Back when I started out shooting and only had a few rifles, I found when ever I left the house to go shooting it was my Remington 700 243 that went with me. I also had a 222 and a 7 RM and a 30-06 and a Sav 99 in 300 Sav and an old Mod 86 in 45-70 but it was ALWAYS my 243 that went. I shot the barrel out of that rifle in about 4 years, something over 10,000 rounds. The others didn't languish idly about either but none saw 10% of the volume of my 243.
The 243 is just soooooo much fun to shoot, almost zero recoil, superb accuracy, which boosts your confidence and it has the ability to reach out and terminate coyotes at 400+ mtrs and is effective on deer with proper bullets, properly placed.
I cannot recommend the 243 high enough as a beginner CF on which to learn to shoot. I have owned and shot virtually every caliber and cartridge available in NA and quite a few I designed and built myself and most of my earliest fond memories of hunting and shooting and some outstanding shots are with my old 243. Now I'm not saying that it is the only caliber/cartridge to start with, but that family which includes the 6mm Rem, 250 Sav, 257 Roberts, and 25-06. The key is to keep the recoil down, the velocity and accuracy up and the fun factor at redline at all times. The cost of shooting is also a factor and these cartridges are all relatively inexpensive to shoot.
I tried but never liked the 222/223 class of cartridges, they blew around in the wind way more than the 243 and were not decisive on coyotes, in fact I dumped and lost 2 running coyotes one winter day with the 222 and I sold it a week or so later. The 22-250/220 Swift are fun but are better suited to longer and heavier barrels, but definitely fall into the bottom end of this class of cartridge with 60-70 gn bullets. The 257 Wby tops out this class of cartridges but is up there in comparative recoil and much higher cost of shooting, but still a ton of fun.
The rimfire is a must, of course, and will definitely aid in learning shooting skills, but I disagree with the concept of buying a cheap one. Buy a higher quality, mid priced adult sized one, and you will keep it for life and always enjoy it. I went on a search for a nice 22 here a while back, with a man sized walnut stock and a barrel longer than 18". I ended up with a Browning T-bolt and it is a very nice rimfire that shoots exceptionally well and looks good doing it. It has a real walnut stock with real cut checkering and a 22" barrel with a flush fitting 10 rd magazine. In my opinion Browning got it exactly right. I have also picked up 3 Winchester 94 22s which I have always loved and again they have real walnut stocks and the heft and feel of a real rifle, with real sights and real blued steel. My T-bolt 22 mag will shoot 10 shots at 50 mtrs into a hole smaller than a dime using CCI 40 gn HP ammo. I have yet to find the perfect ammo for my 17 HMR (a second T-bolt in blue and walnut) but I haven't really sat down with a sampling of everything out there for it and made a concerted effort to find out which is best. Right now it'll keep CCI plastic tips in about 1-1.5" @ 100 mtrs so it fulfills my needs at the moment.
The 243 is just soooooo much fun to shoot, almost zero recoil, superb accuracy, which boosts your confidence and it has the ability to reach out and terminate coyotes at 400+ mtrs and is effective on deer with proper bullets, properly placed.
I cannot recommend the 243 high enough as a beginner CF on which to learn to shoot. I have owned and shot virtually every caliber and cartridge available in NA and quite a few I designed and built myself and most of my earliest fond memories of hunting and shooting and some outstanding shots are with my old 243. Now I'm not saying that it is the only caliber/cartridge to start with, but that family which includes the 6mm Rem, 250 Sav, 257 Roberts, and 25-06. The key is to keep the recoil down, the velocity and accuracy up and the fun factor at redline at all times. The cost of shooting is also a factor and these cartridges are all relatively inexpensive to shoot.
I tried but never liked the 222/223 class of cartridges, they blew around in the wind way more than the 243 and were not decisive on coyotes, in fact I dumped and lost 2 running coyotes one winter day with the 222 and I sold it a week or so later. The 22-250/220 Swift are fun but are better suited to longer and heavier barrels, but definitely fall into the bottom end of this class of cartridge with 60-70 gn bullets. The 257 Wby tops out this class of cartridges but is up there in comparative recoil and much higher cost of shooting, but still a ton of fun.
The rimfire is a must, of course, and will definitely aid in learning shooting skills, but I disagree with the concept of buying a cheap one. Buy a higher quality, mid priced adult sized one, and you will keep it for life and always enjoy it. I went on a search for a nice 22 here a while back, with a man sized walnut stock and a barrel longer than 18". I ended up with a Browning T-bolt and it is a very nice rimfire that shoots exceptionally well and looks good doing it. It has a real walnut stock with real cut checkering and a 22" barrel with a flush fitting 10 rd magazine. In my opinion Browning got it exactly right. I have also picked up 3 Winchester 94 22s which I have always loved and again they have real walnut stocks and the heft and feel of a real rifle, with real sights and real blued steel. My T-bolt 22 mag will shoot 10 shots at 50 mtrs into a hole smaller than a dime using CCI 40 gn HP ammo. I have yet to find the perfect ammo for my 17 HMR (a second T-bolt in blue and walnut) but I haven't really sat down with a sampling of everything out there for it and made a concerted effort to find out which is best. Right now it'll keep CCI plastic tips in about 1-1.5" @ 100 mtrs so it fulfills my needs at the moment.