I am 6'9 and 350 lbs; the one time I went sheep hunting I carried a small cannon that weighed 90 lbs. Anyone with a lighter gun is a twink and should buy a micro midas
A hunting book I have from 1974, recommends a hunters rifle should weigh 1/20th of the hunters own weight.
Interesting concept. 160 pound hunter = 8 pound rifle. 200 pound hunter = 10 pound rifle.
Well Now !Doesn’t that just make PERFECT Scientific Sense !
Lol. RJ
A hunting book I have from 1974, recommends a hunters rifle should weigh 1/20th of the hunters own weight.
Interesting concept. 160 pound hunter = 8 pound rifle. 200 pound hunter = 10 pound rifle.
I'll be hauling arse with my Garand for my first hunt this fall... google tells me it's 9.5 pounds. We'll see how that goes![]()
I'll be hauling arse with my Garand for my first hunt this fall... google tells me it's 9.5 pounds. We'll see how that goes![]()
Shooting lightweight rifles off a bench into tiny groups or at longer range practice targets gives me a false sense of field shootability. When things happen fast, my heart is pumping, the cold has got my fingers hard, they have let me down. Almost everything I’ve missed or wounded in the past 15 years has been with my lightest rifles. Heavier guns allow for more shooter error. I have learned this the hard way.
I don’t get buck fever shooting gophers. That’s probably why I don’t.
Speaking of weight in a hunting rig, I've noticed these days that scopes seem to be getting heavier and heavier. I think this is true all the way through the quality levels, but certainly in the top-tier scopes--Swarovski, Zeiss, Schmidt & Bender, Kahles, Leica, Nightforce, March. It's now almost impossible to find a good hunting scope in the 12 oz. range (the Swarovski Z3 series is there, and some Leupolds); instead the current trend with top-ticket scopes is to huge objective bells, illumination, 30 mm. tubes, and other add-ons, and weight goes up into the 22+ ounce range. So if you burden that 7.5 lb. rifle with a new Leica Amplus 6 scope, for example, the rig now weighs 9 lbs. Whenever I'm contemplating a new hunting rig, I pay as much attention to the scope weight as to the rifle weight.
Speaking of weight in a hunting rig, I've noticed these days that scopes seem to be getting heavier and heavier. I think this is true all the way through the quality levels, but certainly in the top-tier scopes--Swarovski, Zeiss, Schmidt & Bender, Kahles, Leica, Nightforce, March. It's now almost impossible to find a good hunting scope in the 12 oz. range (the Swarovski Z3 series is there, and some Leupolds); instead the current trend with top-ticket scopes is to huge objective bells, illumination, 30 mm. tubes, and other add-ons, and weight goes up into the 22+ ounce range. So if you burden that 7.5 lb. rifle with a new Leica Amplus 6 scope, for example, the rig now weighs 9 lbs. Whenever I'm contemplating a new hunting rig, I pay as much attention to the scope weight as to the rifle weight.
The hunters of the 1800s all carried heavy rifles when hunting for the most part.It all comes down to conditioning and staying fit and a lot of today’s hunters are far from fit that’s why some guys backsides rarely leaves the seat of their ATV.Another thing to consider is the rifles balance,a rifle that balances nice in the hand even if heavy is a joy to carry