Getting ready for Wyoming antelope season.Had planned to hunt one weekend but because my son-in-law and Daughter #2 have a wedding that weekend, I’ll get to hunt two weekends. Yee-Haw!
The first weekend I’ll be joined by two nephews who have never hunted any big game. One has hunted birds and I doubt the other has ever hunted anything – although he spent part of one summer at the NRA Whittington Center at a shooting camp.
The last few trips to the range I’ve been working up 150g Ballistic Tip and AccuBond loads for my three .30-06’s. When the nephews arrive we will have one evening to hit the range before we head north to Bill, Wyoming, and points east in Area 29. I’ll let them practice with the Ballistic Tips, then switch to the AccuBonds for final shots and the actual hunt.
Yesterday was the first chance I had to check the zero with the AccuBonds. The two Rugers (a M77 and a stainless MKII I recently married to a skeletonized “boat paddle” stock) both shot great, about .5" and maybe a bit better, with the same point of impact as the Ballistic Tips. A couple clicks on the vertical and they were just where I wanted them. (They had been a bit off with the BTs, too.) The Remington M700 was another matter altogether. It has never been better than about a 1-1/4” shooter and yesterday was no exception. I’ve come to the conclusion that the M700 is going to need a bedding job to get anything more in the accuracy department.
My Interarms Mark X custom 6.5-06AI was a one-shot affair, both last week and yesterday. Both shots printed right where I wanted them, 2.5” high and dead center horizontally.
When I got back home I loaded up some more 130g Scirocco II’s for the 6.5-06AI and some more BT’s and AB’s for the .30-06s. My nephews can use whatever they want but I’m going to try to steer them toward the Ruger .30-06s while I use the 6.5-06AI. The Roberts with 100g TTSX and the 7mm RM with 140g North Fork would both be fine alternatives and who knows what the youngsters (both college grads) will choose.
One thing for sure, the Remington M700 will be staying home. Yeah, it’s “accurate enough” but disappointing nevertheless. FWIW, the Remington is an M700 “Special purpose Wood” model with checkered walnut stock and floorplate, blued. The stock is pretty plain compared to my .308 Win BDL - no forearm tip, no grip cap, etc. The manufacture date was August, 2005, and I picked it up new in late March, 2008. Regardless of the ammo I try, factory or handloads, this rifle just refuses to do better. If bedding doesn’t help it, the action will become a donor.