It's honestly hard for me to say just how accurate I am. I know my guns are accurate, and like I've said in various posts, "if I do my part." As long as my guns are on, I have no reason to spend 35 bucks to join the range for a year if I only go once or twice. Right now, all my guns are sighted in and I didn't join this year (the year runs Jan 1 to Jan 1). The main reason for NOT joining this year was purely financial. I'm only spending money on what I need to. The gas prices and heating oil prices have sure hurt me.
I do know that I was shooting red squirrels that were a nuisance using my Ruger Mark II Target Pistol and was only using one hand (my good hand), as the other arm was in a sling after surgery. That was several winters ago and I shot 13 in three days (about 1/2 to 1 hour per day).
Most shots were fairly close, out to maybe 15 yards. Other shots were farther, up in the tops of some trees at a distance (roughly 80 yards). I was hitting most with one shot, but I was using a wooden porch banister to rest my gun on.
With my 4" S&W 500, I sighted it in and found the load I wanted shooting at 50 yards (it was 50 yards, as I was in the rifle range and the target was halfway down the 100 yard range). Once I had everything adjusted, I shot five shots. One shot was 3" off from center and the other four shots were in a 1.5" (one and a half inch) group in the bullseye. I have the target downstairs from that with the date, the speed the bullet was chronied and the fact that it was a fairly calm day (calm enough that the little breeze sure wasn't blowing those bullets).
Several days ago, I blistered a woodchuck when I was out bear hunting. The owners of the property want me to shoot any woodchucks I see. When I first spotted him, I was about 60 yards away and coming out of a trail from the woods. I got to the edge of the woods, and couldn't find a sufficient branch to rest the gun on and my heart was really pounding.
I decided I would sneak up on him. I had some camo on. Every time he was down eating the lush green grass, I was slowly moving. Every time he got up, I froze. I got to about 15 yards and was going to take an offhand (two handed) shot, but my heart was beating so hard I realized I needed a rest. I knelt down on my right knee and used my left knee to support my left elbow. I was watching him about 5 minutes and finally I touched the 500 S&W 4" off.
It pretty much turned him inside out with most of his lungs and heart missing completely. I looked around, couldn't find the parts in line with where the bullet would have gone, and figured part of him got vaporized.
Am I a good shot? I don't know and I don't claim to be. I only tell you what I've done. I certainly could use a lot more practice, that's for sure. I am much better with the pistol resting against something or on something. If I had the choice of resting any gun on anything as opposed to shooting offhand, I would take a rest any day. That's why I have two Harris bipods. I believe in one shot, one kill.
I did say in one post that I shot 1/4" groups at 200 yards with my accurized 22-250. I went downstairs later on and measured the group. It was 1/2" not 1/4" at 200 yards. Sorry, my bad. I guess I was thinking of 1/4" at 100 and 1/2 at 200.
I do know I've done an awful lot of shooting since the 60's when I belonged to the NRA and got a Sharpshooter third bar when I was 12 in 1968 for smallbore (22 heavy barrel) 50 foot indoor range near where I used to live.