Youth rifle idea's for western Montana

MarkOrtiz

Lil-Rokslider
Joined
Dec 24, 2022
Messages
224
Location
Minden, NV
My son is 12 and small in weight and stature. I got him a Mossberg Bantam 7mm-08. It shoots well and has little recoil. I think its a great youth choice. He is shooting 120 grain bullets now, but can go up to 140-160 later for larger animals.
 
Joined
Oct 17, 2019
Messages
343
Location
Wisconsin
I have a Savage 110 my son has used his first two years of hunting (at age 10 and now 11). AccuFit is the feature that sold it for me. I can change the length of pull in minutes and make it perfect for him or for me. Comes in a wide variety of calibers.
 

jamesmc8

WKR
Joined
Oct 26, 2021
Messages
368
Ruger American Gen 2 stock goes down to 12 in LOP. It will be coming out in 6 ARC and 6.5 Grendel, or if you want a step higher 6 CM. Could even do a 6.5 CM loaded with a lighter bullet.
 

GoatPackr

WKR
Joined
Jan 5, 2023
Messages
376
I'm in the same boat. Planning a family deer trip next year and am planning to pick up a couple Tikka T3x lite in 243. I've had the kids handle them at the store and they found them the most comfortable.
243 is more than enough gun to do what you are talking about.

Kris
 

RS3579

WKR
Joined
Apr 2, 2020
Messages
1,255
Look at the Hobbit Rifle thread. That’s the route I went with my kids. TC Encore frame, ar style adjustable stock. Single shot (so they can only shot you 1 time). Good luck, many options.
 

kkp005

WKR
Joined
Jan 4, 2021
Messages
389
Location
Texas
It’d be hard to beat a tikka in 6.5 or 308.. try to find a compact stock and put it in there or got with maybe a MDT chasis with the adjustable AR stock. I’d also go ahead and order a suppressor if you don’t already have one. Muzzle blast and recoil aren’t good for kids…

I also wouldn’t completely overlook the 6CM in one of the new Ruger American gen 2. I’ve been killing stuff the last year with a 6cm and it’s impressive.

Figure out the optic budget and then go Trijicon, NF, Swfa or the new maven
 

Preston

Lil-Rokslider
Joined
May 12, 2020
Messages
183
I would recommend a 30-30 and a fixed 3-4x power scope in like a Henry or Marlin, and keep your shots under 200 yards. I’ve shot around 20 elk, half dozen pronghorn and around a hundred deer about 95% of them were shot under 200 yards and most under 75 yards. A 30-30 would have been more than enough and you can carry one all day and have a low recoil and not a ton of muzzle blast like a 243/6.5 CM. A 7mm-08 or 270 is way too much recoil for a younger shooter. And like others have said a 223 will definitely do the job on a deer and a great way to start shooting
 

spdrman

WKR
Joined
Dec 3, 2012
Messages
459
One thing I would put at the top of your list is a suppressor, I put a brake on my kids 260 and he hated the noise of that more than the recoil, took it off and he could only shoot a few times before it was thumping him too hard but he enjoyed it more, got a suppressor and between the recoil and noise reduction. Both boys will shoot it all day long.

I’m a big tikka fan, I’ve put all of mine in chassis’s for the kids, everyone is looking for a shorter LOP for their kids and I feel they often over look the cheek rest, hard to see through a scope if their head is free floating above the stock.

I don’t own one and have only shot one once but maybe a sig cross or something along those lines would be a good option, easy to adjust LOP and adjust the cheek rest to get a good picture through the scope.

Most my kids guns have 3-15 power scopes, wide FOV and good eye relief is key things I’d be looking for. It helped them acquire animals quicker when they where starting out.

Top pic is my 12 year old (Green ear pro) shooting a tikka with a 2-10x42 nxs, you can see his face is floating above the stock to look through the scope. Lower pic you can see he has good contact on the cheek piece, when that cheek riser is setup for my kids I can’t get low enough to look through the scope. That scope is a 5.5-22x56 nxs. That would really never work for him without a cheek riser for them. When his arms where shorter I’d take that folding adapter out to shorten the LOP for him.

Same factory tikka my 10 year old (blue ear pro) you can really see the difference on him between that and another chassis. That tikka is a full length buttstock. Chassis is adjusted down for him.

Another thing to note is the grip angle between the 2 stocks. Factory stock he’s stretching his finger out to get on the trigger, vertical grip on the chassis gets them closer and gives them a little better trigger control
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Glendon Mullins

Hillbilly Moderator
Staff member
Joined
Sep 7, 2014
Messages
2,403
Location
Highland County Virginia
daughter is 13 and son is 9

sorry if i didnt read the 1st post, i didnt catch the age of the kids u may have been talking about. disregard the 6.5 PRD part lol the gun is really nice

the stoke is available in several calibers though, pretty sure 243 is one of them, which i would recommend or creedmore
 
Joined
Feb 15, 2021
Messages
569
Started my kids on .223. When they were old enough to hunt (12 in Alberta) we switched to 6mm for my daughter and 7mm-08 for my son. .243/6mm is the smallest we can legally hunt big game with.
 

Muleyczy

Lil-Rokslider
Joined
Dec 4, 2016
Messages
296
Looking to buy a starter rifle for my nephews. Leaning toward the Tikka youth model in 6.5cm and putting a suppressor on it.
I did this exact set up for my 10 year old daughter. Great set up imo. Suppressed is a complete game changer.
 

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