High price of .22 LR ammo?

buffdog

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I just got the new Cabela (SIR) catalog. Looking at the .22 ammo prices, my only comment is "OUCH."

I shoot about 4000 rounds a year on Prairie Dogs and stuff. Last year I paid $12.99 for a bulk pack Federal 745 load ( 38 gr. HP ) at the Co-op in Redvers, Sask. This year, old stock at Wolverine in Virden was $13.95 and was going up to $16.95 on the new order. Home Hardware in Brandon is $16.95 but a bulk purchase brought this down to $14.95 a carton of 525 rounds.

Cabela's price for the same stuff is $27.99...........OUCH.
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All ammo is going up and up in price, but I hear ya on the .22LR, especially as you can't save a few bucks by reloading the stuff. Last year I decided to stock up a bit, and bought as much as I could at around $13 per brick of 500.
 
I managed to go to Bass Pro about a month and a half ago, and snipe up a half dozen boxes of Federal bulk packs for $13.49/each. Sorry buggers put the wrong price on it for the sale, and I was all too eager to jump on that! The reg price was $15.99
 
Why are you guys complaining so much? Those ammo prices are about the same dollar wise that we were paying 20 to 30 years ago. When you count in inflation over the past couple of decades, 22 ammo is still really cheap compared to what it used to be.
 
Why are you guys complaining so much? Those ammo prices are about the same dollar wise that we were paying 20 to 30 years ago. When you count in inflation over the past couple of decades, 22 ammo is still really cheap compared to what it used to be.



Shhhhh! For ####'s sake! You want them to raise it up some more?;)
 
If you think $14.95 is pricey for a bulk pack, try pricing Eley EPS. $150 a brick or for a real sticker shock $15 for 50 rounds.
 
22 Ammo prices

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Yeah, I hear you on the Eley premium stuff. 50 years ago, the price of CIL hollow points was about 35 cents, so at about 4 times that today, the price is not a lot compared to cars, etc. We were paying about $2.00 a box for the target quality ammo of that period, but if you wanted to compete seriously, then you saved up and used the best you could get. I was making about a buck an hour in the late 50s, so that was two hours work for the best ammo available.

For general target practice, the cheaper stuff was used and the expensive stuff hoarded for matches. When we look at the general usage of the .22 RF, most of it is probably shot plinking at tin cans or other targets, and hunting smaller animals in the cheaper rifles. Ordinary run-of-the-mill stuff is great for that. When you compete on the range, you use the higher grade rifles and ammo, the best you can afford.

Now I'm at that point in life when the 1000 yard targets look a bit fuzzy, the prone position is high centered in the middle, my priorities have changed, and the cash income has been reduced at retirement. Instead of "minute of angle" it is now "minute of gopher", so my ammunition needs is changed accordingly.

I guess this is a good point for spending the cash for the ammo when it is on sale, and getting as much of it as you can afford. It just shows the discrepancy in places that sell it, and if you can get twice as much ammo for the price, you get twice as much enjoyment and shooting.
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buffdog, I have often referred to the 1950s as being the heart of the glory years of shooting. I'll wager that you have burned some of that 22 ammo on the old Dominion Ammunition program, where we shot three position sporting rifle for a vast number of badges, patches and shields. I got the silver shield with my old 69 Winchester, but then moved to where there was no rifle club.
In the 1960s got into the Dom. Amm. program with pistol. I completed the program, including the gold shield. Then, wondering what to do, three of us started the pistol program again, and completed it a second time!
At least, during that time CIL changed the shields, so they are different. At that time I bought plain old "Superclean" long rifle in cases of 5000.
If anyone wants to see the shields, I could post pictures.
 
Everything you have came to you in a diesel fueled truck. It costs nearly 2 grand to fill the fuel tanks on an 18 wheeler.
"...I was making about a buck an hour in the late 50s..." You were rich. Minimum wage was under a buck an hour in 1959.
 
for gophers, I use the winchester hollow points as they run on average about $14.95/500 brick. I never have had the need to use expensive ammo on varmints yet. It only takes one careful aimed shot to do the job and they cannot tell what brand you shoot.
 
"...they cannot tell what brand you shoot..." Exactly. However, .22's being the way they are, you have to try a box of as many brands as you can to find the ammo your firearm(rifle or handgun) shoots best. There's no point buying a brick(or case) until you know that.
 
If anyone wants to see the shields, I could post pictures.

That'd be very cool of you :D. I love hearing Canadian shooting stories of the past such as yours, and I'm sure I'm not alone.

These stories put a spotlight on what we have LOST over time. We all know there are a lot of people out there that think that anything to do with firearms is and was always American. These stories, especially with evidence ;), will hopefully make some people think.
 
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Canadian Industries Ltd., makers of Dominion ammunition, sponsred a club oriented shooting program called Dominion Marksmen. After a shooting club signed up for it, CIL supplied the targets and gave out the awards. Only stipulation was you had to guarantee to use Dominion ammunition. The targets were shot under club supervision, signed by the shooter and two witnesses.
In sporting rifle, 22, it was four position; prone, sitting, kneeling and standing. To start with, to encourage beginners, almost any score would get the initial little badge. One for each position. After the badges were won, the next were patches for your shooting coat. ie, Ten targets of a certain score in prone got you the prone patch, and so on with the other positions.
After a shooter had won all the patches, he/she could shoot for the shields. The old ones were the silver shield, and when that was won, you could go on for the gold shield. The shields required twenty targets of a certain score, in each of the four positions. For the gold shield, I am pretty sure thescore had to be 100%! Of course, you could discard the targets that didn't make it, and keep shooting.
I got the silver shield in rifle and had about half, of the needed 100s standing, the tough ones, for the gold, when I moved from a club that had a rifle program.
The club in the new area I moved to had organized pistol shooting, so I immediately starated the Dominion Marksmen pistol program. This was in slow fire, timed and rapid. The badges and patches were for each of these three methods. To get the gold shield required 60 targets, twenty of slow, twenty of timed and twenty of rapid. The score required for one target of each position was 275, out of 300. I didn't think I would ever get the gold shield, because I shot a lot of targets before I got even one set of three that scored 275, or better!
However, I did get the complete set of everything offered, including the gold shield. Then, three of us in the club started from scratch and went through the whold thing again! Fortunately, the program had changed there patches and shields, so the new ones, which required the same scores, were considerable different in shape and composition.
Here is a picture of some of the shields. The four on the right with the galloping horse, was a similar program by Winchester, in 1967, in honor of Canada's 100th birtheay.
Many of my patches have gone where all things go, that have been played with by sons and grand children. This was an older picture I had, so I see it also has my hunter trainers badge.
I will post a pic of the shields on another entry here.

P1020143-1.jpg
 
And here are the shields. The three on black wood are the silver rifle, the silver pistol and the gold pistol. The other two are heavy bronze castings on inch thick oak wood. These were what we got on the second time around for the shields.
The score marked on the first gold shield is 5630, but I slipped two points, to 5628 for the sixty targets, the second time around.
I got the first gold shield in 1968 and the second in 1972.


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I should have clarified that all piltol shooting was "Bullseye," type. That is, one hand holding the fully extended pistol.
 
Dynapoints $16.99 at Walmat
Federal 525 Bulk pack $21.95 at Can tire!

Im in the same boat shooting over 4000 rds since may at gophers....And that was with not having a 10/22 until late june :)

Anyone know of the cheapest 22 ammo in SAB? It would be worth a drive if a guy could save a few bucks a box.
 
When I was 10 or thereabouts I used to go down to the grocery store and buy Winchester Super X .22s for a buck a box, when I couldn't talk Mom into putting them in with the groceries. That was 34 years ago, what are you guys complaining about?:confused:
 
Dynapoints $16.99 at Walmat
Federal 525 Bulk pack $21.95 at Can tire!

Im in the same boat shooting over 4000 rds since may at gophers....And that was with not having a 10/22 until late june :)

Anyone know of the cheapest 22 ammo in SAB? It would be worth a drive if a guy could save a few bucks a box.

At $5-6 a gallon for gas, you have to either buy many bricks of ammo or have a very short drive to save anything.


I'm sorry to slap CT like this, but just buy the Fed at Walmart, too.

And when yet another CT stops carrying ammo, then we can really squawk as WM starts raising it's prices....
 
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