Loading involves going to the gun counter and asking for your calibre!![]()
I suggest you ask for your cartridge! Just asking for a caliber is when guys with 7x57's end up buying 7mm Rem Magnum ammo by saying "I need some 7MILL ammo!"

Loading involves going to the gun counter and asking for your calibre!![]()

Sounds like it comes from experience and makes sense... but I'm wondering, how did our ancestors fare when hunting there? I don't think they had all the fancy schmancy glass bedding, composite material stocks and uber magnums and got decent results in their hunts.
Yup, not a lot of options but you could throw an X-Bolt into the mix as well.
Loading involves going to the gun counter and asking for your calibre!![]()
They simply had better craftsmanship and better wood for rifle stocks in those days. The fit of the barrel and receiver to the stock was better and the stock was stronger. This problem of stocks failing on powerful rifles seems to be a post second world war phenomenon. Modern stocks for production rifles are not fitted as carefully, the wood for off the rack guns is not a good quality, and the powerful cartridges developed over the last 50 years produce sharper, faster recoil than their predecessors.
Or you could jam a crowbar in your wallet and buy a Dakota.
The choice to use factory ammo for Africa can prevent some potential problems with the folks who clear your entry into the country. They like to see factory ammo boxes and they like the head stamp of the cartridge to match the caliber stamp on the rifle barrel. Every country is different, but should there is a problem with one of these pesky details, the problem can often be resolved to everyones satisfaction with a payment of dollars USD. (No one will say thank-you for Canadian currency.) In such a case the use of factory ammo can save you some money.
I have trouble believing that the wood was better. My Sakos have lovely wood. I would take two rifles but really how often would a Sako fail? In Sask it is often below 40 below and hot in the summer and Ive been in the glades in July and Ive never seen a gun fail yet. Even old .303s and pump junk remingtons. In fact Ive had lil experience with decent guns
What would the best quality factory ammo be? Are accubonds sold in prerolled?
Hey you do know Sheephunter! I'm not going to call him cheap but I will say he is excessively frugal!Or you could jam a crowbar in your wallet and buy a Dakota.
CZ 550. Wood or full wood. Great guns, and old world pretty.
What would the best quality factory ammo be? Are accubonds sold in prerolled?
Or you could jam a crowbar in your wallet and buy a Dakota.

Well, I'm the proud owner of a new Kimber 8400.......now off to the range.
Montana(?) in 338 Win Mag ? Where did you find it ?
IF it has to be new then I would also say the Kimber. Nugget's rifle looks pretty nice and the trigger isn't bad either.
Not sure if you know Chester M. from around our area Sheephunter but all he used in Afrika was a Sako in 338. In fact that is the only rifle he used for all his worldwide conquests.
A gentleman's rifle has iron sights and a claw mounted scope and certainly is not chambered in a Yankee round.
You guys gotta go old school once........just once??????????




























