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-   -   What did you add to your Parker collection in 2018? (https://parkerguns.org/forums/showthread.php?t=25912)

Daryl Corona 12-25-2018 07:54 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Dean Romig (Post 261262)
"Strike when the iron is hot"

"A rolling stone gathers no moss"

"Don't deny the giver"

"He who hesitates has lost"

All of the above apply in the case of "an offer that can't be refused" :bigbye:





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Let's not forget a classic "A Fox gets the game":bowdown:

Mark Ray 12-25-2018 11:58 AM

Okay Non Parkers?
very early Ithaca Minier 16 “special” in 90% original condition
Win mod 21 12, dt, splinter 30” very early , nice condition!
Fox Sterly Trap, 12, 32”super original condition
Darne Halifax 16, straight stock
Early LC smith field 20 bore
Belgian Guild .410 hammer with fancy laminated barrels, real nice condition.
Magnum Research 1911 Commander frame .45acp
My Grandads early Colt Match Target .22

Tom Flanigan 12-25-2018 01:15 PM

I bought a number of graded Parkers this year but my favorite, believe it or not, is a 16 bore Trojan. With its modified and full barrels, it will make a great woodduck gun. It was just the kind of project gun I look for. Untouched and obviously taken care of. Little blue left on the barrels, the checkering almost completely worn and little stock finish remaining. No refinishing errors of the past to deal with. I restored it completely and I look forward to using it next fall when my woodies are again in the beaver ponds and flooded timber.

Rich Anderson 12-25-2018 06:08 PM

Tom I have collected pre 64 M70's for decades. The 250 has a 1 in 12 twist rate and even with careful hand loading groups were bigger than I like as it's to slow a twist rate to stabilize 100gr bullets. I also sold two 7MM mausers (7x57) a std rifle and a carbine but I still have a carbine and it's a great deer rifle. Also sold std rifle in 35 Rem but rest easy as this purest still has a dozen or so left. including a 300 Savage, only about 360 built:rotf:

CraigThompson 12-25-2018 06:41 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Rich Anderson (Post 261297)
Tom I have collected pre 64 M70's for decades. The 250 has a 1 in 12 twist rate and even with careful hand loading groups were bigger than I like as it's to slow a twist rate to stabilize 100gr bullets. I also sold two 7MM mausers (7x57) a std rifle and a carbine but I still have a carbine and it's a great deer rifle. Also sold std rifle in 35 Rem but rest easy as this purest still has a dozen or so left. including a 300 Savage, only about 360 built:rotf:

Of all the Model 70’s I had the one I wish I had back was a circa 1961 264 Win Mag with a factory stainless 26” barrel . I killed a BUNCH of deer with that rifle . I had a 56 243 Varmint and a 60 220 Swift Varmint both with factory stainless barrels , I wouldn’t turn either of them down if they came to me again !

Dean Romig 12-25-2018 10:53 PM

5 Attachment(s)
Today, Christmas morning, I received a very special gift gun from a very special young man who is mature in his thinking beyond his 13 1/2 years.

When Cameron Leeds, my grandson, was about 5 or 6 years old he started showing a deep interest in my shooting and hunting and asked me all the time to take him shooting and hunting with me. He would pick up a stick and pretend it was a gun and pretend to shoot things, including me, his parents and his kid sister with his stick gun.

I guess he was about 7 when I thought about all the times I asked my Dad to take me to deer camp with him - always being told "Maybe in a few years Dean..." and those few years were so long to come and I had to wait until I was about 13. So, when Cam was 7 I told his parents in October I was taking him to Vermont with me to indoctrinate him in the ways of men, woods, animals and guns. That first year he carried a stick and I began his gun safety training, pretending his stick actually was a gun. I was very strict in where he was pointing the stick and warned him "Hey - watch where you're pointing that gun, that thing might go off and you'll kill your own Grampy!" And so went his first hunting season...

The following spring I made him a "gun" from an old .22 bolt action stock and a piece of 1/2" copper tubing painted black and attached it to the stock. The finishing touches were some international orange tape applied in strategic locations for safety's sake when he pretended to hunt back home in his yard.
It was about 3 1/2 lbs and easy to carry all day long and this new "gun" was a much better training tool. He learned to mount the gun at flushed birds and I was still very strict about where that muzzle was pointing and I told him when he could "load" it and when he needed to break it open. He had a great few years with that pretend gun and he really did learn a lot from how I demanded he handle it.

You may remember my article in the Spring 2017 Issue of Parker Pages "Cameron Leeds' Heirloom Parker" where he was bequeathed with the family Parker 20 gauge VH... and so he graduated from his pretend gun to the real deal - a Parker of his own.

Today Cam may be the youngest PGCA Life Member and his whole family is very proud of him and for several reasons.

Back to my opening sentence...

The special gift gun I received from my grandson, Cam, was his original "pretend Gun" that I had made him a few short years back... but re-purposed as a hat rack / coat rack that he wants me to mount on the wall of turkey/grouse/woodcock/deer camp there in the Vermont hills. I'll put it there and there it will stay for as long as that stone camp stands... it means that much to both Cam and me and to the rest of the family and folks who know of our special relationship.

Today he repaid my efforts of helping to ensure his future as a true sportsman. His gift filled me above the 'full line'.


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Garry L Gordon 12-25-2018 11:09 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Dean Romig (Post 261324)
Today, Christmas morning, I received a very special gift gun from a very special young man who is mature in his thinking beyond his 13 1/2 years.
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I've followed this thread and at times been in awe of some of the guns that our colleagues have acquired this past year. I don't think any of them seems any more "valuable" than what you added to your collection today. It's too bad that as Time has eroded the general public's respect for guns, hunting and the coming of age traditions associated with this way of life, there are so many who would not understand what you shared with us about yourself and your relationship with your grandson. Thanks for sharing your gift with the rest of us.

Dean Romig 12-25-2018 11:15 PM

Thank you Garry - it all means more than words. I'm sure you know that.




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Daryl Corona 12-26-2018 06:32 AM

You are a blessed man my friend. Sometimes a gift just exceeds it's physical properties and this sure is one of them.:bowdown:

Dean Romig 12-26-2018 07:05 AM

You’re re right Daryl, thank you.





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