Females first deer rifle

My first rifle was a .264 bolt action and I loved it! I am recoil and noise sensitive. I have also shot a .270 Wby and it was really nice. I would strongly recommend a left handed bolt rifle and fit the pull to the shooter.
 
I used the 7mm-08 managed recoil ammo, and it's not accurate past 100 yards. 200 yards, it was off paper.

So I'm stepping down to a .243 semi auto. With regular ammo.
 
It's easy enough to shorten a stock for a correct length of pull. Any wood worker should be able to do a clean job of cutting off the excess and installing a new recoil pad. Generally easier with wood than "plastic".
 
The .243 is a great choice, but you don't have to go all the way up to 7MM to get a bit more. The .260 Remington is also a good choice, and kind of splits the difference.
 
Mostly open country or woods? By your choice I'm guessing mostly open country. Is she a smallish gal? If so I'd lean toward a 7mm-08. Plenty of power but soft shooting.

For woods I'd go with a 30-30 win, the Marlin 336 youth is a great choice and works well for a lefty.
 
"I do have a lefthanded .22LR Savage but I never shoot it because the stock is too long.
Just my 2 cents. I'm going to keep my I on this thread, it will give me some good pointers next I go shopping."

No reason to not shoot that .22. Find a good gunsmith and have him cut the stock to fit you. Easiest fix in the world. ;)
Paul B.
 
I'm thinking it would help a lot to know if the OP was a reloader or not. I would think that if the .270 is an option, a left handed model witht he stock cut to fit the lady having a Pachmeyr Decelerator recoil pad wodl be the way to go. If the OP does reload, he could very easily make up "managed recoil" type load and gradually work up to full power hunting loads. A 130 gr. Nosler Accubond or Partition would work just fine for deer and even elk although if hunting elk I'd prefer either bullet in 150 or 160 gr. weight.
I've seen how the .243 works on big Nevada Mule Deer and frankly, I was not impressed. I used to guide kids on their first deer hunts when I lived in Northern Nevada and some not havnig a deer rifle would use my .243 with a fairly stiff load using the 100 gr. Hornady sp bullet. I don't remember if they were Interlocks or not as this was in the late mid 70's. Only one deer was a drt bang flop out of 6 deer shot. All the others ran off after being hit, one almost 250 yards and may have kept on running except a fence got in the way. He backed up and hit that fence twice before expiring. Most of the deer ran from 35 to close to 100 yards before dropping. I coached each of the kids on their shot and all were good chest hits either into the heart or lungs. Most shots were at roughly 100 to 150 yards and these kids shot well.
Now I'm certain all the lovers of the .243 will be all over my back saying, "It ain't so." but it is exactly as stated. These deer were all taken on a private ranch with almost no hunting pressure. It was also fairly open so we could see where the deer fimally dropped. Good thing because there was so little blood trail that if cover had been thick, some of those deer would have been lost. Anyway, out of 6 deer shot with that rifle, only one dropped at the shot.
Now if the OP is not a handloader, I believe I would look at a 7-08. REcoil would be in the same level as the 7x57 and would be just fine for deer with 140 gr. Factory ammo. I don't shoot the 7-08 but do shoot a 7x57 and I load my ammo to 7-08 specs. A 7-08 with a premium 150 or 160 gr. load would be more than adequate for elk. A factory 175 gr. load would probably be just fine out to 200 yards on elk as long as it's not Federal's load. All I will say is I've had problems with that one. I've been hunting for 64 years and have lost exactly two deer in all that time. One was with the federal load just mentioned. :mad:
Paul B.
 
Back
Top