When I said you can only shoot one rifle at a time so why have more I meant have one rifle for each discipline.
For example I have
.243 for deer and fox.
Will be getting a 30-06 for boar and a 375 H and H for dangerous game.
All will be the same rifles so I am used to the same action and movement.
the 7mm mag is my back up stone, but draw the line at shooting squirrels with it mate.
sinbad
I have a few calibres , quite a few rifles and have owned and sold on a lot more over the years ,pretty much settled on my main 'working' calibres but still change the rifles occasionally , i also try a 'new' ( to me ) calibre from time to time , i do this because it interests me - not searching for 'the one' .I sometimes consider reducing my collection but know i would end up regretting it and starting over again , i can also see the possible benefit of only one / two rifles which you don't change , but overall i think that practicing regularly with any rifle is the key.
Well bobjs, for what its worth I wouldnt bother giving up because you will only want to start again.
I like to have several rifles. I'm as much a collector as a shooter to be honest but 99% of what I do happens with my 7x57R/12g combi gun. I can shoot anything I like with that and I'm never without a suitable gun. Everything I have has a slightly different use - I don't usually take the combi foxing or bunny bashing. I do need to cut my numbers a bit but for now I have...
.22lr x2
.17 Hornet
.223
7-08
7x57/12g
.338 Win Mag
The only ones I'd be without if I had to be would be one of the .22's, the .223 and the .338. I like and use them all but the .338 kicks more than a roe rifle needs to!