
The Fastest Way to Zero Any Scope
If you’ve ever felt frustrated by the high cost of ammunition or the time required to drive to the range just to zero your scope, you aren't alone.
Meet The Boar - a precision laser boresighter designed to help you confirm your accuracy from the comfort of your own home, without firing a single shot.
Key Features
- Universal Compatibility: Easily adapts to calibers ranging from .17 HMR up to .50 Cal and 12 GA shotguns
- Cost & Time Efficient: Achieve a perfect zero in seconds without wasting expensive ammo or scheduling a range trip.
- High Visibility: The green laser technology provides a crisp aimpoint to ensure your bore and scope are in total alignment.
It's straightforward, reliable, and currently available at 54% off for a limited time.
Thanks for being part of our community,
oes, the Culicidae, are a family of small flies consisting of 3,600 species. The word mosquito (formed by mosca and diminutive -ito) is Spanish and Portuguese for little fly. Mosquitoes have a slender segmented body, one pair of wings, three pairs of long hair-like legs, and specialized, highly elongated, piercing-sucking mouthparts. All mosquitoes drink nectar from flowers; females of many species have adapted to also drink blood. The group diversified during the Cretaceous period. Evolutionary biologists view mosquitoes as micropredators, small animals that parasitise larger ones by drinking their blood without immediately killing them. Medical parasitologists view mosquitoes as vectors of disease, carrying protozoan parasites or bacterial or viral pathogens from one host to another. The mosquito life cycle consists of four stages: egg, larva, pupa, and adult. Eggs are laid on the water surface; they hatch into motile larvae that feed on aquatic algae and organic material. These larvae are important food sources for many freshwater animals, such as dragonfly nymphs, many fish, and some birds. Adult females of many species have mouthparts adapted to pierce the skin of a host and feed on blood of a wide range of vertebrate hosts, and some invertebrates, primarily other arthropods. Some species only produce eggs after a blood meal. The mosquito's saliva is transferred to the host during the bite, and can cause an itchy rash. In addition, blood-feeding species can ingest pathogens while biting, and transmit them to other hosts. Those species include vectors of parasitic diseases such as malaria and filariasis, and arboviral diseases such as yellow fever and dengue fever. By transmitting diseases, mosquitoes cause the deaths of over one million people each ye
