Savage 99A, .250-3000 strikes again. Picture added.

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Picture added on page two. Thanks Red.

Well, opening morning of the NS deer season found me out with my '70s Savage model 99A in .250-3000. Just after legal shooting light I was aiming at a very nice buck (for this area anyway, an old 13 pointer) as he was leaving a field. One shot at 126 paces and the buck ran into the woods. I waited 15 minutes and then walked up to where he had been when I fired and found one drop of blood. His footprints were clear in the frosty grass and a strong blood trail began at the woods. 35 yards later he was found dead.

What makes this even more interesting to me is that I was supposed to be carrying my custom FN '98 6.5 Swede but its Leopold scope recently began to lose zero. I grabbed the .250 as it has been Mr. Dependable since I bought it from WhyNot? in about 1995. This rifle has been carried on foot, snowmobile and boat more than any other rifle I own. It had taken a crazy number of caribou, one wolf, and three black bears for me before today. I bought it because the local store in northern Labrador had a ton of old Winchester Western .250 ammunition in yellow/red boxes that I bought for $2.50 per box! Much of it was 87 grainers and that was what I used for all of the caribou and the wolf (much sewing required). Today I used 100 grain Winchesters from the origional ammo deal because I didn't have time to reload. Complete penetration and good expansion. I used 100 grain Noslers on the black bears.

I have lots of rifles that are worth far more than this Savage; classic, modern, and custom but this old girl has never let me down. It wears an old Tasco world class that I bought when I was 17 (I'm 40 now) and I feed it old factory ammunition. It doesn't shoot bug hole groups or offer the trajectory of a laser. Many would consider it marginal. Heck, I even think that older 99's in .300 are better rigs but this thing just keeps working!! I'm just going to have to stop arguing with success and go clean the blood off of it, again! :eek:

Thanks for the great rifle Ted!
 
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I have one of the same "modern" 99a's. They are really nice handling rifles. Mine has sat in the corner since I got newer toys to play with, but your story makes me want to dust it off and take it for a walk. I found that mine likes the 117 gr. Hornady round nose and W760. A deadly combination used on several whitetails.
 
Aahhh...the good old .250-3000; one of the finest little cartridges ever. Practically zero recoil yet enough juice to take most big game at reasonable ranges. I wish someone would start chambering rifles for it again. A nice little Model 7...maybe a Winchester M70 Featherweight.
 
... I grabbed the .250 as it has been Mr. Dependable since I bought it from WhyNot? in about 1995. This rifle has been carried on foot, snowmobile and boat more than any other rifle I own. It had taken a crazy number of caribou, one wolf, and three black bears for me before today.......
Thanks for the great rifle Ted!

Glad to hear it it is still ticking, after taking such a licking all these years. :D

The 250 is still a great cartridge!

Ted
 
Well, opening morning of the NS deer season found me out with my '70s Savage model 99A in .250-3000. Just after legal shooting light I was aiming at a very nice buck (for this area anyway, an old 13 pointer) as he was leaving a field. One shot at 126 paces and the buck ran into the woods. I waited 15 minutes and then walked up to where he had been when I fired and found one drop of blood. His footprints were clear in the frosty grass and a strong blood trail began at the woods. 35 yards later he was found dead.

What makes this even more interesting to me is that I was supposed to be carrying my custom FN '98 6.5 Swede but its Leopold scope recently began to lose zero. I grabbed the .250 as it has been Mr. Dependable since I bought it from WhyNot? in about 1995. This rifle has been carried on foot, snowmobile and boat more than any other rifle I own. It had taken a crazy number of caribou, one wolf, and three black bears for me before today. I bought it because the local store in northern Labrador had a ton of old Winchester Western .250 ammunition in yellow/red boxes that I bought for $2.50 per box! Much of it was 87 grainers and that was what I used for all of the caribou and the wolf (much sewing required). Today I used 100 grain Winchesters from the origional ammo deal because I didn't have time to reload. Complete penetration and good expansion.

I have lots of rifles that are worth far more than this Savage; classic, modern, and custom but this old girl has never let me down. It wears an old Tasco world class that I bought when I was 17 (I'm 40 now) and I feed it old factory ammunition. It doesn't shoot bug hole groups or offer the trajectory of a laser. Many would consider it marginal. Heck, I even think that older 99's in .300 are better rigs but this thing just keeps working!! I'm just going to have to stop arguing with success and go clean the blood off of it, again! :eek:

Thanks for the great rifle Ted!

Outdoors,

What a wonderful story. Thank you for reminding us what it is all about. :)
 
It was a really great day. Both of my girls were able to observe part of the cleaning and dressing and later we went for a walk together and got a partridge at the old farm where my mother grew up. God is good.

I hope that each of you get a chance to enjoy the sport this year as well.
 
Aahhh...the good old .250-3000; one of the finest little cartridges ever. Practically zero recoil yet enough juice to take most big game at reasonable ranges. I wish someone would start chambering rifles for it again. A nice little Model 7...maybe a Winchester M70 Featherweight.

I recall Weatherby produced a 250-3000 on the MK-V action called the Whitetail or Whitetail Special. That was one of the few Weatherby rifles that really caught my attention, and I regret not purchasing one.
 
I recall Weatherby produced a 250-3000 on the MK-V action called the Whitetail or Whitetail Special. That was one of the few Weatherby rifles that really caught my attention, and I regret not purchasing one.

I still have that brochure!
 
I remember when Ted sold that rifle and lamented that I wasn't faster on the draw to get it. :(

Remington should a Model Seven in 250 Savage. I'd rather one of those to a .243.

.
 
I remember when Ted sold that rifle and lamented that I wasn't faster on the draw to get it. :(

Remington should a Model Seven in 250 Savage. I'd rather one of those to a .243.

.

x2

They do offer it in the MS custom Model 7, but at a cost, ~US$2500!
 
I've never bothered to learn how to upload pictures to this site. I can email one to you if you want to add it.



Send it to me I'll put it up for you


Here's Outdoors buck with the .250 savage,nice one BTW

250deer.jpg
 
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I've always been amazed at how well the "little guys" perform for their size and how little the "big guys" deliver as well.

There are only 2 Savage rifles I allow in my safe, the 99 and their very first model bolt action. The 99 is in 300sav and is a fine performer. The bolt action is in 250-3000 and is a tack driver as well. Sloppy trigger though. It has a 1-12 twist and just barely stabilizes 100grn bullets.

Nice rifle and nice buck. Congrats on a great day in the outdoors with the family by the way.
 
You must be referring to the model 20 1-14" twist.Try Speer 100grainers in her.They are the shortest bullet available and shot MOA in a 99 I own.Either IMR 4895 or IMR 3031......................Harold [ the old 100gr Dominions went in the same hole]As for the 250 Savage last night my 14 year old took a 4x4 WT buck at 300 yards with my Rem 700 Classic in the same caliber.The 100 gr Sierra exited the off side!!!!!!
 
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NO!?! Really? I looked and can't find any....

You really have to look closely at the Savage website. I actually noticed it by accident, and at first I thought it was a typo. They only offer .250 and .300 in one model, the 14 American Classic. There's a review of the rifle in both calibres in one of the latest magazines, but I'm not sure which one. A couple of years ago, I just ordered a .250 barrel for my Savage 16 and now I use it everywhere. Great calibre.

I also have an old Takedown in .250, and the only 100 grainers that it will shoot are the Speer, which work quite well, even with next to no rifling left (the barrel probably wasn't cleaned for 60 years or so).

Erik.
 
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