Re: Hunting rifle weight?
<div class="ubbcode-block"><div class="ubbcode-header">Originally Posted By: KIMO</div><div class="ubbcode-body"><div class="ubbcode-block"><div class="ubbcode-header">Originally Posted By: tman300wm</div><div class="ubbcode-body">
Keep it light (under 8 lbs total) and your legs, back, and shoulders will thank you. </div></div>
Weakling.....
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OK, OK! I was only kidding!
Went yesterday for what I thought would be a leisurely morning of glassing clearcuts. I brought my 17 lb. 260 remington with suppressor. Piece of cake as it was supposed to be a leisurely morning of glassing clearcuts (right?) and home by noon regardless. Easy Peasy. Hunting partner had other plans it turned out….
By the time we got to near the bottom of the Lawson Creek Drainage and had essentially bushwhacked the 1.2 mile obstacle course created by the Biscuit Fire,
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Biscuit_Fire, a serious problem was discovered; the bolt from my Bighorn action was no longer in the action! What a great opportunity, I get to do it all again while staring at the ground trying to retrace my steps up that fiendishly steep overgrown and log strewn path that once resembled a trail.
Two hours later I found my bolt. Sheer luck.
I'd left the rifle at the bottom since without the bolt it was just dead weight and the mountain had needed to be reclimbed. Once back at the bottom I rejoined my partner and we carried on the hunt for a few hours predator calling a location where my partner had seen a large cinnamon bear during elk archery season. No luck though.
On the way back up (the second time for me), I swear the rifle quadrupled in weight. I longed for my Kimber Montana 270wsm and its mere 6.5 lbs. If another hunter had wandered by with a featherweight or similar, I swear I'd have swapped straight across and eaten the $2000 or so difference in value.
This is the day after that experience. It hurts. Everything. In any event, I'm sure I'll be able to walk normally again soon.
Light is right.
Cheers!