Overthinking kids first rifle; .223 or bigger is better

I don't have kids, but I would advocate for giving them the smallest amount of recoil available.

Last weekend I watched a small kid just getting hammered by recoil at a bench while three grown men provided "instruction". Poor little dude looked like a crash test dummy. I can't imagine standing next to that and thinking it looked alright.

I could just picture his old man saying "my boy handles the *** just fine."

Meanwhile my buddy and I are banging away with our little .223s.
 
I was started wrong and so were all of my friends. Kids are little but grow fast. To each their own but a small 7(or whatever) year old doesn't have to be able to slay big game if a youth stocked or factory chopped 223 is still too big for them. It will fit next year. Set them up with a decent 22 then swap over to the same in 223. Going too fast because of our egos will do more harm than good.
 
What bullets did you try in the .223? It is super effective with the right bullets but can def be underwhelming with the wrong ones. 77TMK'S produce more tissue damage than any .350 legend loading I'm aware of (disclaimer, I've never personally used .350 legend, but know guys that have and I have seen quite a few photos of .350L wound channels).

This is the inherent problem in grandstanding a .223. Unless you use the "right combination", it can be less than ideal and/or adequate....

Someone once made a post on a similar thread that spoke to how well their young son shoots a small suppressed caliber and then provided the photo "evidence" of three shots placed within inches of each other on a small bull behind the shoulder.

Question: why were 3 shots necessary?
 
This is the inherent problem in grandstanding a .223. Unless you use the "right combination", it can be less than ideal and/or adequate....

Someone once made a post on a similar thread that spoke to how well their young son shoots a small suppressed caliber and then provided the photo "evidence" of three shots placed within inches of each other on a small bull behind the shoulder.

Question: why were 3 shots necessary?
I think it speaks volumes to the point that all 3 were accomplished. Would you rather your kid be able to put 3 in the lungs and enjoy shooting or holding on tight and hitting once but only shooting because they have to?

I told this story again today. 10-11 years ago I was shooting with my nephew. He was shooting my old 6cm on plates out through the field. He kept shooting and asking if he could shoot one more time. Not is that good enough. Everyone needs to shoot something they want to keep shooting one more time. If that's a 223 or 300. If you love shooting it and want to shoot it over and over let er rip. Most people don't keep shooting boomers like they do more comfortable chambering. The boomer part can be different for different people. A 200 pound man will probably feel recoil differently than a 90 pound kid. Then again we all know the guy who is 46 years old stands 5'8 and a half who drives a jacked up diesel and only shoots a magnum cartridge.
 
Lefty is tough unless you put together something semi-custom. I was just shopping factory rifles, and couldn't find a fast twist 243 in left-hand compact - or 6CM at all for that matter. I went 6.5 CM with a suppressor and heavy barrel for my kid and it was a great success. Hand-load a light range load. No problems with recoil. Now he has a gun he won't grow out of. Elk is on the horizon for us though, if it were just deer and targets tough saying what I would have gone with.
 
Good off the shelf hunting ammo, you can spend $2/round for Black Hills if you don't shop smart. There are options around $1/round (Bone Frog, AAC when they get back into production).

The big deal though, is you can get some good practice ammo like ADI or AAC 77OTM for well under $1 per round. Shoot buckets of that all year, then switch to the 77 TMK a month or two before hunting seasons start.

Cheap 6mm ARC is around $1.25 per, and what I prefer for hunting is more like $1.50-1.75. I do very much like 6ARC and own one, but if I had to get rid of that or the .223 bolt gun it would definitely be the .223 that stays.
Less than $1/ea 77 TMK ammo.
 
My son started with a BB gun, then a 22, then a 223, and at ten years old started shooting a 6arc and I wouldn’t change a thing!
 
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