How often do you hunt moose?300 weatherby is my choice for anthing i need to put my sight's on and drop but it would not be my first choice for a coyote rig i would get a 22-250 for that. the reason i say 300 wby mag is let's say im moose hunting see a coyote i can pull up bam and not need my 22-250 there with me i know you can do that with the 06 but the weatherby is my choice.
This guy must listen to Ron Spomer.243, 6mm Rem., 25-06. .260. .270. .280 7mm-08, .308, 30-06,
??? I don’t see anything in that list that’s not a good deer cartridge.This guy must listen to Ron Spomer
Back in 2008 when I started hunting in Alabama for whitetails all the older guys that had grown up there hunting deer used the 260 rem. The younger guys mostly 7mm08. They used to sort of be amused at all us guys from Florida and our big weatherby magnum rifles with 26 inch barrels and huge scopes. It didn't take long for me to come around…. I never did go with a 260 but I bought a 7mm08 with a 22 inch barrel.If by "deer", do you mean whitetail? Or do you mean the entire deer family (moose, caribou, elk, mule, black-tail, etc.)
Whitetails are relatively easy to kill - 6.5's in cartridges like 260 Rem, 6.5 CM, 6.5 PRC and their 7mm siblings all work well for the ranges I consider ethical to hunt whitetails at (especially in eastern US).
What do I actually use? 260 Rem. Why? Because I have been using 260 Rem for 25+ years. It fits in a light rifles with short actions. (I bought two Model 7 Stainless rifles in 260 Rem for my kids to use and I still use them.) I laugh at all the buzz about the greatest invention since slice bread - the 6.5 CM. (Inside 400 yards, the 260 beats the CM. You can argue the 6.5 beats the 260 Rem at 1000 yards for shooting steel - but that isn't hunting. )
If you change the question to be the entire deer family, then the 7mm to 30 calibers shine. If I had to pick one, I would go with 300 WSM. Why? I like short action light rifles. (If you want to lug around a heavier long-action rifle to shoot a 300 WM or 300 PRC go for it. The dead moose won't know if it was a 300 WSM or a 300 PRC that killed him.)
FYI: I hand-load and stock-piled alot of brass so no concerns about availability of brass for 300 WSM.
You can even get factory powderpuff loads for whitetails.One of the most versatile rounds is the 30-06. I think you can get bullets from around 100 to a little over 200 grains.
Oh, my comment was a compliment! Basically every caliber you listed Ron also says is perfect for deer. There's no need to go overboard into magnum territory lol??? I don’t see anything in that list that’s not a good deer cartridge.