Originally Posted By: Stu Farishlooks like one mans best all around may not be another ones, depending on the conditions they hunt under.
Quite true!
Though it is noteworthy to observe those cartridges which excel at greater distances, are equally suited to the close-up shots. The cartridges that excel at only at close distances, cannot be equally suited to greater distances. The wildcats I prefer certainly aren't for everyone... but boy it sure is hard to call the 22-250 unsuitable for coyote hunting in any situation.
I remember searching books and countless predator hunting sites when I was a teenager just getting into coyote hunting. Not even sure if predatormasters was around back then. Everyone pushed me in the direction of .223. Looking back on it, as a young man of very meager money, I wish someone would have put me in the direction of a 22-250. Instead I listened to all those whom said .223 was the way, and over a decade of use on coyotes, found it lacking many times. These big northern coyotes, at the distances we're shooting them, certainly illustrates the weaknesses of that cartridge. Those little bitty desert coyotes I see some of you guys shooting, might be easily killed by an airsoft rifle for all I know.
Even still, a 22-250 would kill them AND the big dogs up north with no issue.
When someone says "all around" in reference to a cartridge, I am taking his meaning as something that will excel in nearly any predator hunting role the rifle might be pressed into. The .223 and cartridges like it will find themselves lacking when presented with a great deal of probable situations a caller can find himself in. Though with a 22-250 in his hands, there isn't many situations where he'd feel under-gunned on predators less than wolf or mountain lion. Even still, I've heard first hand accounts from guys that drop mt lions and wolves with 22-250's and heavy bullets like nobodies business.
The way I see it, there is "all around best" to mean "most versatile" and then there is "this is what works for me in my AO on my coyotes." One will often cross over into the other, while the other, will not readily.