Mexican waters. The areas depend on the length of the trip. Some trips are 5-6 days in length, others as long as 15-16 days in length.Bahamas? Baja? Also amazing fish.
For the last couple of years I have been shooting a standard 280 Remington with 160gr partitions at 2825fps from my 22" mountain rifle. It currently has a mule deer and three elk to its credit, furthest shot was just over 300 yards.
280/280AI will do everything you need it to out here in the west.
If i had to only choose two rifles, it would be a 22-250 & a 300wm. You said you don't varmint hunt, so the 22-250 probably isn't on your radar. But the 300wm isn't one to overlook. Mine is a hunting rifle and it shoots lights out. I've been running the 185 berger hvlds. Lately I've been testing the 125 Nosler bts. With the few loads I've tried, they are great. I'm getting 3120 with the 185s and right at 3500fps with the 125s.
Matt
That ain't no tuna!
My favorite Jack O'Conner story is about the Wyoming Guide, Wes Bowman, keeping a couple of .243 standard weight Winchester M-70s in camp. They were offered to people who were afraid of, or unable to shoot their new "magnum." And that those two .243s shot more Elk than all the other rifles in camp, including some brought by a couple of "big name" gun writers testing new R.E.M.-chest-rby rifles fit magazine articles..I have lived and hunted elk in the West all of my life, I have used a variety of calibers, 243, 7x57, 270, 30-06 and I can tell you with confidence that either of the two rifles you own now will work just fine for elk. However keep in mind that I am talking about distances within a reasonable range of 100 to 300 yards, if you are planning on 700-1000 yard shots then you need a large magnum. For all practical purposes the 280AI would be my choice of the two you have only because it gives a bit more energy if you do take a longer shot.
drover
Jon Beanland (gunsmith) reccomended a 300wm or a 28 Nosler to me. I have always stayed away from the belted cartridges out of a superstitious belief that they were innately flawed. Jon said he has had great accuracy out of his 300wm builds. For all intents and purposes a 7 RM would be an ideal cartridge for me. As I said earlier, I am going to stick where I am this year. I have no hunts planned out of TN this year. Unless we have a southern Moose and Elk migration this year I am adequately gunned with the 6.5L and the 280ai. My 7 year old son is good to go with his Savage Axis Youth 7mm-08. He thinks it is the best rifle ever.![]()
Here in "Upper Slobovia" as Jim Cloward" referred to us, I primarily used two CF rifles. I used a 7x57AI in the winter when the bears were asleep and my "Typical Alaskan Hunting Rifle" A short barreled Model 70 in .375 H&H when I had to walk amongst the "Fuzzmonsters". I look on the wall and most of the stuff there fell to the three six bits. A 300gr. round nosed Hornady will almost go through a moose lengthwise and it does less meat damage to a Sitka Blacktail deer on Kodiak than a .270 Win. Most of the time, I shot the old style NP, 270 gr. bullets. They worked well in Africa on most everything also. The 7x57AI with 150 or 160gr. NP's is a Caribou killing machine. Got to admit that I used a .416 RM on my Cape Buffalo though. But that's just me. Anyhow, my fifty years of hunting here has primarily been done with two center fire rifles.
I too nashed my teeth over what to do when my Sendero 7Rem Mag barrel finally gave up. I like to tinker so I had wild thoughts about all sorts of things. In the end, I chambered up another 7mm Rem Mag and am now happy that I did. It does everything I want it to do. Healthy does of H1000 and a 160 to 180gr bullet has treated me very very well for decades now. In the end I realized Ididnt need to fix what was not Broken... LOL.
Good shooting to you all.
I don't fish for sharks. I am also worried about their long term survival.
My favorite Jack O'Conner story is about the Wyoming Guide, Wes Bowman, keeping a couple of .243 standard weight Winchester M-70s in camp. They were offered to people who were afraid of, or unable to shoot their new "magnum." And that those two .243s shot more Elk than all the other rifles in camp, including some brought by a couple of "big name" gun writers testing new R.E.M.-chest-rby rifles fit magazine articles..