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11-18-2019, 08:18 AM | #3 | ||||||
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LOL!
My B,C,Ds & VHEs all take offense!
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"A man who carries a cat by the tail learns something he can learn in no other way." |
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The Following User Says Thank You to Reggie Bishop For Your Post: |
11-18-2019, 08:23 AM | #4 | ||||||
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In shotguns in terms of numbers, Parker first, Fox second, LC Smith third, Ithaca last. They all fascinate me as objects created by different individuals and companies during the gilded age and into the early years of last century. My primary focus has been on american waterfowl guns from that same period regardless of manufacturer.
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The Following 9 Users Say Thank You to Craig Larter For Your Post: |
11-18-2019, 09:04 AM | #5 | ||||||
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I don't own every brand of fine shotgun, but I'm getting there. I have owned my first Parker for sixty years, since I was fourteen years old, and finally reached the holy grail recently. My "holy grail" was a Whitworth Fluid Steel barrel AA Grade Parker Pigeon Gun and a Whitworth barrel exposed hammer, bar in iron, late Purdey pigeon gun, one of the last ever made before the recent reintroduction at $80,000 plus. My first shotgun, when I was about eleven years old, was an 1887 Lefever E Grade pigeon gun owned by my grandfather, a pigeon shooter and pigeon ring proprietor in Hazleton, PA. I guess I was inoculated early with the "shoot birds for money" needle. He died in 1929 and his Lefever remained in storage with my uncle Norbert until he sent it to me around 1956. Apparently, eleven was his idea of the proper age for a kid to have his first Lefever. I wasted no time loading my first box of black powder shells for it.
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The Following 11 Users Say Thank You to Bill Murphy For Your Post: |
11-18-2019, 09:26 AM | #6 | ||||||
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I’m a two timer...many (many) times over.
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“Every day I wonder how many things I am dead wrong about.” ― Jim Harrison "'I promise you,' he said, 'on my word of honor, I won't die on the opening of the bird season.'" -- Robert Ruark (from The Old Man and the Boy) |
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The Following 2 Users Say Thank You to Garry L Gordon For Your Post: |
11-18-2019, 09:56 AM | #7 | ||||||
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I have others, (LC Smith, Winchester, Fox, and Ithacas mainly) but I have transitioned to Parkers almost exclusively over the last few years. There are lots of reasons for this I suppose but the ones that jump out at me would be the gun itself and then there's the PGCA and the folks involved. Not a bad place to hang out eh
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The Following 12 Users Say Thank You to Randy G Roberts For Your Post: |
11-18-2019, 10:02 AM | #8 | ||||||
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I play the field, but have found the fair maidens from Meriden to be the ones to take home to mom.
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The Following 5 Users Say Thank You to Paul Ehlers For Your Post: |
11-18-2019, 10:41 AM | #9 | ||||||
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Parker by far #1, followed loosely in order by Fox, Smith, Ithaca, Various Brits, Baker, LeFever, Various Euro Guns, Iver Johnson, American Hardware Store guns, and a couple of very early Japanese "B.C. MY Luck doubles.
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" I love the look Hobbs, my Vizsla, gives me after my second miss in a row." |
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The Following 3 Users Say Thank You to Mark Ray For Your Post: |
11-18-2019, 10:59 AM | #10 | ||||||
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Parkers make up the majority of my collection and I shoot Parkers more than anything else, but I also enjoy a wide variety of other classic guns, including a few autos, pump guns and over and unders. I am partial to American made
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The Following 3 Users Say Thank You to Mills Morrison For Your Post: |
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