- Location
- Southern Vancouver Island
1- Get into reloading
2- Buy whatever rifle strike your fancy... and there are some great deals out there on "weird" less common calibers...
Who cares, it's just one more set of dies.
Exactly.
1- Get into reloading
2- Buy whatever rifle strike your fancy... and there are some great deals out there on "weird" less common calibers...
Who cares, it's just one more set of dies.
1- Get into reloading
2- Buy whatever rifle strike your fancy... and there are some great deals out there on "weird" less common calibers...
Who cares, it's just one more set of dies.
3030, 308, 3006, 270
Pick one and be happy for ever.
Dont pick the 300 Win Mag mentioned above.
I'm slowly looking out to get myself a first and permanent deer rifle on the east coast. I know nothing about ammo availability besides "everything is out of stock", so what would YOU recommend getting in these strange times? All I've shot so far is shotguns and 22's, so I have no hands on experience with any of the calibers performances but find it hard to believe I'd have to take a shot over 200 yards, let alone 100.
Cheers
hahaha, Yep This is sound Advice mate.....3030, 308, 3006, 270
Pick one and be happy for ever.
Dont pick the 300 Win Mag mentioned above.
And which gurus would those be?6.5 creedmore?!?! But all the CGN gurus told us time and time again this was just a passing fad! Now look at em, how’s the crow tasting guys
I'll vote for either the SKS or a good 308. The SKS can be had for about $400-ish here in the Maritimes and the ammo - 7.62x39 - only about 0.50- .60, Under $10 for 20 rnds. A case of 1440 about $500. Go over to ECC store (Army-Navy) on Agricola to see what they have in stock for used rifles. Often was a good stock when I lived down there. Mil-surp and modern. And lots of surplus gear, too. Enfields are really low priced, but as said the .303 is costly - even if you reload the brass is pricey. Not great for learning accuracy.
And check out ####### .ca for local deals.
6.5 creedmore?!?! But all the CGN gurus told us time and time again this was just a passing fad! Now look at em, how’s the crow tasting guys
No, its not just the quantity available but the actual shelf space set aside for it. There's plenty of ammo available in other cartridges - the shelves are decently stocked, but I had a choice of about a dozen .30-06 loads this weekend. It seemed like the same or more in .308 and .300 WM. There was like 3 loads each of .25-06 and 7mm-08 on the shelf. All in-stock. 10 loads of .270 and probably the same in 7mm RM. There's the usual cheapies (Federal Classic "blue box", Win Power Points, some Core-Lokts, etc) and a mix of premium and super premium loads as well (mostly Federal, Hornady, Winchester, and Nosler ammo), but 6.5CM just dominated the ammo aisle. That, plus .22LR, 9mm, and tons of 12 gauge.
I'm off work today so will probably end up at a gun counter somewhere, might update this post with more findings.
I'm slowly looking out to get myself a first and permanent deer rifle on the east coast. I know nothing about ammo availability besides "everything is out of stock", so what would YOU recommend getting in these strange times? All I've shot so far is shotguns and 22's, so I have no hands on experience with any of the calibers performances but find it hard to believe I'd have to take a shot over 200 yards, let alone 100.
Cheers
So as expected, I did end up at a few gun counters, and the consensus is that 6.5 CM is performing awesome in the market. According to one large retailer with 3 bored counter jockeys, its the top selling cartridge in the Ruger American, Browning X-Bolt, and Tikka T3X which are all three pretty good selling rifles. The other shop I visit regularly can't keep the guns in stock. I'm not sure of there is a back-end rebate structure for the retailers or something but the 6.5 Creedmore is a really popular choice in the Winnipeg area so the ammo is flowing.
Then I bought a box each of Terminal Ascent 175gr for my .30-06 and Berger Hybrid 140gr for my .270 because I'm boring like that but wanted to try the bullets specifically without buying components.
30 cal anything.
308 winchester being your best option. I've seen it slay huge bears, deer, even a big bull moose in one shot. Plenty of power, way less recoil than 30-06, and 30cal ammo has likely the widest available bullet selection around.




























