What your deer rifle says about you

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What Your (bolt) Deer Rifle Says About You

The five most telling deer-busting, buck-thumping center-fires today and what they say about you

Porsches preach success. Hondas reek of practicality. So goes the reputation of a car guy. For hunters, the deer rifle you choose is no different. Every time you sling it over your shoulder and step out into the field, it speaks to your reputation.

The Everyman
Deer Rifle: Savage 111FCXP3 in .270 Win. Savage is known to have some of the most accurate rifles on the market. With this package, you get that accuracy along with a free-floating barrel and a mounted, bore-sighted scope all at rock bottom suggested retail price. When your kids get older and want to hunt, it’s the perfect hand-me-down.

Personality: You’re a weekend warrior. Don’t get me wrong, you love hunting, but it’s a hobby not an obsession. Your deer rifle makes its weekday home in the basement gun safe, only to be handled on hunting's biggest days (season opener and the following Saturdays). You and your reliable bolt action take a trip or two to the range each year, fire a few rounds at 100 yards and call it a day. A low maintenance, dependable and less-than-pricey rifle will do you just fine, as long as you can take it out on those treasured days in the field, as few as they may be.

The Dirty Harry
Deer Rifle: Ruger M77 ss/syn in 30-06. Comes equipped with a synthetic stock that can take a beating and the stainless steel barrel won’t rust if you clean it every now and then. It also features an integral scope mount and steel rings, so you can be sure that scope won’t budge.

Personality: Your deer rifle better be feeling lucky. You’re about to drag it up every muddy/snowy/rainy hillside on God’s green earth. Each scratch and scar on your deer slayer is a badge of courage, and you’ll be sure to test its mettle at every turn. Tracking through rolling hills of the whitetail-heavy western U.S or the crop-dusted flats of the Midwest buck paradise shouldn’t be a problem—you work hard and so must your deer rifle. You’ll take every chance to hunt whitetails no matter how far you must travel or how big a dent it puts in your wallet. You’re a hardcore hunting soldier and your rifle needs to be a tank.

The Sniper
Deer Rifle: Remington 700 Sendero SF II in .300 Win. Mag. Fluted 26-inch heavy contour barrel makes it perfect for ultimate long-range accuracy. The X Pro Mark trigger is 100 percent user adjustable—no gunsmith needed to make the trigger all yours. The stock is reinforced with aramid fibers and features a contoured beavertail fore-end with ambidextrous finger grooves and palm swells and twin front swivel studs to accommodate your bipod.

Personality: You love to watch Tom Berenger work his magic – one shot, one kill. You demand perfection out of your deer rifle. She probably has a name like Lola, Marie or the always-eccentric Gen. Robert E. Lee (true story). You may even prop her at your bedside come October, just so she knows you care. You know your rifle inside and out, in fact, you probably have the exploded view hanging neatly above your kitchen table. Your deer rifle is more than a tool with which you dispatch game; it is a part of your camo-clad soul.

The Prince
Deer Rifle: Weatherby MK V Ultramark in .257 Wby. Mag. The hand-selected AAA fancy exhibition grade walnut stock, 20 LPI checkering, maplewood/ebony spacers and rosewood fore-end and grip caps scream highest of high end. This is the only gun on the market at this price range with an accuracy guarantee of 1.5 inches or less at 100 yards.

Personality: Aesthetics, sir, are what hunting is all about—at least for you. Some may call you pompous, arrogant and downright vain, but no matter, you’re probably a better shot anyway. You demand a gun that exudes importance or maybe even royalty, the most regal deer rifle a man can buy (that isn’t custom). Which is undoubtedly a rifle with ripe historical value and the pristine condition to match. You won’t go afield just anywhere or stoop to hunting on public land. Your rifle deserves better. Boone & Crockett bucks are all your rifle will ever harvest. Well, that is if you ever decide to pull the trigger for fear of dirtying up your hunting scepter.

The Old-Timer
Deer Rifle: Winchester Model 70. Tested and proven, this is what some call the “rifleman’s rifle.” The three-position safety is one of the best-known and most copied safeties in the world. The accuracy is second to none and the bolt is one of the smoothest on the market. Over 71 years after its creation this rifle is still the epitome of the American bolt-action.

Personality: Fudd, Elmer Fudd that is. You’re a traditionalist, an old-timer and a man who has spent more time in the woods than most young folks have been on this earth. You don’t need a fancy deer rifle or some tricked out sniper tool, and your firearm is just as stubborn as you are. It may have a few flaws or glitches but it’s trusty, timeless and shoots with the best of them. While your take-it-slow methods may be maddening to the iPhone crowd, you never come home empty handed. You’ve been hunting the same tract of land for decades and you can be found in that same old blind from dawn ‘til dark every rifle season.



I'm a Dirty Harry but with a 308 ruger .
 
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Meh, It seems over simplified to me. You can own any or all of those rifles and hunt with them differently than what is listed. I hunt like an old timer, The sniper and dirty Harry no matter what rifle I'm using and as for a Savage, I shoot at least 100 rounds through each one of mine every year,even if I don't choose to use it during a deer season. The only rifle I don't own on the list is the Weatherby..yet
 
What about the guy that has all of those plus archery and BP gear that is out three times a week and choses which ever one is handy or has a special season.

I guess that would mean he had a multiple personality disorder. At least that is what Bob, Elmer, Leroy, Mustaffa and Dwight just told me:D
 
those AREN'T DEER RIFLES- they're bolts- the deer rifles are the winchester 94, savage 99, and the marlin 336 - i couldn;t help but notice the 3 most popular deer rifles aren't even mentioned- yet the three i've mentioned have taken more deer than those 5 combined- heck the winchester alone deserves that title
 
For the lever lovers:
The John Wayne
Deer Rifle: Chambered in 30/30 with solid iron sights (scopes are for the weak and everybody knows that they fail at the worst possible time) possibly may allow some to mount a peep but good old buckhorns are the way to go!

Personality: Cowboy Wannabe? Growing up to a bunch of oldies but great movies, there seems to be an inherent fascination with everything cowboy. IF only the stupid government will allow you to carry that beautiful matching Colt SAA to deliver the Coup de Grace on animals crippled by man's first true assault rifle! Frequently hunters of this ilk will have the 30 year old Ford/Chevy as their mystical hunting steed.

The Practical John Wayne
Deer Rifle: Savage 99 in .303 Savage/.308 Win. Frequently scoped and chambered in a real rifle calibre, these rifles ooze both fire and killing power. Why be hindered by impotent rounds like the 30/30 and iron sights are for chumps!

Personality: Basically, this hunter wears a cowboy hat but drives an SUV into the woods. He has a total disregard for the traditional but does it with little to no style. I mean who else would have a scoped lever gun/high power combo???

Marlin 336: Do anybody but guides use these things.

BTW: If you haven't figured it out I am kidding around, I don't need a bunch of hateful PM's from the levergun crowd. :)
 
The Ontarian

Deer Rifle: No Rifle at all, Just a Shotgun 12 to 20 gauge, smooth bore, some type of buck shot or riffled slug. For the elitist a riffled barrel with sabot slugs. Bead, Iron sights, or for the super elitist a scope.

Personality: Confused, can shoot coyotes and wolves with a .270 in the same area but not deer. Muzzle loaders and sabot slugs are becoming better and better, and can travel pretty amazing distances, but riffles are still a no no. We can go bear hunting and take off our orange when in a tree stand, but for some off reason 10-20 feet in the air we need orange while deer hunting.

EDIT..... /\
Personality: Slightly more confused after writing this........... see above /\
 
... I'm not really a weekend warrior i've been following lots of hunters for a couple of years when i was younger and they're the ones who thought me how to hunt... I've been hunting by myself now for 4 years and took a deer every year! I usualy hunt from day one until the end of the season(usually i go with my family after i shot mine so i can follow them and help them), i've always been on "stand by" and whenever someone i know shoots a deer i'm there to get dirty for them when they're not confortable gutting a deer or to use my truck when they don't want to dirty their cars. Like my signature says i hunt with a "Savage Package" in 7 rem mag because i'm on a budget... and i usually take it often to the range. Hunting is basically my life (ask my GF lol) when i'm not allowed to shoot a deer i simply go out and observe them. Oh and i even left earlier for Afghanistan to come back before hunting season :) they even offered me to stay an other month and i said no so i wouldn't miss the season... I could've used the extra 4k but i was all worth it!

Cheers,
Ray
 
I got an other one for you

The Carnivore

Will shoot a deer every year with what ever he can find or borrow usually a .300 winchester supper mega magnum nuker edition. He will shoot anything that he can legally shoot no matter how small the antlers are or even if the fawn still has white dots. Usually Buys a Caliber to powerfull for him just to look manly but end up flinching every time he shoots it. He usually puts a ton of apples and carrots in a field and waits with his .300 winchester supper mega magnum with torpedo heatseeking bullets which he need because he flinches everytime.
 
i don't know where i'd fit in- my scabbard holds a scoped 99 in 308 and i carry a 94 trapper in 44 mag for the coup de grace- since we can't carry a handgun- however, there's always a 338 win mag on the horse- just takes a while to get at it
 
So let's see...
I have a Guide Gun in 45-70, a 30-30, a Remington in 7MM Mag, and now a double 30-06, all of which can easily take a deer. So what does that make me? Schizo?
 
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