In all honesty.....if it had been out four weeks after the 300 Weatherby.....I would have chose it too.....too late to the party also....the Gun Bean...not me!I'm late to the party but the RUM gets my vote
In all honesty.....if it had been out four weeks after the 300 Weatherby.....I would have chose it too.....too late to the party also....the Gun Bean...not me!I'm late to the party but the RUM gets my vote
Now here's a man after my own heart!The three hundred is for shooting, but the RUM is for drinking.
Cz 550 in 375 H&H or take your pick with a Sako 85These days it's hard for me to pick just one favorite .30 cal. cartridge with so many good ones to choose from.
The .300 Weatherby is certainly a fine cartridge for any longer range hunting and shooting, there is no doubt.
The .300 Norma Mag and the AI version are certainly in there kicking and screaming.
The .300 PRC is another good cartridge.
Then include the:
30 Nosler
.300 RUM
30-378 Weatherby
But probably the most popular and long lasting is the .300 Winchester Magnum. Both the civilian versions and the military derivations.
There are several more but others should post their favorites.
Maple is amazing. My uncle had a custom Mauser with a birdseye maple stock when I was a kid. I thought that was the best looking rifle ever. The deep bluing really aet it off.I cannot argue with that. I have sold many a Mark V in the various Wby mag calibers. What we would do if we had more than one MKV in a caliber that the buyer wanted we would bring out all of them so he could choose between the best wood stock.
It was not uncommon for us to have four or five MKV rifles so the hunter can compare one over the other. The idea that you don't want to scratch a wood stock is not reason enough not to buy one. Every scratch or dent in a wood stock tells a great story that particular hunt.
Wood stocks on rifles have been around a lot longer than composite(plastic) stocks. The centuries that men hunted and defended themselves never had any problems feeding their families or keeping the villains away with a rifle that had a wood stock.
Right now one of the most popular wood stock rifles are the Browning Gold Medallion with the Maple stock. They are very popular they are hard to keep in stock.
I have a Browning X-Bolt with a walnut stock and I'm just as accurate with that as I am with the X-Bolt composite stalker. Nearly all of my rifles are wood stock. I got the composite stalker used a a very, very good price I couldn't pass it up.
Yes, maple has a deep, beautiful glow.Maple is amazing. My uncle had a custom Mauser with a birdseye maple stock when I was a kid. I thought that was the best looking rifle ever. The deep bluing really aet it off.
You could even shoot the 7mm Mashburn, splitting the difference, and fire it at everyting.Any 300 magnum is a wonderful "single-rifle-for-everything" solution. I like the bigger 338's for elk and moose and 270 Wby for antelope and deer.