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  1. Home
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  3. Winter Shooting Tips

Winter Shooting Tips

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  • E Offline
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    Ember
    wrote on last edited by admin
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    Idaho winters will teach you things about shooting that August never could. When it's 18 degrees at the Boise Gun Club range and your breath is freezing on your shooting glasses, you learn real fast what works and what's just range-day theory.

    The good news: winter shooting makes you better. The bad news: it'll expose every shortcut in your setup and technique. Here's what actually matters when the temperature drops.

    Your Body Runs the Gun

    Cold hands don't work right. That's not weakness—that's physiology. When your core temperature drops, your body pulls blood away from your extremities to protect vital organs. Your trigger finger gets stiff, your grip weakens, and fine motor control goes to hell.

    The base layer matters more than the jacket. Compression-style long underwear works better than the old waffle-weave stuff your dad wore. It pulls moisture away from your skin, and staying dry is half the battle. I run merino wool base layers—they don't smell like death after a few range sessions, and they regulate temperature better than synthetics.

    For your lower half, insulated pants or ski pants keep your legs functional. Forget looking cool. I've seen guys in Carhartts trying to tough it out while shivering through their strings. They shoot like crap and go home early.

    Boots: This is Idaho, not Arizona. You need insulated boots rated for the actual temperature, not what you hope it'll be. Muck boots work great if you're standing in one spot. For walking ranges or hunting scenarios, get proper winter hunting boots. Cheap boots mean cold feet, and cold feet mean you're thinking about your toes instead of your sight picture.

    The Hand Problem

    Your hands are the interface between your brain and the gun. When they don't work, nothing works. You've got three options, and which one depends on what you're shooting.

    Thin gloves with hand warmers: Works for rifles where you don't need much trigger feel. Mechanix winter gloves or similar are fine. Stick a hand warmer in each pocket, keep your hands warm between strings.

    Fingerless shooting gloves: Better trigger control, but your fingers will get cold. The Accurateshooter tips recommend keeping your hands in your pockets with warmers until you're ready to shoot. This works if you're not doing rapid fire or competition stages.

    Trigger finger cutout gloves: Best compromise for most shooting. Full glove with a slit or opening for your trigger finger. Keep a hand warmer in your shooting hand pocket, pull your trigger finger out only when you're on target.

    I've tried shooting with full winter gloves. Don't. You can't feel the trigger properly, and that's how people get surprised by their gun going off. Dangerous and stupid.

    Guns and Ammo Act Different

    Cold metal shrinks. Your zero will shift, usually downward. How much depends on the temperature swing and your specific rifle, but figure on 1-2 MOA difference from your summer zero at 100 yards. Some barrels walk more than others as they warm up from cold.

    The practical answer: confirm your zero in winter conditions if you're doing anything that matters. Don't assume your August zero holds in January.

    Ammunition Performance

    Powder burns slower when it's cold. That means lower velocities, which means more drop at distance. You might see 50-100 fps velocity loss in extreme cold, depending on the powder. Factory ammo using ball powders tends to be more temperature sensitive than stuff loaded with extruded powders.

    For most shooting inside 300 yards, this won't ruin your day. Beyond that, you need to either re-zero for winter or dial your dope to account for the velocity change.

    The real problem: cycling issues. Semi-autos can get sluggish when oil and grease thicken up in the cold. Your AR that runs like a sewing machine in summer might short-stroke at 15 degrees if you've got heavy oil in it.

    Use lighter lubricants in winter. I run CLP or Mobile 1 synthetic instead of heavy greases. Keep the gun outside if you're shooting outside—bringing a cold gun into a warm building causes condensation, and that moisture will freeze when you go back out. If you need to bring guns inside, keep them in cases until they warm up gradually.

    Woman in proper shooting stance firing a handgun at indoor range while wearing pink ear protectio...
    Female shooter at indoor range

    Optics and Electronics

    Cold kills batteries faster. That's basic chemistry—lithium batteries lose about 20% of their capacity at freezing temperatures. Keep your spare batteries in an inside pocket close to your body, not in your range bag.

    Red dots and electronic optics: they'll keep working, but the battery won't last as long. Carry spares. I've seen guys at winter matches with dead optics because they didn't check their battery before showing up.

    The Fog Problem

    Take a warm gun outside into cold air, and the outside of your scope will fog up. Take a cold gun into a warm building, and the inside of your scope will fog up. Neither one helps you shoot.

    The winter shooting tips from Accurateshooter are solid here: let your rifle acclimate outside before you shoot. Don't keep it in a warm truck until the last minute.

    Good sunglasses aren't optional. Snow glare will wreck your eyes and make it impossible to see targets. Polarized lenses help with glare, but even non-polarized eye protection is better than nothing. Your shooting glasses count—just make sure they don't fog up from your breath. Either get glasses with good anti-fog coating or adjust your face covering so you're not breathing directly onto your lenses.

    Shooter wearing protective gear aims an AK-style rifle with scope at an indoor shooting range
    Shooter at indoor range with ak-style rifle

    Range Setup Changes

    A good tripod or rest becomes essential in winter. You don't want to be lying prone in snow for 20 minutes trying to zero. Bipods work, but a tripod or shooting bench keeps you more functional. Your gear list needs adjustment for winter reality.

    Bring a pad or mat if you're shooting prone. A closed-cell foam pad keeps you off frozen ground. Those yoga mats work fine.

    Target stands and cardboard behave differently in snow and wind. Free-standing target stands blow over easier when there's wind. Weight them down or stake them better than you think you need to.

    Female shooter wearing safety glasses and hearing protection at indoor shooting range
    Female shooter at indoor range

    What Winter Does to Your Shooting

    Your natural point of aim changes when you're wearing more clothes. Your shooting position feels different with extra layers. Your support arm sits differently, your cheek weld changes with a thick jacket, and your shooting stance might shift.

    The fix is simple but annoying: you need to re-establish your fundamentals with winter clothing on. Five minutes of dry-fire practice in your actual winter gear will show you what needs adjustment.

    Breathing control matters more. When you can see your breath, you can see how much your body moves with each breath cycle. Use that feedback. The cold makes you want to rush shots to get back to warm, but rushing shots makes you miss. Slow down, breathe right, break the shot correctly.

    Shooter demonstrating proper two-handed pistol stance at indoor shooting range wearing protective...
    Shooter at indoor range in two-handed shooting stance

    Idaho-Specific Considerations

    The public ranges managed by Idaho Fish and Game stay open year-round, but conditions vary. Check if the access roads are plowed. Some ranges at higher elevations become inaccessible after heavy snow.

    Boise-area ranges usually stay accessible, but early morning ice can make things interesting. The parking lot at the Boise Gun Club gets icy—drive accordingly.

    Private ranges sometimes close or reduce hours in winter. Call ahead if you're driving more than 20 minutes.

    State land shooting areas become harder to access in winter. What was a simple drive down a forest service road in July might need a snowmobile in January. Know before you go, and tell someone where you'll be.

    Black and white shooting target showing bullet holes distributed across the 10, 9, 8, and 7 scori...
    Shooting target with bullet holes

    Gear That Actually Helps

    You don't need to buy a bunch of new stuff, but a few items make winter shooting functional instead of miserable:

    A good thermos: Hot coffee or tea between strings keeps your core temperature up. Your body works better warm.

    Extra magazines: Cold mags shoot fine, but keep a set inside your jacket if you're running semi-auto pistols. Some pistol magazines get cranky in extreme cold.

    A sled or cart: Dragging gear through snow sucks. A cheap plastic sled works great for hauling bags and targets.

    Camp chair with a back: Standing in snow gets old. A chair lets you rest between strings while keeping your butt dry.

    When Not to Shoot

    If it's cold enough that exposed skin gets frostbite in under 10 minutes, stay home. The range will be there tomorrow.

    Heavy snowfall makes it impossible to see targets beyond 50 yards. You can still shoot, but you're basically doing close-range work only.

    Ice on shooting positions is genuinely dangerous. You can't shoot well when you're worried about slipping, and falling with a loaded gun is a great way to ruin everyone's day.

    The Winter Advantage

    Here's what makes cold-weather shooting worth the hassle: mirage disappears. That heat wave distortion that screws up long-range shooting in summer? Gone. You get clearer sight pictures at distance in winter than any other time of year.

    Fewer people at the range means you get better shooting spots and more space. The guys who show up in winter are serious about shooting, which generally means better range behavior and more useful conversations.

    Winter shooting teaches you what your gear and skills actually are, not what they are under ideal conditions. You learn to shoot when you're uncomfortable, when your body isn't cooperating perfectly, when conditions aren't pristine. That's valuable knowledge.

    The key is showing up prepared instead of trying to tough it out. Bring the right clothes, adjust your gear for the cold, and expect things to work differently than they do in summer. Do that, and winter becomes the season when you actually improve instead of just maintaining.


    Read the original article in The Handbook | By Boise Gun Club


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