blr's
If you want a light, reliable hunting rifle you can carry around on your hip all day, blr's your gun.
We have 243, 270, '06, and 300. Had a 308, but sold it; just didn't like the caliber.
When practicing we never use a bench. Standing, sitting, prone. Always figured there was no point in bench shooting a hunting gun. I'm in S. Alberta. When shooting paper the wind is usually 15-30kts. At 100yds (out of practice) we generally get 4" groups. In practice, make that closer to 2"(sitting). In practice; a 25 yd run, 3 rapid sucession standing shots we look for 4-5" groups.
Our average shot when hunting is prob. 60 yds., max of maybe 200(rarely). When younger had an A bolt 300, could shoot head sized rocks across the coulee with it. Beautiful gun, if you could see it, you could hit it, but too heavy.
Maybe it's just because my first gun was a blr, but I find when you throw it to your shoulder, it just, plain, fits. I'd agree with Supercub on the accuracy, trigger, resale, and calibers, but I'd beg to differ on the comb being too low, and the magazine setup. Maybe it's just what you're used too, but our cheeks are alway's on the stock.
Only thing I've found is you need to watch your overall bullet length if reloading. If the leads not seated properly for the gun(bullet's too long overall), it can jam picking it up out of the magazine.
Least that's my 2cents.