From the Ground Up - The Homework - 1:5

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  • Опубликовано: 3 фев 2025

Комментарии • 5

  • @SHEPDEV.ONLINE
    @SHEPDEV.ONLINE  Месяц назад +3

    The dry-fire workouts encompass many different skills that apply to both competitive and defensive shooting, however there are some workouts and techniques that may apply more-so to only one of the disciplines. It is encouraged to complete these workouts even if they are of no interest to your discipline, as they can open up different thinking which could modify your current platform for the better.
    It should be noted that the workout plan and course outline work separately from one another. However, the videos are formatted in chunks that can be viewed and managed like an "Encyclopedia of Shooting Skills" to provide you with the information necessary on the given day.
    Download the homework printouts here:
    shepherddevelopment.com/homework/

  • @Ntop33
    @Ntop33 Месяц назад +2

    Thank you so much for this bro. This is truly helpful

    • @SHEPDEV.ONLINE
      @SHEPDEV.ONLINE  Месяц назад +1

      @@Ntop33 I'm really happy to hear that these videos were worthwhile to put together! Thanks for the comment 🙏 Let's keep training! 🫡

  • @abettermind
    @abettermind 9 дней назад +1

    Can you explain the reasoning behind your "check the bore" process? It looks absolutely wild to me, especially in a video targeting new shooters. I've never seen any instructor suggest such a step, nor would I suggest such a thing to someone under my tutelage. I'm not ragging on you, as i go back to fundamental videos like this to pick up new ideas, but I'll be damned if that doesn't look batshit crazy to me.
    You have some great content on this channel, and I'm enjoying your approach. Your low subscriber count doesn't make sense, and I'm sure those numbers will go up quickly if you keep at it.

    • @SHEPDEV.ONLINE
      @SHEPDEV.ONLINE  8 дней назад +2

      Hey, thanks for raising the question man. I do agree with you wholeheartedly that it looks like a crazy idea. It's the final letter in PROVE and must be done in order, which means we have verified the firearm is clear before proceeding to examine the bore. It's an optional step, but something that is taught in our firearms academies in Canada as well. If the firearm is unloaded and verifiably so, then at some point we have to accept that and trust it to do things like cleaning, dryfire, dry reps in the CQB, or force on force with sim rounds, etc. If we guarantee with our life that the firearm is safe, then examining the bore is just an optional step or extra tool to sort out some problems that even new shooters could run into. As crazy as it looks, I think it also helps new shooters to truly be confident in their clearing and understanding of the function of the gun. It's rare, but having pieces of dummy rounds, dirt, squib rounds, etc stuck in the barrel can be catastrophic. Anecdotal experience, but we had a near catastrophe switching from sim rounds to blanks where an unknown sim round was still lodged in the barrel and the blank round sent the sim round at higher velocity right into a role players face, embedding in his cheek and requiring surgery. Could have been much worse, but now that's implemented in training to examine the bore when loading up. Seems crazy or redundant I know, but it's a simple and efficient way to be entirely 100% that the gun is ready to go.
      ruclips.net/video/9DbG-jF7WDI/видео.htmlsi=zIbQh7mlUnYu-G_Z