buffybr
Well-known member
OK, I've only been hunting since the mid '60s, annually in Colorado or Montana along with a dozen or more international hunts, and I have never heard of class 2 or 3 game animals, and what I thought a manbun was is a girly-boy haircut that looks like the knot tying off a garbage bag.
So back to the OP's original question, when I started hunting deer and elk, the locals that I worked with in NW Colorado who had hunted since they were old enough to, told me to get a .270 Win or .30-06. I went with a .30-06 and for a dozen years it put many deer, elk, and antelope into my freezer. I now have a safe full of rifles from .22 LR and .223 to .375 RUM, including a .270 Win, .308 Win, and .30-06 that the OP mentioned. Almost all of my hunting is spot and stalk.
For hunting in inclement weather, I like stainless steel rifles with composite stocks. All of my hunting rifles have at least 24" barrels. I have had good luck with Weatherby Vanguard rifles, including SS versions in .223 Rem and .308 Win, and my favorite elk and all-a-round rifle a blued .300 Weatherby. My Vanguard in .308 Win with it's Leupold VX 3i 4.5-14x40 weighs 8.75 pounds.
Most of my hunting rifles have Leupold scopes with my favorite being the VX 3i 4.5-14x40 with the side focus and CDS reticle.
I regularly practice (weekly) out to 430 yards, but I have never shot an animal at over 350 yards.
IMO for someone who primarily hunts deer, a Vanguard, Howa, Savage 110, or Remington 700 chambered in 7-08 or .308 Win would be an excellent choice rifle. If you add elk or moose, I would move up to a .30-06, 7 mm Rem mag, or even .300 Win mag.
So back to the OP's original question, when I started hunting deer and elk, the locals that I worked with in NW Colorado who had hunted since they were old enough to, told me to get a .270 Win or .30-06. I went with a .30-06 and for a dozen years it put many deer, elk, and antelope into my freezer. I now have a safe full of rifles from .22 LR and .223 to .375 RUM, including a .270 Win, .308 Win, and .30-06 that the OP mentioned. Almost all of my hunting is spot and stalk.
For hunting in inclement weather, I like stainless steel rifles with composite stocks. All of my hunting rifles have at least 24" barrels. I have had good luck with Weatherby Vanguard rifles, including SS versions in .223 Rem and .308 Win, and my favorite elk and all-a-round rifle a blued .300 Weatherby. My Vanguard in .308 Win with it's Leupold VX 3i 4.5-14x40 weighs 8.75 pounds.
Most of my hunting rifles have Leupold scopes with my favorite being the VX 3i 4.5-14x40 with the side focus and CDS reticle.
I regularly practice (weekly) out to 430 yards, but I have never shot an animal at over 350 yards.
IMO for someone who primarily hunts deer, a Vanguard, Howa, Savage 110, or Remington 700 chambered in 7-08 or .308 Win would be an excellent choice rifle. If you add elk or moose, I would move up to a .30-06, 7 mm Rem mag, or even .300 Win mag.