by 1911fan on Tue Jun 14, 2011 1:02 pm
If you're gonna stick with store bought ammo, go to the Goose hill or Joes, or where ever you shop and price ammo..
Ammo prices are crazy now, and going to stay that way I believe. So 300 savage ammo runs $30 or more a box, where as stuff like 6.5 swede runs $40 or more a box and .30-30 can be down in the $15 a box range and .308, .243, 30-06 can be around $20. If you're gonna be a fudd where you shoot one box every 10 years, then ammo costs don't matter. If you're gonna shoot the gun a bit, well, then looking at ammo costs up front can alter your decision making processes.
Recoil. I don't know how much you shoot, but recoil will come into question for practice if you get a larger round. If you're a newb, then get a mild recoiling round.
My fav'es for hunting rounds for pretty much anything on the lower 48 are .257 roberts, 250 savage, 6.5 swede, 7 mauser, and 7-08 rem, They shoot well, they don't kick, and they are all very accurate. Notice that all except the 7-08 are on what ammo makers call the "seasonal" list, meaning they are made sporadically, and unless you reload, they are going to be difficult to find at times, and somewhat more costly.
Deer are not hard to kill. My father killed hundreds during the depression to feed his family using a 32-20 pump gun. energy wise, thats about the same as a .327 federal, which a lot of people think is too small for self defense. Shooting them where they die fast is a skill and requires like any skill, practice. if you consider the animal a big billboard and you just have to slam one in the side, well, then practice might not be so important. I am one who takes great care and pride in killing animals quickly and without wasting meat.
My personal deer rifle is a 1950's era Savage 99 lever gun in 300 savage. I load it to about mid way between the starter loads and the max loads in the books and I am very confident in its ability to kill deer and not ruin an excessive amount of meat. Sure by loading it down, I do not get the best ballistics, but its very accurate and its very good at killing deer. Using paper ballistics can get you into trouble, and accepting the hype that advertising can bring will also get you into trouble. I read the hype for a few years and believed it. I got older and less gullible and I watched what the older guys in my camp where shooting. I have killed a lot of deer, and our camp has killed a lot of deer and I will say that of the guns we use, only one is an 30-06, one .280, the rest, a 6.5 swede, a couple of .250 savages, a couple of .300 Savages and a .257 bob.
While chamberings like the .270 and the .25 06 are very good, they are for most of the hunting done in Mn more than you need. They are great prairie guns, great mountain guns, where getting a 4-600 yard shot is not only possible, but common, they excell. In Mn, unless your shooting on a power-line or a mongo clear cut, getting shots of that distance are unlikely, and the energy needed to kill cleanly at 400 yards means an excess at 45 yards. Shredded shoulders, blood shot meat all over, are not the best way to get your meat home.