CHAPTER TEN

 

CONSTRUCTION OF THE KNEELING SHOOTING POSITION

KNEELING:

1.   Preparation:  Commence the kneeling position by placing the mat on the firing position or point, the mat is placed at an angle facing or pointing 10 to 20 degrees to the right of the target.  The upper left corner of the mat will then be pointing to the target center. 

(a)  Place the spotting scope between the firing line and the left shoulder position while in firing position.  This will allow the athlete to view the target while charging the rifle. 

(b)  Place the ammo block to the right of the firing position between the right shoulder and hips at a comfortable position within easy reach.

(c)  All other items required by the athlete can be placed to the right of the shooting position but not in such a manner as to disrupt the athlete next to your position.

                                                                             

·        NOTE RULE:  Do not place any items of equipment on or forward of the firing line during live competitions.

 

2.   Taking the position: KNEELING

GENERAL     As a rule, the results of firing from the kneeling position will be as perfect and stable as the prone position. However, untrained athletes will find it very difficult at first while maintaining the kneeling position during competition.  Aching occurs in the foot, leg, and buttocks, which sometimes result in reduced concentration and less effective Quiet Zone-Aiming-Firing sequence. Provided the position is constructed correctly, problems of this nature can be corrected during training.  With the kneeling position in balance the neurophysicologcal system is used by the unconscious entity, the Quiet Zone will appear for a brief period as the lungs become balanced.  This period is normally ½ to ¾ of a second long and then leaves.  After a period of time the athlete will have restarted the shooting sequence as the Quiet Zone will not reappear until the athlete has again restarted the shooting position.  How can an athlete prepare for the kneeling position?  Simple, take the kneeling position in front the television without the rifle. 

 

While the athlete watches the TV program, the leg muscles will stretch and ease the discomfort to the athlete.  About a week of this and the athlete will be ready to shoot the perfect bull’s-eye in the kneeling.  Remember, the goal is to fire 60 one-shot matches resulting in perfect bull’s-eye without a miss.   

 

On the range, the shooting athlete takes the position pointing 20 to 30 degrees to the right of the target line.  The rifle is balanced as in other positions just at the front of the trigger guard.  If the hook or butt plate must be extended the necessary movement of the counter weights must also be accomplished.  Many discussions have occurred over the years as to which is placed first, the left foot or right foot with kneeling roll.  Upon making the turn to the right, the shooter places the left foot at the firing line.   Once the left foot is placed the athlete will take position with the right foot and the kneeling roll.  The right knee is placed at a 20-30 degree angle to the right and from the left foot.  For more information about the left knee, please continue. (If the right knee is place to close to the left foot, the position will become unbalanced.   Such an unbalanced will cause random results because the NPA is moving randomly around the bull.

 

The natural point of aim is tested by assuming the kneeling position and looking through the thumb and index finger at the bull.   The natural point of aim is seen as the black bull fills the space between the thumb and index finger.  The left knee and leg will also be pointing at the bull down range.

                

·        The balance of position and rifle fall into two differing lines of balance.   The rifle balance starts at a central balance point located at the front trigger guard and continues on a direct line through the left elbow and left knee to a point just forward of the left heel of the left foot.      

 

·        The position point of balance starts at a point of the neck and shoulders, continuing on a direct line to the floor just in front of the right foot and kneeling  roll .   The rifle balance line is a Sub-balance line of the main position balance line.  It may seem strange that the position line should end in front of the kneeling roll.  The reason is that the torso is leaning forward so the line will also be at an angle.

 

SPINE  The spine is slightly inclined forwards, so the full weight of the body rests exactly on the three-point position “left foot - right knee - right foot” and is balanced evenly.   The shoulders hang loosely and relaxed in their relationship to the backbone/spine, forming, as in the prone position, the shoulders at right angles to the spine/backbone and rifle.

 

·        NOTE FUNCTION: If the spine and shoulders are not at right angles to one another during the position construction and shooting, considerable lateral instability will have to be expected.

                                                                             

The backbone/spine must be relaxed and yet not hunched. It should be slightly bent without the muscles having to be flexed.   This is important, as the stability of the shooting position is dependent upon the athlete’s construction of the perfect shooting position and receiving the perfect bull’s-eye.  The Quiet Zone appears as the lungs approach perfect balance, air neither inhale or exhale.

 

 

The rifle is perfectly sighted, lungs are in perfect balance, the Quiet Zone arrives, trigger is pulled straight to the rear, validate the shooting process and the perfect bull’s-eye.   The shooting athlete will note that upon the lungs reaching balance the spine will compress and thereby stiffing the position.

LEFT FOOT  The left foot must be directly below the rifle and at an angle of 5 to 8 degrees to the right of target.  While in position the leg and foot are in line with the knee, the elbow position upon the knee.  In this way, the position of the leg is at its most stable.  Here, as in standing, the kneeling position requires a good pair of flat sole and ankle supporting shoes to wear during shooting.  They are for shooting only and not walking. 

A second pair of shooting shoes will be used for training and may be scuffed and for walking around the range if the athlete wants.  The match shoes must always be protected from damaged.

LEFT LEG  The left leg must be vertical, or depending upon the body size, inclined slightly forwards below the rifle.   No sideways or lateral movement of the leg is permitted.  Again, a line is formed with the foot, knee, and elbow in line with the balance point of the rifle.

RIGHT FOOT  The right foot must be straight, or with the heel slightly turned outward, and resting on the tip.  A kneeling roll supports the instep, the toe presses firmly on the ground and the heel presses directly onto the bone of the right buttock (bone-to-bone support).  The sole of the shoe must be firm, as it is only in this way that the body is supported at the ground point of contact, and the weight of the body has three effective and stable supporting points.  As with the left foot, a pair of shooting boots must be worn to reinforce the shooting position.

KNEELING ROLL   Kneeling rolls must be secure. They must not change during the competition, as this can affect the entire stability of the position.   The roll should be filled with wood shavings, straw, sawdust, or rug.   

·        NOTE RULE:  The kneeling roll size is 7 inches in diameter and 9.5 inches long.

 

While the length of the roll does not influence the position, the diameter is very important.

1.   The angle of the foot and the sole of the shoe to the ground.  If the roll is too

thick, it is subject to the entire body weight and additionally the sole by itself does

not give the required support. 

 

2.  If the roll is too thick, the sighting, if the body position is correct, will be below                     the target, and if the roll   is too thin, the sight will be above the target.  The position or body weight is placed upon the sole heel and  not on the ankle.

 

3.  The even weight distribution on three supporting points.  If the filling is too thick, the left foot will he subjected to stress and will give to impression of falling forward in the position.

 

It can be seen from the three examples that the fit of the roll is very important.  The correct diameter can be worked out from the length of the limbs and the shoe size of the athletes.    

 

·        NOTE RULE: The left elbow will not protrude over 3 ½ inches beyond the left knee while shooting from the kneeling position.

 

RIGHT LEG   The position of the right leg in relation to the left leg should form an angle of about 30 to 40 degrees.  This angle may be difficult for some athletes and it can be reduced.  If the angle of 40 degrees is exceeded, excessive weight is transferred to the front and onto the left leg.  Each athlete must experiment and find out which is the ideal angle for the athlete.

BUTTOCKS  As already indicated the bone-to-bone of the right buttock should rest on the heel of the right shoe.  This makes a stable connection between the bone structure and the ground through the foot.

LEFT ARM  The left elbow is placed in the hollow between the kneecap and the femur.  The left forearm rest on the extension of the femur.  The weight of the rifle is therefore transmitted directly to a stable base, the thigh while continuing through the knee and onward to the foot.

LEFT HAND   The rifle stock rest on the ball of the thumb.  The fingers are completely relaxed and do not touch the stock.  All flexing of the hand muscles is to be avoided, as it can affect the steadiness of the position.  The sling length and the position requirements determine the position of the left hand under the stock.

RIGHT ARM/SHOULDER    It is the right arm, and thereby the right hand, that has the ultimate responsibility for firing and for ensuring a proper shoulder contact.  The shoulder contact must be made without muscles being flexed.  The necessary pressure on shoulder is brought about by the weight of a completely relaxed right arm; the right hand holds securely onto the stock pistol grip with two middle fingers.  The majority of the mistakes occur in the kneeling position because the shoulder is too high or the shoulders are not at right angles with the rifle and generally result in a cramped position.  The reason for this is to be found in shoulder position adjustment during the construction of the shooting position.  The rifle butt or butt hook (if used) is placed into the shoulder pocket of the right or left shoulder.   Care must be taken in Big-bore that the rifle butt is not located on or in contact with the collarbone going to the neck.  The Butt-hook is placed in such a way that the hook lies next to the ribcage and not tightly under the armpit.

 

RIGHT HAND    The thumb of the right hand, without pressure being applied, rest on the rifle stock.

The index finger is on the trigger, has no contact with the stock.  The rifle is only drawn into the shoulder by the middle two fingers.  The right wrist is extended and acts as a direct extension of the lower arm.  The hand grasps the grip of the stock and the trigger finger pulls directly backwards.   As in the other positions, the two inner fingers are pulled against the grip to firm the wrist during the firing sequence.  Lastly, the trigger hand and arm is in a straight line, which includes the wrist.  

 

The thumb and index finger forms an L with the trigger finger parallel with the rifle stock and ready to engage the trigger.

 

WEIGHT DISTRIBUTION OF BODY    The weight of the body and the rifle is distributed evenly between the three bearing points `left foot, right knee, right foot tip or instep with roll’. Because of the space between these points, the main weight lies within and at the rear of the triangle.  In this way, the position has maximum stability.

 

We acknowledge that every athlete varies a little.  This is not a problem, as the athlete must adjust the rifle until the sighting path is clear through the rear sights.  The athlete must remember the rifle movement (cant if any) cannot exceed 1 degree without the movement changing the sights and sight zero. 

Normally, a cant is not required if the position is correctly established and the stock is correctly sized to the shooting athlete. Because of the nature of the kneeling position rifle orientation occurs naturally, however, if the sight does not fall on the target bull naturally, the whole shooting position must be reconstructed.  A straight line from the right shoulder or upper right arm through the left hand, left elbow and left knee to the target.

SLING      Place the sling in the high sling position on the upper left arm.   Attach the sling to the rifle allowing adequate length for a proper sling fit.   Tighten the sling until the rifle is supported totally by the sling without the use of arm muscle tension.   Move the forehand stop against the left hand and secure the forehand stop-locking nut to the rifle stock rail.   Check the natural point of aim and make any adjustments necessary.  Shooting across the position is caused by sling that is too tight and incorrect position setup.    The ideal shooting direction is across yet out of the chest position.   The athlete will fine the distance from shoulder to rifle is about 5 to 8 inches. The shooting athlete must shoot out of the position not across the position.

COMMENTS ON MOUNTING AND PRESENTATION OF THE RIFLE IN THE STANDING POSITION

Suggested additional guidelines for construction of the shooting position.

Every muscle of the body uses a very slight degree of muscle tension to help the body structure remain in a balanced position. This also allows you to make finer adjustments in your unconscious and neuromuscle control. By over-tensing or locking your muscles, you will tire quickly and start to tremble, reducing your hold. As such, muscle tension is slight and very close to relaxed.  On the other hand muscle tensions prevents the unconscious mental entity from making the necessary changes for sight alignment and achievement if the perfect Bull’s-eye. Note that muscular tension is not used to force your rifle on to the target. Your position should be constructed in such a manner that will allow the natural point of aim arrive directly on target sight alignment for a perfect bull-eye.

 

You may your check natural point of aim upon assuming your position and achieving completely relaxed position. Close your eyes; breathe 2 or 3 times and then exhaust your lungs until you reach perfect balance.  Perfect lung balance is reached upon your receipt by kinesthetic response acknowledging the lungs are perfectly balanced.  i.e. lack of need to inhale or exhale further. When you re-open your eyes, you should have remained exactly on target while viewing the perfect bull-eye through the sights. If you have to use muscular tension to "muscle" the rifle on to the target, you are susceptible to muscle spasms or tremors affecting your shots. This is the value of a natural point of aim always resulting in the achievement of the Perfect Bull-Eye (PBE).

Your head should be erect as possible. To do so, bring the rifle to the face by placing the rifle butt high on the shoulder. Raise the top of the stock above the shoulder and neck to a height where the eye and rear sight are exactly at the same level. Never move the head away from the erect or straight up and down position, towards the rifle: always bring the rifle to the head.

Note: One important fact is if you cant the rifle; make the identical angle of cant each time you take up your position. By varying the cant's angle, your shots will randomly deviate all over the target. Also, remember to take into account that canting your rifle will have an impact on sight adjustment. For instance, when adjusting windage, you will also adjust elevation and vice versa. To assist you in duplicating your cant, you might want to consider using a bubble spirit level to measure the angle. But, generally you will not cant your rifle in any shooting position.

NOTE: Do not cant your rifle, as this will cause a lot of problems for all shooters attempting to do it.  Will admit that it is required at times depending upon type of rifle and stock you may be using.

Eye relief is the distance from the eye to the rear aperture. This distance will be approximately 5-15 cm (2-6 inches.) Resting the eye against the sight may result in wear of the sight or concurrent damage to the eye because of recoil, or in developing a flinch in response to recoil. Regardless, never rest your eye against the rear sight or the rubber extender.

Changing the position of the butt plate or hook against the shoulder or changing the cheek pressure on the stock can result in a large change in zero (point of impact or natural point of aim.) Typically such changes affect recoil, which will determine the amount and direction of the rifle's jump. You must place and hold the rifle in exactly the same way each time you shoot, in order to duplicate your position's recoil pattern.  What does the recoil tell you…?  The front sight jumping straight up and down will inform you if any incorrect position misplacement or tensions exist during the shooting technique.   If the sight jumps to the right or left at recoil it is informing you that some aspect of the position is incorrect and you have to break the circuit and restart again from scratch.

Follow through on each shot. This is to say, maintain your position and concentration after the shot is released, such that you do not shift prior to the bullet exiting the barrel.  For very slow pellet or bullet velocity and with a shooting athlete working in the conscious mode, this statement is true but for the shooting athlete that uses the mental technique, the timing is so fast that the bullet or pellet is out of the barrel and gone before you can take up the follow through positioning.

Furthermore, for those that use conscious solid follow through on each shot, they do not consciously move before the shot actually breaks. In the case of the mental shooters, the follow through occurs in the ¾ of a second commencing at automatic trigger release.  In this case the bullet or pellet has departed the barrel prior to expiration of the ¾ of a second timing.

For mental shooting athletes, the spotting scope is unnecessary as you use the  mental pictorial representation of the perfect bull-eye.  Included with the pictorial representation is found the associated procedures attached and used by the unconscious mental entity for all sighting and shooting sequences.  The goal is to shoot the perfect one-shot match, which always results in the perfect bull-eye.

NOTE:  All shooting athletes Goal is: Every one-shot-match is accomplished with meticulous perfection and always ending or resulting with the perfect bull’s-eye….!

To win the gold, the shooting athlete will eliminate all personal errors in shooting technique!  The winning of any competition is accomplished solely on which competitor has committed the least amount of errors of technique…!

 

COMPETITIVE SHOOTING IS 98% MENTAL, 2 % PHYSICAL AND 100% SUPERIOR PERFORMANCE.

 

RANGE PICTORIALS.

STANDING POSITION - RIFLE.

PRONE POSITION - RIFLE.

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The One-Shot match was won not by a superior score, but by the athlete’s own superior mental performance.