Thoughts on one rifle?

Macintosh

WKR
Joined
Feb 17, 2018
Messages
3,037
Not every year, but I do travel to hunt in wildly different terrain—super thick forest hunting to open prairies. I could easily do it all with one rifle, but I highly prefer different scopes for each. Since I like to practice, and because i prefer not to keep switching scopes around, I have 2 main hunting rifles. One for short range focusing on woods is wearing a 1-6lpvo, and one that can do anything from short to long-for-me range that is set up with a ffp 3-12. I dont, but I could easily use the same cartridge.
 

mahonsr

Lil-Rokslider
Joined
Feb 5, 2019
Messages
252
I was sort of aiming for this but any time my wife even hints at a green light on a gun purchase in any minute way… I buy another one 🤣
 
Joined
Apr 21, 2015
Messages
1,047
I cant see only having 1, though Ive done it before.
I like having a backup and sometimes a backup to the backup.
Never needed it myself, but have loaned out plenty.

I like a gun for small stuff, and for medium stuff, and for competition, and for target practice, and for backpack hunting, ect….
I like a semi auto for varmints and one for self defense and then a few for nostalgia like a Garand an M1A and a 1903.

I always have one go to big game rifle that sees most of my hunting use.
 

Bluefish

WKR
Joined
Jan 5, 2023
Messages
802
Definitely going down the road of fewer rifles. Picked a few calibers and am sticking to those. Getting rid of the ones that are different. Can’t do just one due to hunting regulations requiring large caliber.
 
Joined
Mar 10, 2013
Messages
622
Location
washington
Im a fan of two cartridges. One for high country one for river bottom/timber. Ill never need anything other than 308 for down low and 300 rum up high. Set for life with those two options for my hunting style. Good luck….
 

SouthPaw

WKR
Joined
Apr 10, 2014
Messages
876
Location
Northern CA
I will always have 3. One is a high volume trainer/plinker/varmint, and two ready-to-go hunting rifles. Most non-local hunts I take a full backup rifle/ammo.
 

MisterD

FNG
Joined
Jan 30, 2025
Messages
1
Hello everyone. I am a new member. For many years was active on 24HrCf but the nastiness caused me to depart.

I have been hunting, loading, and shooting since age 12. Ordered my first custom rifle at age 19 from one of the preeminent builders of the day.

I have owned everything between a 6 Rem to a 458 Win. In my 30’s and 40’s and even into my 50’s I continually attempted to acquire the very bestest cartridge/rifle combination. My fortunes improved and I did much more hunting. I found that more rifles actually interfered with going hunting. Today, for 90%+ of BG hunting I want one primary rifle and a second for those rare times when the primary does kewampus days before departure. I keep both in a single chambering. I use a 270W with optimal loads. I prefer WalMart chamberings, why, because if WM sells it you can find it worldwide. I can’t think of a single animal that I have been unable to get because of the cartridge. Of course there are times when a hunter needs a 375/416/458 bore but that is a different discussion.

If a hunter has one primary rifle then there is no reason to skimp on anything.
 

D Lee

Lil-Rokslider
Joined
Jan 4, 2014
Messages
106
I agree with Greyghost. 2 rifles. Each one has a more defined purpose(s) to pretty much cover all bases.

I did try the 1 rifle route. Worked. Sort of. That "sort of" led me to my second rifle. MO betta now.

If I were forced to own 1 - hands down 30-06 for a thousand good reasons. But I'm not.

Good luck to you - you are on a good path.

Cheers.
 
Joined
Nov 19, 2021
Messages
448
I think it also depends on what you want to do with the rifle.

Would you only hunt deer/elk? Sounds like one rifle would work great.

Would you hunt everything from coyote to grizzly? I’m wanting at least two.
 
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