JimConway
Instructor
I have no doubt that what you say is true.
I get a number of shooters each year that have gone your route and can not shoot.
You say that I think my way is better. The problem with your statement is that I do not have a single way.
What we are good at is diagnosing the base problem and showing the student how to solve the problem.
All students are different and there is no canned answer
Btw, one of the "top shooters" advised one of our students to simply hold high right to stop missing low left.
This approach worked well for him as long as he knew the distance, but failed miserably when he did not know the distance or when he was moving toward or away from the target.
I guess that if a student asks the right question of the right person, he/she will get good help.
I get a number of shooters each year that have gone your route and can not shoot.
You say that I think my way is better. The problem with your statement is that I do not have a single way.
What we are good at is diagnosing the base problem and showing the student how to solve the problem.
All students are different and there is no canned answer
Btw, one of the "top shooters" advised one of our students to simply hold high right to stop missing low left.
This approach worked well for him as long as he knew the distance, but failed miserably when he did not know the distance or when he was moving toward or away from the target.
I guess that if a student asks the right question of the right person, he/she will get good help.