The Weatherby rifles are excellent and you can go straight to the source if you want to buy new. Howa builds their rifles in Japan and they retail for less than the Weatherby even though its the same rifle. They also switched to a 1 in 10 twist for the .308 and the 2 stage trigger can be set down to about 3 lbs very easily. Aftermarket support is far less than rem or savage though. They sell for about $575 new, about $100 less than a rem sps tac depending where you buy it. And dont forget about glass! A cheap scope will not allow you to learn from your mistakes but rather get frustrated dealing with the issues associated with cheap optics. Probably the best buy in decent LR scopes is the Bushnell 10x40. Theyre up to about $260 new nowadays but still worth it. They have good glass and great internals with 80 MOA elevation. Surely not the best option but for the price, you wont be fighting with internals that dont track well and fuzzy, cloudy glass that gives you a headache. Add a decent base and rings and you should be able to just squeeze in under your $1000 mark. If .223 is your thing then avoid the Howa/weatherby rifles as they only come in 1 in 12 twist for light varmint bullets and will not stabalize the heavier match bullets you'll want to shoot if LR is your goal. Id go SPS tac for .223. Most provinces do not allow .223 for hunting big game. I can only speak for Alberta for sure, we have a .23 cal minimum for big game. Expanding bullets are required as well, terminal performance of the .223 with soft points especially at longer ranges is not adequate for consistent clean kills on deer sized game. There is too much chance for a long, slow death for the animal. Something I wont allow myself to do, and hope others feel the same. Another option is a good .22lr rifle to practise for far less cash than centerfire while you save for a good rifle. It will teach you the skills you will need to develop without bringing cost or flinching into the equation. 300m with .22lr is very challenging, shooter error is magnified immensely and wind drift is crazy.