std7mag
Well-known member
Mtmuley's do it all is a 300 RUM. A little hard on squirrels, but otherwise...Neither. My criteria is different. mtmuley
Follow along with the video below to see how to install our site as a web app on your home screen.
Note: This feature may not be available in some browsers.
Mtmuley's do it all is a 300 RUM. A little hard on squirrels, but otherwise...Neither. My criteria is different. mtmuley
Not my do it all but I do pretty well with it. mtmuleyMtmuley's do it all is a 300 RUM. A little hard on squirrels, but otherwise...
Dude, are you on acid?I do not shoot at flying deer,,,or flying elk.
A few months back I was visiting a friend who is a horse trainer that specializes in wild mustangs.
My moniker “Mustangs Rule” is no joke. This trainer likes to name geldings after US presidents. Often a nickname,,,some sharp sound a horse can hear clearly if issues develop.
This little flaxen maned mustang was named “Ike”,,,after Dwight D. Eisenhower of WW2 fame. He was my first and favorite president. “I like Ike” I heard people say.
Anyway, we were leading “Ike” around, and I just made a sudden move with my hand and the little horse launched ,,,into a jump so “anti-tiger” fast that no rider,,,save maybe 1840’s Comanche, could have stayed on him bareback. That little horse went airborne and sideways about 15 feet, it flew “deer fast” .
His speeeeeeed was so great he would had made Superman look so slow, like he had kryptonite for breakfast lunch and dinner.
Maximum heightened flight response was what Ike was exampling. That horse was airborne with all four feet off the ground. In a gallop or canter,,,all four feet get off the ground...in a trot two and depending on how slow a horse is walking just one foot might be off the ground.
Only the canter and the gallop could be called “running” as in shooting at “running game”. There is even a real slow kinda bouncy canter in which the horse is not really “running”’
Riding horses a lot really gives one a feeling of not just horses are like, but also any hoofed animal.
When I watch deer, or elk move, I feel like I can feel what they are doing,,,and responding too.
And I watch them both,,,a lot,,,and wild sheep, and when I am not lazy Mountain Goats too. I no longer live with antelope anymore, but I used to look at them out my living room window.
Every year I buy a mountain lion tag,,,which I have not, never have had the slightest interest in filling.
I do not hunt my own kind. Where I live has one of the highest wolf and lion concentration in the west,,,and because the habitat is so great, an excellent population of both deer and elk.
I just buy this lion tag as an excuse, to go wandering about with whatever rifle is my “do it all rifle” for the coming deer and elk season.
“Counting Coup” was a tradition of the plains Indians in which they just grazed an opponent on the head with a war club,,,instead of killing him.
With my “all around rifle” heaven only knows how many I have had,,and later sold and with dummy snap caps, I go about “Counting Coup” on deer, elk, and even moose.
“Calling one’s shot” on a target is an important step to being a real fine marksman. Just as the trigger falls, the shooter locks in where the cross hairs are. That is what I do,,,hike around,,stalk, dry fire,,at game that does not see me and sometimes does. I always try practicing my shooting on any critter,,,still or moving...The fast swing, sustained lead, snap shot,,,or even with elbows on my hip for level work,,,and then I sense where my sight image is when the trigger falls.
It is great practice, been doing it since Jack O’Connor suggested it in one of his books I read 60 years ago. So cool when it all comes together, the shooting practice and sensing how an animal will move.
With un-pressured wilderness animals, which I will be hunting, their maximum heighten flight response is not that high,,,they don’t “fly” that much.
Of course I prefer they have four feet on the ground, but as long as they have at least two feet on the ground in their gate, they are not running, and not going to live very long when hunting season begins if I have them in my very low powered scope, with whatever my “do it all rifle” is.
And when my critter is dead and down, I take out my Garmin In Reach satellite communication device and with a push of a button, tell the soon to come cavalry and pack horses exactly where I am.
The smoke from wildfires has cleared a lot,,,,no more excuses to stay inside and not to go out to split and stack firewood. Winter gets pretty cold here.
Thank you MtMuley
MR
It’s sad, but I had to register just to comment on this. The 117 sst has always passed through every animal I’ve shot from 50 yards to 250 yards. Yes entrance and exit wounds were smaller than a 270 or 308, but the damage internally has never been matched. Every animal I’ve shot with my 25-06 has not taken another step once I switched to the SSTs. Yeah shooting cheaper Remington loads sucked on terminal performance, but not the SSTs.I shot a 25-06 for a lot of years. I ended up selling it because I just wasn’t happy with how it did on a trip out west.
I shot a mule deer buck and doe, along with a antelope buck and doe.
Now it did kill them all and but there was little blood trail. Of the 4, 2 went down right away. No tracking required but zero blood until I gutted them. The other 2 ran a ways over a rise and dropped in a large sage flat. We ended up having to grid that sage to find them as they dropped out of sight. The one was a marginal shot and it went several hundred yards. Only had an occasional drop of blood here and there. The other one we never found a drop.
.25 just isn’t a big entrance hole to allow much blood to escape. The ones that had a pass thru with maybe a 3/4” size exit. It seemed the hair on the animals soaked up a lot of it.
Where I found the gun to shine was when I was using for varmint hunting. It was a blast to shoot all summer long.
Quarter bores have there place and are fun rifles when used right.
FYI Ryan Pierce (Piercision) has both the 133 and 135 Berger’s in stock right now… from what I’ve heard you’ll be waiting a really long time for the 131s.Let us know how your build turns out. I’m interested in the Sherman since Blackjack hasnt come out with their round yet.
I've had simular performance with the 100gr, and 115gr Nosler Ballistic Tip from my 257 Roberts.It’s sad, but I had to register just to comment on this. The 117 sst has always passed through every animal I’ve shot from 50 yards to 250 yards. Yes entrance and exit wounds were smaller than a 270 or 308, but the damage internally has never been matched. Every animal I’ve shot with my 25-06 has not taken another step once I switched to the SSTs. Yeah shooting cheaper Remington loads sucked on terminal performance, but not the SSTs.
My buddy used one of my 25-06s for his muley this year and used some 115gr BTs I loaded up. He got it at 240 yds and had a full passthrough. I'm rather fond of them. My Sako's throated too weird to use the 100s though, so I have to use the 115s primarily. Though I have a couple hundred of the 100gr ones that shoot well in my other 25-06.I've had simular performance with the 100gr, and 115gr Nosler Ballistic Tip from my 257 Roberts.
Always a pass through.
Furthest a deer has made it is 20-25 yards.
This year i wanted to hunt with my 250 Savage, expecting short ranges.
Furthest shot was 50 yards.
Collected 2 deer.
But no pass through.
I have my 25SST shipping next week allegedly and am debating which muzzle brake to put on it. I usually do the titanium Christen Arms slayer brake but yours looks good on the proof barrel. What brake did you go with? Also, how do you like that swaro? 2nd FP I’m guessing?Well, I never thought it would happen but here she is…
This is an Axisworks titanium brake they build to match the proof barrel contour. The scope is good so far. The 4wxi reticle is a little bit of an adjustment, but being used with a lot of youth I didn’t want a lot of extra reticle lines. Haven’t had much chance to mess with the illumination. It’s 2nd FP. I don’t think they make an X5 with FFP.I have my 25SST shipping next week allegedly and am debating which muzzle brake to put on it. I usually do the titanium Christen Arms slayer brake but yours looks good on the proof barrel. What brake did you go with? Also, how do you like that swaro? 2nd FP I’m guessing?