Re: Shooting in extreme cold
I like the cold or did at least. When the air is filled with ice crystals (alaskans know about this) and the air is dead still looking over massive wilderness, has to be experienced.
The only issue I had with bolt guns was scope turrets not wanting to go clicky click, parallax knob very stiff and eye piece on spotting scope froze. Both my 700 and GAP always went pop to around -35, this is about as cold as I shot them but I did shoot them routinely in the -20s.
Pistols, Sig and 1911 had all sorts of issues at -30, XD45 ran like it was 70, always.
10/22 had some issues, 597 did not.
I have never did anything different with lube, Breakfree on semis and a dab of grease on the bolt.
I shot prone using a closed cell foam pad and then TAB shooting mat. I never used gloves on the trigger even at -30, my hands would not get cold for the time it took to empty 308 10 rounder. I never really got cold or chilled.
Avoid breathing directly on ocular, my rifle and scope would be frost covered by my breath and the ice fog, I breathed out the left side of my mouth when on the gun.
Bipod would sink in the snow, I built little ice ledges dropping water on the snow till it froze, its easy to lose brass in 3 feet of snow, its easy to lose anything in 3 feet of lose powder snow.
-30 on a Jan afternoon in the sun is blinding, good sunglasses and they will fog is a good idea.
While I prefer skis, when firearms involved I used snowshoes to get around.
I used a Primus thermos of hot water and brought soup and coffee packets.
Avoid rolling down rig windows, you been warned. Do not slamm closed glass hatches on SUVs, do not drop your warm keys from your pocket in the snow, pick them up and then in the ignition, do not make your troops mad or you may come out to go and home and find out spray bottles of water was sprayed on you rig during your shift and its quarter inch thick or buried by a front end loader.
I think shooting in the winter and cold is more fun because only the tuffest show up so you usually are alone.