your rifles for different game - what do you use?

Mr. Friendly

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some have a 'does it all' rifle, but many have rifles in different calibers that they use because it's focused for hunting whatever game they go out into the field for. what are yours?

if you'd be so kind as to state the game, the rifle, the caliber and why you like it for that game, I would appreciate this.
 
Remington 700, .300 WM for moose. Plenty of horse power, I shoot it very well and all the moose I have shot with it ended up DRT.

Ruger 10/22 for grouse. You can shoot them with a .300 WM too but you really have to be careful or you end up with a bunch of feathers and about 2 yards of guts and nothing else:p
 
For Grouse, Partridge, Quail, Squirrels, Skunks, Raccoon's, porcupines.....ect. I use my Remington 597 .22lr

For Ground hogs->Wolves I use a Savage Predator .22-250 its a little much for the small stuff but I dont loose any energy for the bigger stuff and longer shots on Yotes and Wolves ammo is fairly cheap and cheaper if you re-load.

For White Tail Deer, Black Bear, Elk, Moose, Caribou........... I use my Benelli R1 .30-06 why do I use it....well because it is one of if not the most versitile caliber known to man from 150gr on white tail to 180gr for moose.
 
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Depends on my mood that day. 7mm will kill a moose as well as my .416....just depends what I feel like packing that day.
 
Used on deer: 30-30, 6.5x55 and 308. No discernable difference other than the scoped latter two are far better at a distance. Took along a 300WM but never used it on a deer. Had 44 magnum but never shot a deer with it. Fired twice, missed both times. Despite winning an off hand open sights contest with the rifle, I couldn't hit a standing deer. Problem. Misjudged the distance. Deer was much further than I thought after I paced it out. Both shots must have passed right under it.

Have a 223, but only have used 22LR on gophers. Also shot many rabbits and grouse with 22LR and 12 gauge.

That's about the extent of my hunting. Hope to go for moose or elk some day,still have a lot of learning to do about the areas around here, so I'll hang onto the 300WM just in case that dream comes to fruition.
 
considering my financial situation, I'm probably only go own a few firearms (how many of you call them guns? LOL!)...a rimfire (not sure what yet), two centerfires (got a very good price on a Savage 11 in .223 and I want something that will take everything else) and a shotgun.

I'm waffling on what I want for my 'take everything' caliber. there's an excellent deal on a 7mm RM in the EE, I've also considered getting a Tikka T3 Lite...just not sure if I would want .270 or a 30.06 or perhaps even go as high as a .300WM or WSM.

I can't recall who coined the thought (might have been Wayne Van Zwoll), but it was said that your shot is always about placement, not caliber, but if something gives you confidence, use it. :)
 
Rem 700 6mm, Win94 30/30, Stevens 30/30, Stevens 243 for deer, first 2 were my fathers deer guns and get the most use
BLR 308, BAR 308, Globe 308, ParkerHale 30/06, Mossberg 338 for Moose
Savage 22/20ga, 10/22, 410 backpacker, Baikal 20ga, for partridge and trapline
50 cal muzzleloader, Jennings compound bow for black bear
Savage 22 hornet for beaver
 
Deer, Moose, Elk, Black Bear, Caribou, Marlin 336 , 30/30
I hunt usually in heavy brush and get up close and personal

Coyotes and foxes etc 22 250, now in 550 CZ varmint

Grouse and rabbits and gophers, 39A mountie, most accurate lever I have ever used, so that's why I use it

Upland game, 16 gauge, stevens 311A

Ducks and geese. Always using something different, but always with 3.5 loads and never ever will I have another stoeger 2000, (####ty gun my experience)
 
I hate do it all rifles... Here are my main big game rifles.

Moose: Custom stainless Ruger MKII in a Hogue stock in .35 Whelen

Deer: stainless Remington 700 Mountain rifle in a Ti stock in .260 Rem

Varmint: stainless Remington 700 LVSF in .22-250

Ok.....I do have one do it all:
Winchester M70 Gunkoted in a McMillan stock in 7mm Rem Mag.
 
221 Fireball CZ 527 American for coyotes, 260 Rem in either a 700 Ti or 700 custom for deer, Rem 700 LSS 50th anniversary 280 Rem for general purpose moose/elk/deer hunting in open country, Sako 85 LSS in 338 Federal for closer range hunting of moose/elk/bear, and a yet to be completed 700 in 8mm Rem Mag for big stuff.
 
For little stuff, grouse and such, either the .22 or 12 ga gets the nod.

For big game, either the .30-06 or the .338 Win Mag gets the nod. Either will work well on most game in BC, with the .338 getting the nod as the game gets bigger. It works just fine, with no more meat damage than the '06 on smaller big game (ie deer) as well.

Truthfully, there are a couple dozen perfectly good cartridges that will serve well as a deer to moose/elk rifle. Anything from 6.5 mm up to .375, that will drive a decent hunting bullet at upwards of 2300-2400 fps will cover a lot of hunting in BC. As the game gets bigger, larger calibers or higher velocity or both tend to be preferred.

The main factors to consider are the recoil tolerance of the shooter, the availability of ammo (or components), the cost of ammo (components as well) and the intended usage.

It is pretty hard to beat a rifle chambered for something in the range of a 7 mm-08 or 7X57 up to a .338 Win Mag for a do it all gun in BC. There are lots of options in here that all achieve pretty much the same result.

You would be hard pressed to beat a readily available cartridge such as a .270, .308, .30-06, 7 mm Rem Mag, or .300 Win Mag as a do it all gun. Ammo is relatively cheap, very readily available for all, guns are abundantly available and they will all work well for most hunting in BC. Picking one good gun, using it for everything for now, learning how it shoots and becoming very familiar with that gun will be a better choice than a gaggle of guns that you are unfamiliar with, just because the cartridge it is chambered for is theoretically the perfect choice for the game being hunted. It's better to place a good, killing shot with a smaller, less powerful round, than to gut shoot or miss with a big powerful manly magnum. This is especially true for less experienced shooters and hunters.
 
For Groundhogs, .22mag
For Rabbits, .22mag over 20g combo
For Waterfowl, Remington 870 Express SuperMag
For Deer and Moose, Remington 700 in 30.06
For Deer in shotgun season - Mossberg 835 UltiMag with rifled, cantilever barrel
For Turkey, Mossberg 835 UltiMag
For Pop Cans, Cooey .22 single shot
 
When I'm deer hunting but have a chance at seeing a black bear or a legal moose or elk, I use a 270.

When I'm moose,elk or bear hunting but may see a deer, a 300 Winchester magnum.
 
270 WSM for pronghorn, deer, and elk. 30-06 as back up.

22-250 for coyotes.

222 and 22lr for gophers, jack rabbits and other varmints.

338 WM for just in case.
 
22/250 for coyotes and deer
257Roberts for deer
375 Chatfield-Taylor for moose

I own others, but these are the core user group.



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Remington 700 300 WM for northern facing wabbits
1895 Marlin 45-70 for southern facing wabbits
Brno 8x57 Mauser for eastern facing wabbits
Remington 700 7x57 for western facing wabbits
No5Mk1 Jungle carbine for ephalumps, samsquanches ,woozles and other mythical creatures real or imaginary.
 
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