Mike D Texas
WKR
A Tikka Compact in .308 shooting 125 class bullets would be a perfect youth gun IMO.
Sent from my iPhone using Tapatalk Pro
Sent from my iPhone using Tapatalk Pro
At this point, I'm shooting an AR in 6.8mm Rem SPC.6.8 Western.
It's got the reach of the 6.5's and the power of the 30cals.
Lordy, he done drug out ole Bob !!!
My nephew, just turned 13, a big little man, my daughter is 9, and she is quite small for her age, and my son is 6 and big for his age. I am looking to pick up one gun that could be used for all three over the next couple of years.
I live and hunt in Oregon, hunting mostly deer, elk, and the occasional pronghorn. I am looking to get a couple of young hunters into the sport and am curious about your experience for a young hunter and a caliber of choice. I am looking for something that is capable of all of Oregon's big game, has reasonable recoil, long barrel life, and ample ammunition availability. Something they can use now and well into the future. I have narrowed my selection down to either a 6.5 Creedmoor or a 308 with reduced recoil loads. Any experience going either way?
I know there are other great options, but I am sold on either of these two avenues...
What factory bullets would you recommend?Both are good choices, especially when combined with a good bonded or mono bullet,
I have an a-bolt micro medallion in 257 Bob wearing an old Swaro. It comes out every few years to be fondled and go hunting. Very few locals recognize the round.LMBO!
You know Ken, in my short tenure as an employee of a sporting goods store, the last big development was the "Win Mag" line and the Rem 8mm Mag artillery round!
The store owner was big into "classic" rounds. I found them interesting, so I kinda lean that way!
Back then (late 70's), the recognized "kids & ladies" cusa .30-30 Win or a .243 Win. It just worked.
Men with a bit more.....uhm....sophistication, would prefer the .257 Rbts or a 7×57 Mauser.
Also remember that "big game" in East Texas was a 130 pound, on the hoof, whitetail!
There is still nothing wrong with the old timers.
I will agree that some of the newcomers over the last 20 or so years are beginning to make a name for themselves!
Yeppers! I drug up ole Bob! Lol!
i witnessed few kids shooting 243 and 260 without flinching and to me it was not like a punishment when they collected their caribous or black bear.As the OP of the kids rifle manifesto thread, I cannot state this strongly enough...
A .308 size case pushing 120-140 bullets (so that includes 6.5CM, 7mm-08) produces 14-17 ft lb recoil energy. A 100lb kid gets pushed around by that about like a 200lb man gets pushed around by an 8lb .300 win mag.
I've done it wrong and I've done it better... A .223 or 6mm ARC are hands down the best kids options. If I were in your shoes I'd do everything possible to get one of each so you have a great practice and deer rifle, and a great OR elk legal rifle as well.
Edit to add: suppressors are a cheat code to kids proficiency as well. My 10 yr old prefers suppressed 6ARC to unsuppressed .223, and suppressed .223 over everything else.
my vote is 6.5cm, great rifle/ammo selection and availability. Solid ballistics. Plus I think the 6.5cm is a little more forgiving if you guys want to tinker with some long range shooting.I live and hunt in Oregon, hunting mostly deer, elk, and the occasional pronghorn. I am looking to get a couple of young hunters into the sport and am curious about your experience for a young hunter and a caliber of choice. I am looking for something that is capable of all of Oregon's big game, has reasonable recoil, long barrel life, and ample ammunition availability. Something they can use now and well into the future. I have narrowed my selection down to either a 6.5 Creedmoor or a 308 with reduced recoil loads. Any experience going either way?
I know there are other great options, but I am sold on either of these two avenues...
i witnessed few kids shooting 243 and 260 without flinching and to me it was not like a punishment when they collected their caribous or black bear.
in canada except few aeras like NWT above tree line (at least in the past) the 223 will be only for wolf or range.
I’d follow this train of thought.Out of the 2 you listed, 6.5 creedmoor with light loads. Personally, with kids, I’d go even lighter if state game laws let me. 6mm creedmoor, .243 Winchester, 6arc. Plenty of evidence on this forum proving the 6mm/243 as a “all around” hunting caliber. Heck a lot of guys prefer a .223 Remington and after seeing the proof, I cannot argue against it.
Another great old classic is the .250-3000, or .250 Savage.I have an a-bolt micro medallion in 257 Bob wearing an old Swaro. It comes out every few years to be fondled and go hunting. Very few locals recognize the round.
7mm-08 works just fine on Moose.243, but I'll also vote for the 7mm-08 as well. It's great for experienced adults as well, but shoots soft and can be used for anything short of moose or bear so you get a lot of "life" out of it.
you re right and unfortunately in canada the ar platform is forbidden for hunting we might have bolt or pump ar derivate but way heavier than they should ...the 223 is ruled out in most juridictions over there except for wolf and in nwt for caribou above tree line (if still the case). so that left few options with most of the time a derivate of the 308 case and the 243 is agreat cartridge for any beginner as the 260. a lot of weight can be added or even a recoil shoulder pad. but i will say shooting at the range or shooting at an animal is not the same and most will not feel the recoil while shooting for hunting.Were you doing dummy drills (someone else loads a mag with a mix of live and dummy rounds)? It's really easy to develop a flinch that doesn't really show itself to the shooter or casual observer in live fire (except for frequent poor shots. Sometimes it shows itself as consistent larger groups, sometimes pretty good groups with occasional shots way outside the normal group). When the gun goes click and the shooter moves, it can tell a lot about where the shooter is really at.
I've said before and firmly believe, one of my big mistakes early on in teaching kids to shoot was that I didn't appreciate the difference between "handles the recoil well" or "isn't scared of it" vs "really good for building skills as a rifleman". My son at 10 would shoot his 7mm-08 as much as I would let him. Loved it. That doesn't mean he didn't develop bad shooting habits from it.
Flinching is the enemy here. And that does transfer from the range to hunting.you re right and unfortunately in canada the ar platform is forbidden for hunting we might have bolt or pump ar derivate but way heavier than they should ...the 223 is ruled out in most juridictions over there except for wolf and in nwt for caribou above tree line (if still the case). so that left few options with most of the time a derivate of the 308 case and the 243 is agreat cartridge for any beginner as the 260. a lot of weight can be added or even a recoil shoulder pad. but i will say shooting at the range or shooting at an animal is not the same and most will not feel the recoil while shooting for hunting.
The store owner gave the store manager a fist full of dollars and sent us to a gun show at Astro Hall in Houston.7mm-08 works just fine on Moose.