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-   -   Best Youth Deer Rifle (https://www.huntingnet.com/forum/whitetail-deer-hunting/428735-best-youth-deer-rifle.html)

greenpasturehunt 11-26-2022 04:15 AM

Best Youth Deer Rifle
 
I know this topic has been covered before. However, I would love to get peoples' thoughts on good deer rifles for youth when they are RECOIL sensitive. I did just see this nice video from a teen's perspective:
. I like the idea of a 243 or even the 357 mag Carbine (for short ranges). I hope everyone's deer season is going well!!!





Ridge Runner 11-26-2022 07:07 AM

AR-15 6.5 grendel, with collapsible buttstock and a 5 round mag

TheCreeper 11-26-2022 10:00 AM

I took a nice 165 lb, 6 point a few years ago with a .357 mag Marlin 1864 at about 70 yards he didn't make it 5 yards.

Bocajnala 11-27-2022 05:04 PM

Savage hog hunter (or any of the cheap options Ruger American, Savage axis, etc) in .350 legend.

7yo daughter shoots it with no issues.

We've taken 5 or do deer with it now. Good little rifle.

flyinlowe 11-28-2022 06:27 PM

My son started a couple years ago with a CVA Hunter single shot .44 mag. The first year we got it I had him shoot 44 special through it before the season, just so he didn't get scared of it. Once we got ready to hunt we changed to .44 mag and re zeroed it. He has yet to get a deer with it but it is very accurate gun for the price. It has a Vortex 2-7 on it.

Bocajnala 11-28-2022 07:42 PM


Originally Posted by flyinlowe (Post 4407879)
My son started a couple years ago with a CVA Hunter single shot .44 mag. The first year we got it I had him shoot 44 special through it before the season, just so he didn't get scared of it. Once we got ready to hunt we changed to .44 mag and re zeroed it. He has yet to get a deer with it but it is very accurate gun for the price. It has a Vortex 2-7 on it.


Between Dad, an uncle, and me we've killed a pile of deer with the .44 mag.

Double lung them and go find your deer.

Boringly reliable! (That's a good thing)

-Jake

BigHunterificiation 01-15-2023 12:28 PM

I grew up shooting a .243 with a good recoil pad. Sweet little gun. My boy shoots it now and he's a bean pole. It did scare him the first few shots but he says it doesn't kick as bad as his 20ga.

Oldtimr 01-15-2023 12:34 PM

Good recommendations so far, however it depends on the child, some cn shoo a 30 caliber with no problem and some cant. Allow your child to shoot several calibers and then decide.

woody329 02-05-2023 02:26 PM

Hard to beat .243

Nomercy448 02-06-2023 08:15 AM

This has been a topic near and dear to me for a long time, as I grew up with poor-fitting rifles myself, and thereafter I focused for a lot of years on helping others get properly configured youth rifles for their kids - but it occurred to me several years ago now, I honestly don’t believe the “youth rifle” really deserves to exist. I’ve sat with too many dads when they came back to buy ANOTHER rifle and tried to figure out what to do with their sunk cost in the youth rifle, and with too many kids which have grown up and then lamented having some undersized, under-powered, under-quality, or under-featured rifle, which SHOULD carry all of the sentiment of growing up as a marksman and hunter, but the kids were told it was a “single-serving” rifle and not meant to be a long term part of their life, so they’ve been looking past their first rifle as something disposable…

Alternatively, I’ve come to focus now on sustained value and purpose of the rifles. Purchasing a standard model which will have greater potential for life-long purpose and a replacement stock to be modified for youth LOP, or purchasing an AR-15 with a collapsible stock (or bolt gun which uses the same) offers a youth shooter the opportunity to keep using the same rifle throughout their life, stacking sentimental memories onto the metalwork year after year.

What cartridge? Eh, the choice isn’t so critical. Since most kids should be shooting far more than hunting, and because recoil is always an issue, but also because many low-recoil rounds 1) have sustainable utility throughout a shooter & hunter’s life, 2) share a common boltface with more capable cartridges, and 3) can be found in models which offer modularity and relatively low cost adaptability. Grab a 6mm or 6.5 Creed, 243win, 7-08 etc, and you’ll have access to any short action standard cartridge in the future - and can forever hunt deer and smaller game as well as enjoy low recoil, low cost, high capability pleasure shooting. Many models now offer interchangeable bolt heads and drop in barrels, and some models offer all of their chamberings on a long action, so converting from 223rem to 300 PRC in some models is just a matter of swapping parts around. Of course, AR-15’s offer incredible modularity and interchangeability as well, and starting with a low recoil 223/5.56 or 6.5 Grendel or 6 ARC offers a lot of capability with sustainable purpose.

Walking my talk, my son’s first firearms have been a Marlin 60 and a Savage Mark II, both in 22LR, and for both of which I ordered replacement Boyd’s stocks to cut down to fit his LOP as he grows; an AR-15 with a plinking upper in 223rem and a hunting upper in 6.8 SPC, and a Defiance Deviant bolt action in 6 Dasher, settled into a Manners Gen 2 Compact stock with extremely adaptable LOP. The ONLY firearm he started shooting young which likely will not have sustained utility in his life is my great grandpa’s single shot 410 - for which I found a replacement stock and cut down to 10” LOP until he grows into it - and naturally, passing on a 5 generation firearm just makes a lot of sense. I used it frequently as a bunny gun, even as an adult, so maybe he will as well, but like myself, I expect he’ll spend more time shotgunning with some other shotgun in the future.

hunters_life 02-06-2023 10:02 PM

Nomercy, I pretty much did the same as you with the twins. They both love their AR15's in 6.8spc. Dad started them out with our old .243 but they quickly grew into the AR world. They don't hunt in this state currently but they go to a few others with me. As far as that .410 goes, I still use one to hunt over my Beagle hounds. Whole lot less chance on dusting one of the dogs noses. Love my dogs, not to mention the cost and time training a new one if you make one gun shy and not wanting to hunt.

lakesidez 02-08-2023 10:18 AM

Struggling on what to get my 11 year old who is 70 lbs ringing wet, I've always shot a 30-06 so I'm all ears for advise on what to have him try for whitetails.

Bocajnala 02-12-2023 05:51 AM


Originally Posted by alex_sebh (Post 4409525)
My dad got me a 25-06 when I was a young teenager and I'm still using it to put down deer. Not as much kick as a 30-06 or 7mm but shoots flatter and packs enough of a punch to put down deer.


Excellent deer choice


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