Hlads;
I find myself in the odd, albeit enviable, position of looking for a second hunting rifle. Last year I upgraded from my venerable .303 Brit to a Ruger M77 Hawkeye. This is an awesome rifle, and I think that .308 is the go-to caliber for anything I'm hunting now in Eastern Ontario which is primarily whitetail deer and hopefully moose. Once I get some decent glass ( Leopold) this will remain my go-to big game rifle for these parts. Despite some original misgivings about the "hinge-plate" design I don’t find it that bad for the type of hunting we do round here which is primarily spot-and-stalk ( through fairly dense bush) and from tree stands. Once is loaded it stays so all day, never see's the inside of a vehicle, and gets unloaded at last light.
In a few years I'm likely moving back out west to Alberta and will be doing some "truck" hunting, for Mule/ White Tails, hopefully sheep, antelope, and moose. After reading Craig Boddingtons article in the recent Guns & Ammo – a good read BTW - I’m considering a Browning X-Bolt chambered in either .243 ( or maybe even a .270) to augment my hinge-plate, Mauser action, Ruger .308.
I'd like my second rifle to have a magazine, for quick loading in-and-out of a vehicle, and think that a .243 - .270 would be ideal for what Alberta offers in sheep/goats/ and antelope. My Ruger also has a wooden stock, and is slightly on the heavy side, so I'd also consider getting a synthetic stock with it.
1. I'd love some opinions on this;
2. I'd like to know who out there owns an X-bolt, and what they think of it;
3. While I don’t want to open a debate about .30-06 vs .308 etc ( please) I would like to know if going with a flatter shooting round like a .243 / .270 would be good to back-up my .308 ?
cheers lads
I find myself in the odd, albeit enviable, position of looking for a second hunting rifle. Last year I upgraded from my venerable .303 Brit to a Ruger M77 Hawkeye. This is an awesome rifle, and I think that .308 is the go-to caliber for anything I'm hunting now in Eastern Ontario which is primarily whitetail deer and hopefully moose. Once I get some decent glass ( Leopold) this will remain my go-to big game rifle for these parts. Despite some original misgivings about the "hinge-plate" design I don’t find it that bad for the type of hunting we do round here which is primarily spot-and-stalk ( through fairly dense bush) and from tree stands. Once is loaded it stays so all day, never see's the inside of a vehicle, and gets unloaded at last light.
In a few years I'm likely moving back out west to Alberta and will be doing some "truck" hunting, for Mule/ White Tails, hopefully sheep, antelope, and moose. After reading Craig Boddingtons article in the recent Guns & Ammo – a good read BTW - I’m considering a Browning X-Bolt chambered in either .243 ( or maybe even a .270) to augment my hinge-plate, Mauser action, Ruger .308.
I'd like my second rifle to have a magazine, for quick loading in-and-out of a vehicle, and think that a .243 - .270 would be ideal for what Alberta offers in sheep/goats/ and antelope. My Ruger also has a wooden stock, and is slightly on the heavy side, so I'd also consider getting a synthetic stock with it.
1. I'd love some opinions on this;
2. I'd like to know who out there owns an X-bolt, and what they think of it;
3. While I don’t want to open a debate about .30-06 vs .308 etc ( please) I would like to know if going with a flatter shooting round like a .243 / .270 would be good to back-up my .308 ?
cheers lads


















































