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Hunting
Coyote Hunting - From 10 Yards to over 1,000 Yards
Swival Bipods
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<blockquote data-quote="RobertB" data-source="post: 732812" data-attributes="member: 54582"><p>Thing to decide is wich catagory you want. One style that attaches to the front of the rifle or the type you put the rifle on. The harris style (one that attaches) is probably the most stable once you are in posistion and are very fast because theya ready to go. But carrying the rifle with them on and moving from one posistion to another can be tricky. Not always but sometimes. The true shooting sticks are better in the fact that you can carry the rifle easier and shots that do not require sticks are easier. I have a picatinny rail on my rifle and I keep an atlas on the front but can swap to a longer harris pretty quick that is kept in my back beside my tripod that I can shoot from to if I'm not using it for my spotter of LRF. I keep stick with me to strapped to the side but don;t use em much. Good luck</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="RobertB, post: 732812, member: 54582"] Thing to decide is wich catagory you want. One style that attaches to the front of the rifle or the type you put the rifle on. The harris style (one that attaches) is probably the most stable once you are in posistion and are very fast because theya ready to go. But carrying the rifle with them on and moving from one posistion to another can be tricky. Not always but sometimes. The true shooting sticks are better in the fact that you can carry the rifle easier and shots that do not require sticks are easier. I have a picatinny rail on my rifle and I keep an atlas on the front but can swap to a longer harris pretty quick that is kept in my back beside my tripod that I can shoot from to if I'm not using it for my spotter of LRF. I keep stick with me to strapped to the side but don;t use em much. Good luck [/QUOTE]
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Hunting
Coyote Hunting - From 10 Yards to over 1,000 Yards
Swival Bipods
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