20 COMMENTS

  1. When I was a youngster most of the old timers had a dislike for auto pistols. One of the almost universal exceptions to this rule was the colt woodsman pistol. If this trick can be pulled off it takes a natural pointing gun like the colt and a lot of practice.

    It doesn’t hurt to shoot higher up the string where the swing isn’t as large and good timing brings it home.

    • He also placed his shot at the top of the period – the point at which it stops to change direction. Which is much easier that hitting it mid period.

      • Absolutely. And you see lots of sporting clay shooters doing the exact same thing with “teal” type targets.

      • Wrong answer RPOC, it was not at the top.. .it was already starting it’s downward trend.

        He’s simply a great shot from lots of practice and dedication.

        • Great Lakes Navy Bootcamp? Just wondering because of a phrase you used that I still say to this day, that unless someone has been through it they have no clue what it means.

  2. I knew old timerer when I was growing up in the mountians of kentucky who could make a lot of “impossible ” shots. A lot of things are “impossible” because we have never really tried to find a way to do them . Just look at circ-de-sole. This guy has practiced a lot .

  3. It was a great shot. Of course there are plenty of doubters here.
    Feel free to post a video of faking this or even doing it yourself.

  4. I am impressed! Seems like a young fella to be already shooting that good. Maybe he has been shooting since he was a little kid?

  5. Wow. I thought I was hot stuff when I put a .22 round through a 9mm case at about that same distance — put it against a contrasting background, hit it on the 3rd shot (careful zeroing beforehand, and all that…oh, and no scope involved, factory irons on a Henry rifle). But how in the name of deity do you even SEE dental floss at that distance?

    • Some people are just blessed with great hand eye coordination. And practice with a 22 is cheap and from the looks of it he’s on private land so he doesn’t have to sweat range fees every time he shoots. Color me jealous.

      • Well, at least I’ve got one of those x-factors going for me.

        I can only dream about being able to walk out back and shoot on my own property (heck, I can only dream about having my own property), but here in the Northwest it’s legal to shoot on public land. And being in a rural area, there’s a lot of land to be had within a 45-minute drive (or less).

        I’m out shooting every weekend, the only fee I pay is at the gas pump, and I’ve only had to share my favorite “public range” twice in two years. So I got that going for me, which is nice.

        As for superhuman vision and uncanny hand-eye coordination, my best hope at this point is a bite from a radioactive spider.

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