Nomosendero
Well-Known Member
Bullets more than headstamps !
Just read one of his books and am halfway through the second. He shot most of his elephants with a .275. Not so sure a .308 is that far off. His backup was a .313 or .318 I can't remember which.That's because He got old and senile.
Amen to that, some of the best words of this thread!Land of the free....shoot whatever you feel you can make a good kill with my friends and happy hunting.
I also shoot feral hogs with a .243, from 75 gr to 110 gr. Always aim for the neck, and they always drop on the spot. It's amazing how a good rifle can make me look like a marksman.Keep the .22 calibers for Varmint & Predator Hunting.
.243 & .257 for Deer size
6.5mm +++ up for larger animals.
Just my opinion.
I'll rephrase this.
I think that the larger cartridges like the 22 Creed and the 22-250 with an 85 grain or heavier bullets with shot placement and proper range will take down any deer size animals.
Here in Va 22 cal. is not legal for deer or bear. Grew up shooting 243 and then to 30-06. I don't see much difference in using 85 to 90 gr pills in 22 creedmoor or 243. Never shot the 22 Creedmoor but it may have less recoil which would be good to start kids and newcomers to the sport. Shot placement is always key. My go to gun for big game, mule deer, elk and moose next week is the 340 bee.Hunted whitetail with 5.56 77gr smk's for the last 20yrs out of various ar15 rifles from 10.3" to 18" barrels. I'll also take the slow twist 22-250 with 50gr NBT's out to 350yds. Furthest kill with the 77gr smk was at 416yds on a doe out of a mk12 clone. Shot her in the neck and she ran about 15yds.
I've been itching for a 1-7.5 tw 22 creed & some 80-88gr elds just because