Shooting Fundamentals
Eye and Aiming
Shooting Positions
Range and Firearm Safety
Field Scenarios
100

This is the proper alignment of the front and rear sight.

Sight Alignment

100

This is the eye your brain prefers for precise aiming.

Dominant eye

100

This position is considered the steadiest of all shooting positions.

Prone

Act it out- Act it out for 10 extra point.

Hit the target with the nerf gun anywhere get 25 points, hit a bull's-eye get 50 points.

100

The muzzle should always point in this direction.

Safe direction

100

A hunter jerks the trigger quickly to “make it fire.” This is an example of this.

Poor trigger control

200

This type of trigger pull prevents jerking the firearm.

Smooth trigger squeeze

200

This simple hand triangle test helps determine this shooting trait.

Eye dominance

200

In this position, elbows are often braced against knees for stability.

Sitting position

Act it out- Act it out for 10 extra point.

Hit the target with the nerf gun anywhere get 25 points, hit a bull's-eye get 50 points.

200

If a firearm does not fire when the trigger is pulled, it is called this.

Misfire

200

A shooter controls breathing and slowly squeezes the trigger. This demonstrates this.

Proper shooting technique

300

This fundamental requires holding your position after the shot.

Follow-through

300

This sight must be clear and sharp, while the target appears slightly blurry.

Front sight

300

This position is commonly used when vegetation blocks lower positions.

Standing

Act it out- Act it out for 10 extra point.

Hit the target with the nerf gun anywhere get 25 points, hit a bull's-eye get 50 points.

300

A delayed firing after pulling the trigger is known as this.

Hangfire

300

A hunter swings around with a firearm after shooting. This violates this safety rule.

Keeping the muzzle pointed in a safe direction

400

his breathing technique improves accuracy by reducing body movement.

Controlled breathing (exhaling and pausing before the shot)

400

This term describes placing aligned sights on the intended target.

Sight picture

400

This position involves one knee on the ground and offers moderate stability.

Kneeling

Act it out- Act it out for 10 extra point.

Hit the target with the nerf gun anywhere get 25 points, hit a bull's-eye get 50 points.

400

After a misfire, you should wait this long before opening the action.

30 to 60 seconds

400

A hunter rushes the shot due to excitement and misses. They likely ignored this fundamental.

Follow-through (or trigger control/breath control)

500

Flinching usually happens because of this anticipation before the shot.

Anticipating recoil (or anticipating the shot)

500

A right-handed shooter who is left-eye dominant may need to do this to improve accuracy.

Learn to shoot left-handed (or adjust to use the dominant eye)

500

This factor determines which shooting position is safest and most effective in the field.

Surrounding terrain and visibility (or safe backstop awareness)

500

This must always be clearly identified before pulling the trigger.

The target and what is beyond it

500

A hunter fires without checking what lies behind the target. This violates this key rule

Being sure of your target and beyond

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