wildfowler.250
Well-Known Member
Haha well that will be .223, .22-250, .222 so we’ll see if there’s a favourite or if I start going off label and down the 20 tac route..
The way I see it you either purchase a 22 Hornet or a 220 Swift.
But then I'm not given of conventional thinking so feel free to ignore!
K
Give it a month and then I can post about it being the “sweetest cartridge” and “God’s caliber”![]()
How are you getting on with it...... and what are you thoughts now?
Does pretty much everything a .22-250 does plus more.Have you considered the .243 with a light round it’s an awesome foxing calibre with the 100 grn SP a decent stalking round as well
Reloading a mid weight round it will be a extremely accurate calibre for all round use
Have you considered the .243 with a light round it’s an awesome foxing calibre with the 100 grn SP a decent stalking round as well
Reloading a mid weight round it will be a extremely accurate calibre for all round use
Agree.....what will do a lot, will do a little.Both have a reputation for outstanding accuracy. While the .222 seems to still be very popular in Europe and Great Britain it is almost a forgotten cartridge here. So I’d go 22-250 because of ammo and reloading supplies availability and the opportunity to take very long shots if one wants to where I live.
Agree.....what will do a lot, will do a little.
Ken.
You beat me to itthink your fox shooting friend with the .222 needs to spend some more time at the range
same here:I’ve got a Ruger #1 custom barreled job in 22-250 AI that I’ve shot sub 1/10 MOA groups with . I also have a trio of 222’s of which I’ve shot sub 1/10 MOA . Now to the facts , I’ve not shot the Ruger in five years , matter of fact I’d get rid of it other than the fact that my father wanted it so it’ll stick around . The 222’s get shot regularly , and will continue as long as I’m able to load for them and shoot .
Save your money, keep your 22-250 and buy a good thermal spotter instead ( if you haven’t already got one) and you’ll find you use the 22-250 a lot more. At least that’s what I’ve done recently, linked with a Pard add-on, it’s completely changed the way I shoot foxes.Needing some opinions! Currently have a .270, .22-250, .22 and a 17hmr.
I probably put 10 shots a year through the .22-250; hardly use it. Few to zero and shoot maybe 1 or 2 roe deer, 1 or 2 foxes,(although I may eventually get into that) and the odd crow.
So really the .22cf is an extra/novelty anyway. I’m fancying a change of rifle rather than caliber. Is there any real world difference between .222 and .22-250 for shooting a roe out to 200,(max 250) yards? Bearing in mind most shots are 150 or less?
Really tempted by the .222 as it’s nice and quite and supposedly very accurate. Can reload either way. But I’ve the dies,(actually unused) ect for the .250. Any real difference in meat damage, knock down or bullet drop?
That said the .22-250 possibly ticks the boxes a little better apart from noise? No real interest in a .223 or .243 currently.
Cheers!
Does it really matter? Real life situation, after a fox at night or a Roe deer, Lest look at the fox first, you may not be in ideal shooting position, your lamp is only going to light up the body at max 200 yards, or your night vision is only good for 200 yards & even then it can look a bit vague, you may have 2or 3 seconds when that fox stops moving & theres a bit of a breeze. Roe deer the same, except its daytime, but your looking at that beautiful animal through your scope, your heart may be pumping a bit harder, you just crawled 50 yards. For most of us, in a real life situation, it won't matter how flat shooting your rifle is, can we guarantee we are going to kill it. I would say 175 yards is a good range to shoot. Shot placement is everything. Calibre is secondary. Only speaking for myself, I have to live with other peoples shy foxes, it isnt fun, certainly don't want to wound anything, it does happen but it stays with you, & makes you think before you pull the trigger.
Completely different scenario for folks in the valleys or glens or flat open fens, just my opinion.
Something that costs 60 quid, & kills hundreds of foxes. Enables you to cover hundreds of acres in minutes, & lights up critters better than any NV. Paired with dimmer switch, amber filter & rifle = lethal. Fast ID & despatch. Deadly on stubble fields after harvest. My preferred way. Try it sometime.