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11 Top Hunting Rifles Chambered in .350 Legend By Payton Miller

Hunters are seeing an explosion of rifle models chambered in .350 Legend now that more states have lifted bans on centerfire deer hunting. Here’s a sampling of offerings from most to least expensive.

Several states that had previously not allowed centerfire rifles for deer now permit straight-wall cartridges. Thus, the .350 Legend, introduced in 2019, now has a serious foothold in market—and the rifle models to prove it. It’s tailor-made for light, handy and relatively inexpensive bolt actions, yet is comparatively kind recoil-wise—at least in contrast to the straight-wall rounds such as the .45-70, .444 Marlin, .450 Bushmaster and .458 SOCOM. A typical factory loading—featuring 160- to 180-grain bullets at 2,100 to 2,300 fps—provides plenty of steam for whitetail out to 250 yards.

It’s caught on quickly after three years on the market, and a burgeoning number of rifles chambered to it attest to the fact that several mainstream companies are convinced enough to believe the .350 Legend has the legs to justify chambering so many models for it in such a relatively short time. Here’s a sampling of what’s out there, presented from least expensive to most expensive.

1. Mossberg Super Bantam Scoped Combo

11 Top Hunting Rifles Chambered in .350 Legend

Mossberg’s Patriot Youth Super Bantam scoped combo has a removable spacer in the black synthetic stock so you can change length of pull as the youngster grows.

The .350 Legend is a great choice for young hunters because of its low recoil, and Mossberg’s entry-level package gun has a removable spacer in the black synthetic stock so you can change length of pull as the youngster grows. Plus it comes with a 3-9×40 variable scope mounted in Weaver bases, so you don’t have to go hunting for an optic. The Bantam model sports the same 22-inch fluted barrel and spiral-fluted bolt as the standard model, and it also incorporates the excellent Lightning Bolt Action trigger that’s user-adjustable from two to seven pounds. It feeds from a four-round detachable box magazine. $483, Mossberg.com


2. Savage Axis XP Camo

11 Top Hunting Rifles Chambered in .350 Legend
The Savage Axis XP comes with a factory-mounted and bore-sighted Weaver 3-9x40mm scope.

The Axis XP is a .350 Legend that won’t break the bank—a great deal since it comes with a factory-mounted and bore-sighted Weaver 3-9x40mm scope. The 22-inch button-rifled barrel is finished in matte blue, and the stock features a good-looking camo pattern. The rifle feeds from a four-round detachable box magazine. Weight is 6.9 pounds. $509, SavageArms.com


3. Henry H015

11 Top Hunting Rifles Chambered in .350 Legend

Available with a matte steel or highly polished brass frame, this simple yet elegant platform for the .350 Legend features a fully adjustable folding leaf rear sight and brass bead front and are drilled and tapped for scope mounts. The matte steel model features a pistol grip walnut stock and rubber recoil pad. The brass model features a straight wrist. The barrel length is 22 inches. The H015 features an external hammer spur, a non-ejecting case extractor, and a locking lever that can be pivoted right or left to break open the action. $552, HenryUSA.com


4. Mossberg Patriot Walnut

11 Top Hunting Rifles Chambered in .350 Legend
The Mossberg Patriot Walnut is a full size, classic-style sporter with button-rifled and free-floated 22-inch barrel and LBA trigger.

This full-size, classic-style sporter is now chambered in .350 Legend. It’s a good-looking rifle, with walnut stock and a fluted 22-inch barrel as well as a spiral fluted bolt. But it’s not just looks. The barrel is button-rifled and free-floated with a recessed crown, and the company’s Lightning Bolt Action trigger is fantastic, user adjustable from 2 to 7 pounds. The rifle feeds from a four-round detachable box magazine, and Weaver-style bases come with the gun. Weight is seven pounds. $559, Mossberg.com


5. Howa Mini Action

11 Top Hunting Rifles Chambered in .350 Legend
Howa’s Mini Action has a 12 percent shorter action than standard short action and has a cold-hammer-forged 16.25-inch threaded barrel and pillar-bedded stock.

The Mini Action, which is imported from Japan by Legacy Sports, has an action that’s 12 percent shorter than the company’s standard short action. It has cold-hammer-forged 16.25-inch threaded barrel and a synthetic pillar-bedded stock in black, OD green or Kryptek Highlander camo. Overall length is 35.75 inches, and weight is 5.8 pounds. Available with or without a Nikko Stirling scope. starting at $559, HowaUSA.com

 


6. CVA Cascade

11 Top Hunting Rifles Chambered in .350 Legend
The CVA Cascade has a 22-inch barrel that’s threaded 5/8×24. The bolt has a 70-degree throw.

Long associated with single-shot rifles and muzzleloaders, CVA has introduced its first bolt-action centerfire—and in.350 Legend no less. It features a 22-inch barrel in matte blue or flat dark earth Cerakote, and it’s threaded 5/8×24. The bolt has a 70-degree throw, and the rifle has a two-position safety. The Veil Wideland synthetic stock has a Soft Touch finish and is adjustable for length of pull. Those who like shooting with bipods will appreciate the dual front swivel studs. The Cascade is compatible with Savage 110 scope bases, and two-piece Weaver bases ship with the rifle. The rifle feeds from a flush-fit detachable magazine. $658, CVA.com


7. Savage 110 Hog Hunter

11 Top Hunting Rifles Chambered in .350 Legend
The Savage 110 Hog Hunter’s stock is adjustable, and the 18-inch medium-contour barrel is threaded and features iron sights.

Built on the famed 110 action, the Hog Hunter allows you to adjust length of pull to fit the shooter, and it comes standard with Savage’s excellent AccuTrigger. The short 18-inch medium-contour barrel is threaded for a suppressor and comes with a thread cap. Unlike other bolt actions in this list, the Hog Hunter comes with iron sights, and of course it’s drilled and tapped for a scope as well. The oversize bolt handle is built for fast follow-up shots, and the stock is a handsome OD green synthetic. The rifle feeds from a four-round detachable box magazine. Weight is right at 7 pounds. $669, SavageArms.com

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New Mexico Gov. Trying to Eliminate Firearm Industry Under the Guise of Budget BY News Wire

‘Enforce or resign’ said New Mexico Gov. Michelle Lujan Grisham to sheriffs regarding the state’s 2020 red flag law.

Estimated reading time: 5 minutes

The New Mexico legislature kicked off the 2024 session following Gov. Michelle Lujan Grisham’s State of the State address. At the top of her agenda, like the Biden administration, is punishing the firearm industry with unconstitutional gun control measures.

Gov. Lujan Grisham is vowing to go further than she did last year when she infamously made an emergency order denying Second Amendment rights in parts of Albuquerque and Bernalillo County. She’s got a limited window, as the state’s legislative session is short.

New Year, Same Ideas

In 2023, Gov. Grisham revealed her “imperial ambitions.” She created a Constitutional crisis after publishing a 30-day emergency public health order banning the carrying of firearms in Bernalillo County on public property. The governor’s edict ordered the state’s Regulation and Licensing Division to conduct monthly inspections of licensed firearm retailers to ensure compliance with all sales and storage laws despite there being no New Mexico statute, nor any state regulations, granting the state authority over compliance or storage requirements.

National and state bipartisan backlash was swift, forcefully and roundly criticized the governor’s overreach. A judge placed a temporary restraining order on the concealed and public carry provisions of the public health order and Gov. Lujan Grisham was forced to recalibrate. She hasn’t learned.

During her State of the State address, she spoke out of both sides of her mouth.

“No responsible gun owner should be punished or prevented from exercising their rights – and no child should ever be put in danger by a weapon of war, especially one wielded by a person who can’t pass a background check, or can’t wait two weeks to get a firearm,” Gov. Lujan Grisham said. She added, “Preventing gun violence is the most important work we’re going to do.”

Industry Attacks Ahead

The New Mexico legislature session this year is just 30 legislative days. In a short session like this, the legislative business must be focused on budget issues. That is, of course, unless you’re the governor who gets to add her own “related or germane” pet issues.

Her so-called “gun safety” wish list is long. She wants to ban commonly-owned Modern Sporting Rifles (MSRs), or “weapons of war” as the governor misleadingly calls them. NSSF released updated data showing there are over 28 million MSRs in circulation since 1990, used daily for lawful purposes. The governor also wants to impose a 14-day waiting period on all firearm purchases before the owner – who has passed an FBI National Instant Criminal Background Check System (NICS) verification – can take their firearm home.

She also wants to enact age-based gun bans by raising the minimum age to purchase all firearms up to 21, meaning adults over 18 could no longer purchase shotguns or rifles. Gov. Lujan Grisham also wants to expand prohibited spaces where law-abiding and licensed gun owners could carry their firearms, to exclude public playgrounds and parks, as well as impose other restrictions. An additional 11 percent excise tax on all firearms, accessories and ammunition is on deck to feed a “gun violence victims reparation fund.” That’s a government imposed “sin tax” blaming the firearm industry for the criminal misuse of firearms that would only increase the cost to law-abiding gun purchasers, assuming the industry doesn’t abandon the New Mexico market entirely to avoid crushing liability.

All those restrictions are not followed by criminals who commit violent crimes.

Crushing the Firearm Industry

In addition to all of those restrictions, Gov. Lujan Grisham’s most consequential proposal would sound the death knell for the firearm industry in the Land of Enchantment. House Bill 114, introduced by New Mexico state Representative and House Judiciary Chair Christine Chandler, targets the already heavily-regulated firearm industry by opening the floodgates for potential litigation intended to make it impossible to remain in business in New Mexico.

HB 114 is the governor’s attempt to pass a firearm industry liability law that directly conflicts with the federal Protection of Lawful Commerce in Arms Act (PLCAA), which prevents frivolous lawsuits against the firearm industry from the damages caused by the criminal acts of remote third parties. The New Mexico industry liability proposal would make it nearly impossible for firearm manufacturers or retailers to stay in business.

The governor’s anti-industry liability proposal creates the unique crime of “falsely advertising” a firearm product, which is not the same as “an unconscionable or unfair trade practice” that is already law in the state. This could be applied to an industry member claiming a firearm is effective for home defense, despite evidence of millions of incidents of annual defensive gun use and the U.S. Supreme Court’s holding in Heller that the Second Amendment protects the right to keep a firearm in one’s home for self-defense.

Additionally, HB 114 creates a “harming the public” civil violation applicable only to the firearms industry, establishes duplicative state requirements for practices and protocols that firearm industry members already have in place and authorizes the New Mexico Attorney General or a district attorney to bring an action against any member of the firearm industry by alleging violations (or potential violations) of these new, vague provisions of law. This includes allowing any person “likely to be harmed” by the actions of a firearm industry member to request equitable relief from a court.

If there were any doubts about whether Gov. Lujan Grisham was acting in bad faith to completely demolish the firearm industry, HB 114 puts them to rest and confirms beyond question her anti-Second Amendment goals.

With less than 30 legislative days remaining, the work on the governor’s gun control agenda has already begun. The firearm industry in New Mexico must stay vigilant and speak out against Gov. Lujan Grisham’s unconstitutional aims. Her proposals would not increase public safety and instead would only embolden criminals bent on ignoring laws from the get-go.

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