I haven’t decided what bullet to use from now on, so I’ll be using my 270 with 140 Accubonds this year for deer and elk.
6.5cm seems to be the new craze at the local gun shops. I'm not saying it's a bad round but it has definitely proven to be a great elk hunting round. I personally was in this situation when shopping for a rifle just a few weeks ago. I ended up going with a tried, true, and proven 30-06 myself. You can't go wrong either way though!
Good call. Getting off the bench for practice in field conditions and shooting positions. A well-practiced seated position is one of the best skills a western hunter can master.I went to the range to practice in the wind and seated shots. Now I'm heading out in a couple hours for an evening hunt.
Good call. Getting off the bench for practice in field conditions and shooting positions. A well-practiced seated position is one of the best skills a western hunter can master.
Suggest you acquaint yourself w the Search feature here, since there have been 10+ threads about this in the last 2 months. https://www.rokslide.com/forums/search/457778/?q=6.5+elk&o=relevance
Good luck this fall, from the redundancy department of redundancy.
Do it.All this 6.5 talk has me wanting a sweet 6.5x55 Ruger 77 that just found it's way on to a lgs used rack.... decisions decisions.
If you have ever listened to Tyler Freel on the tundra talk podcast, they talked about how many people use 243s to kill moose and elk and a few grizzly guides that carried 243s. If you can get close and make a good shot then take it.
Always a good idea!100% I don't want to miss a monster because I don't know what to do to adjust for the wind, or I can't get a great supported position.
Same with archery. I shoot off my deck down to the target, I shoot up a slope on our property to the target, I shoot in the wind. I haven't noticed too many bench rests just sitting in the forest where I hunt, so I assume the bench position with sandbags is highly unlikely in real world