimfire. It will save money and help overcome flinching.
7. To avoid fatigue, never shoot more than 20 to 30 rounds per live fire session.
From http://www.shootingtimes.com/longgun_reviews/mark_091306/index1.html
1. Do you jerk the trigger? Adjust the grip of your shooting hand so that your thumb doesn’t wrap around the wrist of the stock. Sometimes eliminating your ability to “grip” the stock will solve the problem.
2. Riflescope magnification higher than 6X can hinder offhand shooting. If you have trouble seeing the target with low magnification, get a bigger target.
3. Coarse open sights can be difficult to align on a target. Use a six-o’clock hold: hold at the bottom of the target. This provides a much more defined aiming point with open sights.
4. To help steady the rifle raise your shooting elbow so it is parallel to the ground or at a 90-degree angle to your body. This will pinch the rifle between your shoulder and cheek providing a rigid shooting platform.
5. The best offhand shot I know often says, “If you hold long, you hold wrong.” Don’t struggle to hold a position for more than eight or 10 seconds. If you haven’t fired by then, lower the rifle and relax.
6. Do most of your live fire practice with a quality rimfire. It will save money and help overcome flinching.
7. To avoid fatigue, never shoot more than 20 to 30 rounds per live fire session.
Searching for new ammo . . .
Have had to go searching for new rimfire ammo since I burned the last brick I had of Federal Champion Target #714.
After a trip to Mike's Ammo in Horseheads, here's the best so far, using Federal 510 off sandbags at 50ft indoors:
This was using a CZ 452 American with a Mueller APV target scope.
Tried the CCI Blazer, but the groups were just a bit larger; I also have some CCI standard velocity that shoots real well. The Federal 510 is high velocity, but at 50 ft stays supersonic to the target so should be all right for competition.
Using the Trainer for offhand, open iron sights practice.
After a trip to Mike's Ammo in Horseheads, here's the best so far, using Federal 510 off sandbags at 50ft indoors:
This was using a CZ 452 American with a Mueller APV target scope.
Tried the CCI Blazer, but the groups were just a bit larger; I also have some CCI standard velocity that shoots real well. The Federal 510 is high velocity, but at 50 ft stays supersonic to the target so should be all right for competition.
Using the Trainer for offhand, open iron sights practice.
Saturday, January 29, 2011
The aging eyes saga continues
Been working on my shooting using my CZ trainer with open iron sights, shooting 50 foot NRA targets. With my normal contacts it was pretty rough; contacts with reading glasses not much better; things improved a bit with bifocal contact lenses. Today, I shot with my new eyeglasses, which have progressive lenses.
Here's the target I shot. I'm pretty pleased with the results: I could see the front sight pretty well, and as I worked on a consistent sight picture, the progressive lenses helped me maintain a consistent cheek weld as I worked to put the front sight into sharpest focus (there is a sweet spot where the front sight is clearest). This is a benefit of the progressive lenses that had not occurred to me.
Now the problem will be getting shooting glasses in polycarbonate safety lenses. These won't be cheap. But I'm thinking that my shooting will improve pretty dramatically by switching over to eyeglasses versus contact lenses and shooting glasses.
Here's the target I shot. I'm pretty pleased with the results: I could see the front sight pretty well, and as I worked on a consistent sight picture, the progressive lenses helped me maintain a consistent cheek weld as I worked to put the front sight into sharpest focus (there is a sweet spot where the front sight is clearest). This is a benefit of the progressive lenses that had not occurred to me.
Now the problem will be getting shooting glasses in polycarbonate safety lenses. These won't be cheap. But I'm thinking that my shooting will improve pretty dramatically by switching over to eyeglasses versus contact lenses and shooting glasses.
Friday, January 21, 2011
3 Below Honey
Record Cold across the Northland
Originally printed at http://www.northlandsnewscenter.com/news/local/Record-Cold-across-the-Northland-114356369.htmlBy KBJR News 1
January 21, 2011
Temperatures have been reported as low as -46 degrees for International Falls beating the previopus record set in 1954 of -41F.
A Extreme Cold Warning, Wind Chill Warning and Advisory expire today at 10am.
Fristbite times in Duluth have been hovering around 10-15 minutes today with the cold snap.
Temperatures this afternoon will be in the negative single digits for Highs.
Here are some of this morning's lows collected from the National Weather Service in Duluth, MN
TEMP LOCATION
---- -----------------------
-46 INTERNATIONAL FALLS
-43 EMBARRASS
-43 BIGFORK
-43 ASHLAKE
-43 EFFIE
-40 BIRCHDALE
-38 CRANE LAKE
-37 MINONG
-37 HILL CITY
-36 LONGVILLE
-36 PINE RIVER
-36 SEAGULL LAKE
-36 ELY
-36 WRIGHT
-33 GRAND RAPIDS
-33 MCGREGOR
-33 AITKIN
-33 HIBBING
-31 HAYWARD
-31 MOOSE LAKE
-30 SIREN
-26 TWO HARBORS
-26 SILVER BAY
-24 DULUTH
Our Weather Watcher Zeke in Alborn, MN had a temperature of -40F this morning.
Wednesday, January 12, 2011
Tuesday, January 11, 2011
hot Italian sausage
sausage day today:
1.5 pounds venison
.5 pounds pork fat
3 pounds pork shoulder
5 tsp black pepper
5 tsp paprika
4 tsp salt
5 tsp garlic powder
5 tsp fennel
3 tsp anise seed
5 tsp red pepper flakes
1/2 cup ice water
Grind venison, fat, and pork shoulder with coarse plate. Mix together. Add black pepper, paprika, salt, and garlic to meat, and mix by hand. In food processor or blender, combine fennel, anise, red pepper, and ice water. Add to sausage mixture and mix by hand. Chill sausage mix in freezer 10 minutes, run through grinder with fine plate. Cook or freeze.
1.5 pounds venison
.5 pounds pork fat
3 pounds pork shoulder
5 tsp black pepper
5 tsp paprika
4 tsp salt
5 tsp garlic powder
5 tsp fennel
3 tsp anise seed
5 tsp red pepper flakes
1/2 cup ice water
Grind venison, fat, and pork shoulder with coarse plate. Mix together. Add black pepper, paprika, salt, and garlic to meat, and mix by hand. In food processor or blender, combine fennel, anise, red pepper, and ice water. Add to sausage mixture and mix by hand. Chill sausage mix in freezer 10 minutes, run through grinder with fine plate. Cook or freeze.
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