Tag Archives: deer hunting

I Failed as a Deer Hunter

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Last month I missed my first chance ever to shoot a deer.

Arizona has a lottery system to determine who gets to participate in the harvest. Winners were announced in July or so. I had until early November to get ready.

My family has no hunting tradition, so I’m on my own. Before the hunt, I needed to choose and purchase a rifle*, choose and purchase optics (a scope), learn how to shoot accurately, learn how to hunt deer, and make several advance trips to my designated hunting area to scope it out (exactly where are the deer?). Furthermore, I need new eyeglasses. As you might imagine, I’m fairly obsessive and compulsive about doing things the right way. I ran out of time, thanks to other aspects of life that were more important. Oh, well. Maybe I’ll be ready by next fall.

I did spend a couple hours with my son checking out rifles at Bass Pro Shop in Mesa, Arizona. They had many on my list of prospects.

Notes On Rifle Choice

Although a wood stock is aesthetically appealing, a synthetic stock probably makes more sense in terms of withstanding weather-related stress such as rain, heat, cold, and extremes of humidity. Plus, the synthetic stocks are $200 cheaper.

I’m leaning towards .308 caliber since it packs enough punch for elk hunting. .30-06 would do the trick, too.

I was not greatly impressed with Savage rifles, although the Weather Warrior was not bad. I don’t remember otherwise which Savage models I held. The salesman at Bass said it’s a little more trouble to mount a scope on the Savages. Savages are popular rifles.

He also told me to consider stainless steel barrels.

The Weatherby Vanguard Series 2 Sporter with synthetic stock was OK, but not one of my favorites.

I ruled out the Ruger American simply because I like the Tikka T3 better. I have a Ruger revolver and recommend the company. I also have a soft spot for Browning firearms since I’m happy with my Browning BDA .380 semi-automatic pistol.

The Sako A7 is too expensive, even with synthetic stock. I don’t remember the price, but must be over $1,500.

All of the following are in the running for future purchase:

  • The Tikka T3 (Hunter or Forest model) is made by Sako and I was favorably impressed. $600 with synthetic stock.
  • Browning A-Bolt Medallion (not chambered in .308, but in .30-06).
  • Browning X-Bolt Hunter.
  • Browning X-Bolt Medallion.
  • Winchester Model 70 is very nice. The Alaskan model is probably the only one on this page that comes with iron sites, an option I like. It is chambered in .30-06 but not .308
  • Remington 700. Several different models, and perhaps not in .308 caliber. At least one has iron sites (BDL model). But has Remington solved the dangerous trigger issue?

If I had to choose one right now, it’d be the Tikka T3.

Steve Parker, M.D.

 *Mike S., thanks for offering me the use of one of your rifles. But my goal is a Parker family rifle I can pass down to the next generation.

PS: I just learned that a Remington 700 is what Charles Whitman used to kill 16 people from a tower at the University of Texas (in Austin) in 1966.

Deer Rifles

Arizona hunters wear camouflage

I’ve been researching rifles for deer hunting.

The most popular calibers are .308 and .30-06.  These two are essentially equivalent.  The .30-06 may have a bit more “oomph.”  The .308 may be a slightly more accurate.  I lean toward the .308. And I’m hearing very good things about a newer round, the 6.5 Creedmoor.

Most deer hunters use a scope rather than iron sites these days.

A traditional wood stock appeals to me.  The alternative is a synthetic stock, such as molded plastic.  The latter are cheaper by one or two hundred U.S. dollars.

These are in the running for my choice:

I looked at Kimber, Mossberg, and Marlin websites and didn’t see anything that appealed to me.  Nevertheless, they’re popular.  Remington 700s have a huge following—the military M40 is based on it—but I’m concerned after seeing a documentary accusing them of deadly or disabling misfires.

Any thoughts?

-Steve

Updated Dec 9, 2020

Buck Fever

Deer hunters call this “glassing”

I have a mysterious new fascination with deer hunting.

I don’t know why I’ve been thinking about this.  It may be related to a book on raising boys I read about six months ago.  The author talked about rites of passage for adolescent boys.  In his social circle, hunting was one such rite.  Boys on the cusp of adulthood were invited to the hunting camp to mingle with the experienced men and learn about manly things.  My son is almost 14.

Jews have the bar mitzvah.  The rest of us in Western societies don’t have much in the way of a rite of passage for adolescent boys (“young bucks”).  The scarification practiced by some West African tribes is not what I had in mind.  I guess we’ve decided as a culture that adolescent rites of passages aren’t needed any more.  I’m not so sure.

I bet hunter-gatherer societies have rites of passage.

Perhaps my son’s path to Eagle scout will be his rite of passage.  Or maybe it’ll be a deer hunt.

-Steve

PS: I’ve never killed a deer, nor even shot at one.  I went on a deer hunt as a yoot but no one in the party got lucky.  I’ve never even fired a rifle more powerful than a .22.