I'd like the gun to be a semi automatic because when there's gophers, there is tonnes, i mean like 10 in a group, and if i had a semi auto i could spray, and hopefully hit more then one.
Spraying and hoping is simply a waste of ammo, even at closer ranges you will miss 90% of the time. So if you just want to spend money on ammo, make noise and scare gophers, then this would be your preferred method.
i just thought for how easy a semi auto is(not having to take my eye off the target if i miss, not inacuracy of the gun, to reaload)
What we found with a semi-auto was that in your head, you know you have 20 or 30 more shots to hit the gopher with so you subconciously do not make the best effort for every shot which results in a large percentage of misses. The semi-auto produces lazy marksmanship.
Using a single-shot target rifle you know you don't have another quick shot to make up for a miss so you tend to put your best effort into each shot which results in a much larger percentage of hits.
I have shot side-by-side with some very fricken good marksmen using semi-auto's and have never felt outgunned with my single shot target rifle. Over a day, the semi-auto guys have to continuously stop to reload mags, where I just keep shooting, slow but steady and my hit ratio is way higher over the day and I make longer shots.
We counted one day and the target rifle produced something like a 70% hit ratio. I have yet to see any semi-auto shooter come close to approaching that percentage. They tend to be down in the 20-30% range with all the unaimed blasting.
I even converted a dedicated 10-22 shooter over to a single shot target rifle cause he got tired of watching me whack gophers way out there with a single shot when he would blow an entire magazine trying to kill the same gopher. And this guy was one of the best marksmen I have ever shot a gopher field with.