Northern Bush Rifle suggestions

Generation after generation of bushmen, hunters, explorers, soldiers, etc., used old-school stuff like the Lee Enfield, Winchester 92, Savage 99, Winchester 94 here in Canada. If you aren't using it for hunting, a 92 has a lot of advantages. There's no need to pull a DND, and re-invent the wheel. Go with what's worked for the past 120 years already. Like said here, a Mauser 6.5, or a 7x57, or an 8x57, is also readily available and will do the job nicely, although harder to find ammo for in the rear end of the NWT.
 
Winchester Mode 70 Featherweight Compact in 7mm-o8 or 308. Good for 300 yrds and everything in North America sans Big Bears. One and done!
 
Northern bush gun. Here's my solutions.
I live in northern alberta so not quite the Yukon, but for the most part we deal with the same gave species. We have Elk instead of caribou.
Marlin 1895 fitted with skinner guide sights ( front post and rear peep)
Marlin 336 30-30 fitted with skinner low profile peep and williams firesight front bead
Mk4 no1 303 brit, barrel chopped to 18.75" new front ramp installed for use of original peeps. Also have a quick detached scope mount with a 1-5 illuminated reticle scope.
If big bears are not as much a concern I would seriously look at the mares leg in 44mag with full stock

How dare you suggest choking a Lee Enfield. 🙃🤣
 
How dare you suggest choking a Lee Enfield. ����
In my case my old enfield was bubba'd before I got it. And there was bad pitting in the last 4" accuracy was 4-5" @100. After cutting groups are now 1.5" @100 and much nicer to carry/ hunt with. Would do it again with any " hunting" class mk4#1 that has no collector value. It's one of my favorite carbines.
 
Not to mention inland grizzlies can be real dicks compared to most of the coastal grizzlies. :)

Meh I spend 8 months a year bush piloting in inland grizz, and until recently 4 months with coastal ones. Contrary to popular conception I couldn’t find a difference, we had plenty of excitement with the apparently docile coastal ones- who are full on mountain grizzlies half the year anyhow. And frankly if there is a difference it’s more than made up for with exposure in the coastal bears, there’s ten times the grizzly near the salt. I’d caution guys who want to live in them all grizzlies are grizzlies and not to try making races out of them.

On a light pistol cal carbine, I tried it a couple times, idea didn’t stick for me but get the concept, I include .45
Colt mares legs with stocks at the top of the same class. Handy guns, can take game in a pinch (took a spring black for camp meat with a 147gr 9mm from a carbine), but I’d find a .22 Hornet to 223 overall a far more useful rifle if trying to go ultra small. The OP needs to decide what he aims to kill with the rifle foremost and go from there.

This 5.6x50 is essentially a .22-250 that weighs 3 3/4lbs. I built it for ideas very akin to the OPs, carry lots shoot little rifle.

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For the OPs original question a good solution is still something like the Ruger Scout rifle (or any Scout style rifle) with the ability to switch magazines with ease.

A guy could take a few magazines with him and have ample full power loads for big game/defense and reduced loads for small game. And be able to change up loads quickly and easily.

Could be pretty simple.
 
I don't live up north, but my brush gun is a Chiappa Alaskan takedown in 44 mag

Potent at close range, and cheap to reload

The Chiappa is my brush gun, too. Light, quick, bright Skinner sights, easy carrying and lots of shots ready in the tube. Nice chrome finish and rubberized wood stocks are grippy but warm.

Great gun for busting rocks and skulls or punching big holes in lungs. The .44 was my choice in the Arctic for over a decade.
 
The Chiappa is my brush gun, too. Light, quick, bright Skinner sights, easy carrying and lots of shots ready in the tube. Nice chrome finish and rubberized wood stocks are grippy but warm.

Great gun for busting rocks and skulls or punching big holes in lungs. The .44 was my choice in the Arctic for over a decade.

This is interesting, you used a 44 in the artic for a decade? I would have thought for those wide open spaces you'd utilize a flatter shooting round. Did you take a lot of game with it?
 
This is my choice for everyday packing.

T/C Contender carbine 14" barrel in 338JDJ #2



375JDJ



T/C Prohunter 20" Katahdin in 45-70



I still have my Marlin 1895GS in 45-70 and my shortened to 21" barreled Rem 700 LSS in 375RUM carried both of these a lot while I was prospecting in BC/Alberta.
 
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