Hunting rifle finished weight (northwest backpackers and back country hunts)

My rifle with scope and suppressor is right about 11#. If you want to shed weight, ditch the bipod. You've got a backpack.
Whenever I read this I wonder whether the person has actually done it. Because apparently everyone completes a stalk with their main pack.

I remember watching my brother crawl on his belly accross the sagebrush attempting to drag a pack behind him and at that point I realized how light my 5 oz sitting height snipod was.
 
I am far from an ounce counter. These are the two that get used the most. I wouldnt want em much heavier..

Tikka 243, tally's(yea, I know) 6x, 3 in the belly
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Ruger 77 223, leupold rings, 3-9

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Just got back from 2 weeks in Wyoming chasing bears. My Springfield Waypoint CF in 300 PRC is 10.5# all in - can, arca rail, mag, ammo, optic. It was too much weight for my handicapped self at 8-10k feet of elevation, and too awkward to have strapped to my pack while going over, under, and through dead falls and beetle kill blow downs.
Just sold it in the last 15 mins and looking at something both shorter and lighter. I think that something around 8 to 9# that is substantially shorter would be the ticket. Currently looking at a 20"-ish barreled Tikka in 6 creed with an OTB can and a RokStock.
I keep my Tricer double pull bipod on the exterior of my pack and mostly shoot off of my tripod.
@hereinaz What current deals do you have that might fit my build list? I've got cash in hand... er, cash in Venmo...? That doesn't have the same sound to it phrase wise but you get my point.
 
Just got back from 2 weeks in Wyoming chasing bears. My Springfield Waypoint CF in 300 PRC is 10.5# all in - can, arca rail, mag, ammo, optic. It was too much weight for my handicapped self at 8-10k feet of elevation, and too awkward to have strapped to my pack while going over, under, and through dead falls and beetle kill blow downs.
Just sold it in the last 15 mins and looking at something both shorter and lighter. I think that something around 8 to 9# that is substantially shorter would be the ticket. Currently looking at a 20"-ish barreled Tikka in 6 creed with an OTB can and a RokStock.
I keep my Tricer double pull bipod on the exterior of my pack and mostly shoot off of my tripod.
@hereinaz What current deals do you have that might fit my build list? I've got cash in hand... er, cash in Venmo...? That doesn't have the same sound to it phrase wise but you get my point.
Check out the Seekins element hunter!
That’s what’ I’m debating over
 
8.5 lbs is just right. -@“‘in. RS, tikka 6.5cm at 16” with TBAC 7 , Maven RS 1.2. NF rail and rings.

Shot my Kimber today to see if it likes the Hornady 143 ELDX. Had a great 5 shot group in one hole. Then I dorked it up. Still 9 shots in 3/4” with one muligan at 1.25. This stock is very difficult to shot well. No vertical grip and flimsy forend. Kimber hunter at 16” factory stock, Warne rail and rings S&B 3x12. 7.5 oz with the TBAC 7.

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My hunting rifles are right around 10.5-11lbs ready to hunt. I like that weight since it makes it more shootable
I’m also retarded and carry around 50lbs worth of stuff on day hunts
 

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Curious to see how weight/preferred shooting positions mix?

No doubt a heavy gun off bags/bipod/tripod is just dandy. Not really a in hand/off hand sorta thing though IMO
 
Whenever I read this I wonder whether the person has actually done it. Because apparently everyone completes a stalk with their main pack.
I do all the time. IME, bipods suck for shooting in steep, varied terrain. Shoot prone off my pack, sitting off trekking poles. I basically never leave my pack behind. If the animal is close enough that I feel leaving my pack on is going to hinder the stalk, it’s close enough to shoot.
 
I think that something around 8 to 9# that is substantially shorter would be the ticket. Currently looking at a 20"-ish barreled Tikka in 6 creed with an OTB can and a RokStock.
That should work well.

My 20" 6.5 CM is 8 pounds all in (suppressor, scope, loaded mag). Spotting sub-400-yard shots is challenging, even with solid support and mindful performance on my part.
 
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