lazyMlazyK
Silver $$ Contributor
I've been thinking about teaching my oldest boy how to shoot this summer, and I'd like to get him a bolt action that can be used for plinking at the range and maybe some squirrel or rabbit hunting down the road. The main goal for this summer is just to teach him gun safety fundamentals, and to get him familiar with how a bolt action functions. He's only 5 years old, but he's shown some interest in my PRS/long range setup, and he's been hunting with me a time or two. I'd like to start him out with a scoped rifle, as he'll probably shoot scoped rifles more than open-sights later in life, assuming he wants to keep shooting. That's not to say I won't teach him how to use iron sights down the road. Anyway, I stopped into my local Scheels last night to glance at their .22 selection, and about 95% of the rifles they had in stock were semi-auto. There was one Henry lever, two Ruger Precision Rimfires, and one Remington bolt action. The RPRs looked pretty nice, and priced under $500, I was a little surprised by that. Due to Remington's history over the past 10-20 years, I'd like to avoid them.
Are you all finding that bolt-action .22s are harder to find new on the shelf these days? It seems like the CZ 455 and CZ 457 are pretty highly regarded here. Maybe I'll look into getting one ordered in. Can a guy do his own barrel swap on either one of them? I want his first .22 to be of decent enough quality that it can be passed down to his kids one day.
Are you all finding that bolt-action .22s are harder to find new on the shelf these days? It seems like the CZ 455 and CZ 457 are pretty highly regarded here. Maybe I'll look into getting one ordered in. Can a guy do his own barrel swap on either one of them? I want his first .22 to be of decent enough quality that it can be passed down to his kids one day.