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todd allen 01-28-2018 03:45 PM

Go-to gun
 
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Hunting the Gambels Quail out where I live, it's kind of an oasis in the desert. The mix of farm, desert, and feedlot holds plenty of birds, but they have a brilliant escape plan. Straight North to the water canal system, and the dense atriplex cover that runs along the waterways. The cover means safety, and the birds just burrow in. They really have no reason to flee the cover, but for the diligence of a couple of hard working bird dogs sniffing the outskirts of the bush, and punching in as far as possible. The birds know the dogs know they're in there, and they will often give in to their nerves, and make a run for it. Opportunities typically start at 35 yds, and get worse from there, though sometimes (rarely) the fear of the spotted beasts will drive them straight into your face.
Running a 32" VHE, with factory full chokes, I choose my shots. This gun shoots where I look, and will control the real estate out to 50 yards. That's right where this guy was, when the right bbl caught up with him.
Attachment 59968
I have more glamorous guns in the safe, but this one is the one that I rely on to get the job done on late season quail.
Those Parker boys really knew what they were doing, when they constructed the interior ballistics of these guns.

Daniel G Rainey 01-28-2018 06:55 PM

Sounds like ruff hunting but sometimes that is what make it rewarding.

Dean Romig 01-28-2018 07:00 PM

Todd, what gauge is your 32" VHE?






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todd allen 01-28-2018 07:05 PM

It's a 12 gauge. The preferred load(s) are either an ounce of 7 1/2s, or an ounce and a sixteenth of 7s, at about 1100 fps.
The gun kills quail like a hammer!

CraigThompson 01-28-2018 07:10 PM

I've got a 32" GH with Damascus barrels I got from someone here that I'm learning to like . But I've also got a VH 2 frame 30" that I've owned about forty years that I shoot very well be it Skeet trap or sporting and like yours it's rather tight . Hence forth however I think my "go to" bird gun provided it's not raining is a little circa 1928 VHE 20 gauge 28" M&F . I've known that gun for about fifty years and was finally able to acquire it three years ago . Well it's actually the gun in my avatar ����

todd allen 01-28-2018 07:29 PM

Not to take anything away from the North East grouse hunters running shorter barrels, I totally get it, have done a little of that, but nothing moves on long, complicated targets, like a 32" gun.
Target gets up, flys like the dickens, gun comes to shoulder, comes from behind into the birds, smoothly establishes lead, and BANG! The bird is down.
Very hard to stop, jink or jerk the swing. Pure Cadillac.

CraigThompson 01-28-2018 08:05 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by todd allen (Post 234152)
Not to take anything away from the North East grouse hunters running shorter barrels, I totally get it, have done a little of that, but nothing moves on long, complicated targets, like a 32" gun.
Target gets up, flys like the dickens, gun comes to shoulder, comes from behind into the birds, smoothly establishes lead, and BANG! The bird is down.
Very hard to stop, jink or jerk the swing. Pure Cadillac.

I'm not disagreeing with you as I like the long ones as well . But I like the short ones to .
Back when I Grouse hunted a fair amount in the Virginia Blue Ridge Mountains I generally carried a Browning Upland Special 16 gauge and that bad boy was only 24" . I've got a little GH 1 frame 16 that someone saw fit to remove an inch from the barrels so it's now at the 27" range and FWIW I do very very well with that one on the skeet field or dove field . Now on the other hand "I had" a 20 gauge Sterlingworth 26" that I had to work at to shoot well . I think weight had something to do with that as that little gun was quite easy to stop or whip . But then again I have a little Iver Johnson double 410 that I can generally shoot 90+ on the skeet field and that ones light as well but my natural tendency is to try harder with a 410 I suppose .

Randy G Roberts 02-01-2018 10:50 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by todd allen (Post 234152)
Not to take anything away from the North East grouse hunters running shorter barrels, I totally get it, have done a little of that, but nothing moves on long, complicated targets, like a 32" gun.
Target gets up, flys like the dickens, gun comes to shoulder, comes from behind into the birds, smoothly establishes lead, and BANG! The bird is down.
Very hard to stop, jink or jerk the swing. Pure Cadillac.

I totally agree with that Todd. Pheasant hunted with a 32" VHE 20 ga this year and it worked great.It's choked pretty tight and I had no issues killing birds. I have recently learned that there is something out there I may like even better than 32" barrels and that would be 34" barrels, at least for targets.

todd allen 02-01-2018 09:18 PM

I would love to try out a 34" gun on sporting clays.

Randy G Roberts 02-02-2018 07:42 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by todd allen (Post 234551)
I would love to try out a 34" gun on sporting clays.

Todd if you ever get to Southern IN or to the Southern in Sanford I can gladly make that happen for you.

Harold Lee Pickens 02-02-2018 11:26 AM

Dr John (Truitt), can tell you alittle about those 34" barrels--he certainly favors them.

Mike Poindexter 02-03-2018 01:24 AM

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This has been one of my go-to guns for preserve birds over pointing or flushing dogs. Light, quick, and open seems to work for me out to 35 yards or so with RST or Polywad 24 gram 6's. I'm not a good enough shot to consistently hit longer ones (except geese with my 32" 10 ga., but that's another story) even with the full choke barrel. This is last weeks haul for 3 shooters. Mr. Bishop's letter says the following:

Parker shotgun, serial number 130829, was ordered by J.B. Shannon & Sons of Philadelphia PA on February 4, 1905 and shipped on August 20, 1905. According to Parker Bros. Order Book No. 66, it was a GH han1merless, 12-gauge. It featured Damascus steel barrels with a length of 26 inches. Special requests were "Lite" and RH cylinder. The order was placed by S.A. Tucker.
According to Parker Bros. Stock Book No. 46, the stock configuration was a capped pistol grip and its specifications were: Length of Pull: l 4 ¼", Drop at Heel: 2 3/4", Weight: 6 pounds and 8 ounces. The chokes were patterned RH 120 pellets and LH 240 pellets of size 7 shot in a 30" circle at 40 yards.


Except for replacing a cracked DHBP and a missing front sight bead, it is original as it letters. I feel lucky to have found it as a walk in at a local show. Sorry for the sideways pics.:banghead:

Randy G Roberts 02-03-2018 07:11 AM

Nice Mike. That brings back some memories of last pheasant season.

Mike Franzen 02-10-2018 06:25 PM

Todd are you still in the Las Vegas area?

todd allen 02-10-2018 07:59 PM

Yes, 60 miles northeast towards Utah.

Tom Flanigan 04-08-2018 05:27 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by todd allen (Post 234152)
Not to take anything away from the North East grouse hunters running shorter barrels, I totally get it, have done a little of that, but nothing moves on long, complicated targets, like a 32" gun.
Target gets up, flys like the dickens, gun comes to shoulder, comes from behind into the birds, smoothly establishes lead, and BANG! The bird is down.
Very hard to stop, jink or jerk the swing. Pure Cadillac.

Todd....even thought grouse in thick cover is instinctual shooting, I never understoof the popularity of short barrels. I used mostly 28" guns in grouse cover but wouldn't feel handicapped with 32" barrels if it was a light gun.
They feel better and point better, even in close cover.

Some talk about short barrels needed in tight cover but I never understood the logic of that. I've never had the swing of a gun barrel stopped by brush. It just doesn't happen.

I owned a 34" DHE that was my favorite pass shooting gun in Sasketechewan. Those long barrels sure helped. I loved the feel of that gun.

Dean Romig 04-08-2018 08:51 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Tom Flanigan (Post 240409)
Some talk about short barrels needed in tight cover but I never understood the logic of that. I've never had the swing of a gun barrel stopped by brush. It just doesn't happen.

It is 99.9% psychological... and That in itself is always enough to miss a bird.






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Gary Laudermilch 04-09-2018 08:18 AM

As is usual for these discussions I am at the opposite end of the trend. I have no use for long barrels. I like 'em short or more specifically with the weight of the gun between my hands. I did some of the best shooting on pass shooting doves last year with my 12 ga P w/26" twist barrels choked .012/.024 with 7/8 oz loads. At 6-10 it is a lightweight but moves as smooth as silk. As someone said, to each his own.

Phil Yearout 04-09-2018 11:32 AM

28". Not too long, not too short :corn:.

Tom Flanigan 04-09-2018 11:55 AM

It's purely a personal thing. I like long barrels others like the short ones. My grandfather taught me to shoot with my barrel arm extended like I was pointing at something rather than bent like most others shoot. His theory was it gave better control. It is natural when pointing at something to keep your arm straight. My hand is well down the barrel when shooting so short barrels don't feel right to me. Also, I don't like to shoot guns with Beavertails since my natural form is to shoot with my hand beyond the reach of these types of forend's and they get in the way for me.

Rich Anderson 04-09-2018 12:25 PM

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This is my go to upland bird gun or at least it's the main one. Gunner's Gun :)

Craig Larter 04-09-2018 12:43 PM

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I absolutely love 26" bird guns in 20ga for flushed game either Mearns quail, wild Bob's or south Dakota pheasants. My current favorite is a Fox CE. For ducks my go to is a 9lb super fox or 10ga Parker. Weird me.

charlie cleveland 04-09-2018 09:14 PM

nice....charlie

Eldon Goddard 04-09-2018 09:37 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by todd allen (Post 234551)
I would love to try out a 34" gun on sporting clays.

Hey Todd,
I am in Las Vegas and you are more than welcome to shoot my 34" VHE on sporting clays with me.

todd allen 05-22-2018 08:55 AM

Hi Eldon, I would love to shoot the 34" gun. Where do you shoot at?

Tom Flanigan 05-22-2018 02:54 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by todd allen (Post 234152)
Not to take anything away from the North East grouse hunters running shorter barrels, I totally get it, have done a little of that, but nothing moves on long, complicated targets, like a 32" gun.
Target gets up, flys like the dickens, gun comes to shoulder, comes from behind into the birds, smoothly establishes lead, and BANG! The bird is down.
Very hard to stop, jink or jerk the swing. Pure Cadillac.

I'm a grouse hunter but I can see the advantages of long barrels even when snap shooting at short range. I use 28" barrels on my grouse guns but wouldn't mind if they were longer. The problem is finding a light small bore gun with longer barrels and open chokes. I've never seen one. And I would never alter the original chokes of a Parker. Many folks do, but not me. I'll shoot the shorter barrels and leave Parker molestation to others.

Dean Romig 05-22-2018 03:57 PM

I shoot 24", 25", 26", 27", and 28" for grouse and woodcock and don't think I'd be comfortable shooting longer barrels for these birds... and it's got nothing to do with being in close cover and being afraid that the close growing saplings would hinder my swing... and open chokes are often overrated in my opinion. I just found out a few weeks ago that I do very well with ultra-full chokes at all sorts of SC targets. I'm beginning to wonder if many of my previous misses with open chokes may have been because of a lack of density in my patterns.






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Harold Lee Pickens 05-22-2018 04:16 PM

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I love to hunt grouse with my J Manton 20 ga hammer gun. It has 30" barrels and
cyl/cyl chokes. I shot this 5 bird limit this fall with it. 4 shots, 4 birds, and then the right hammer spring broke on the 5th. Spent the rest of the day with a functional left barrel only and misssed 3 in a row before getting the next. Thats Betty and Fancy in the pic

Harold Lee Pickens 05-22-2018 04:19 PM

It is a little muzzle heavy, but still a light gun. Cant wait to try my little German 16 ga hammer gun, 30' with cyl/full this fall. It weighs 5 lbs 13 oz--lighter than the 20

Rich Anderson 05-22-2018 04:22 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Dean Romig (Post 244508)
I'm beginning to wonder if many of my previous misses with open chokes may have been because of a lack of density in my patterns.






.

I doubt it. Most grouse shots are rather close inside 25 yards and thats a long shot where I hunt. Sometimes even 28 inch barrels are to long and I gave up on some nice 30 inch guns a while ago. A choke combination I have begun to appreciate is IC/F in either 26 or 28 inch guns. Foolishly I let a nice DH O frame 16 go that was so choked with 26 inch tubes. That still bothers me:banghead::banghead:

Daryl Corona 05-22-2018 04:26 PM

I think you've finally figured it out Dean. I've found that 7 1/2's in a modified to full choke will kill any upland bird that I care to hunt.

Tom Flanigan 05-22-2018 08:10 PM

It all depends on the typical range at which your shots are taken. My grouse coverts are very thick. A ten yard shot is common with about 25 yards being the maximum before winter. Any choke at all is a handicap in my coverts. The first barrel of my grouse guns are IC but I shot a 16 bore for years with a cylinder bore. With an ounce of 9’s, no grouse could fly through my patterns up to about 35 yards. I patterned the gun at all typical grouse ranges and so I knew what the gun would do. One of the reasons I have been so successful with #9’s is that you can shoot open bores and still have enough pellets to fill out the pattern at the ranges my shots were taken. Go to a 7 ½ or larger and you can have gaps in the pattern at the further end of grouse shots. An ounce of 7 ½ contains 579 pellets while an ounce of 7 ½ contains only 346. It makes a big difference when the tight cover stops many of the pellets from reaching the bird. The old time grouse hunters knew this which is why they shot fine shot.

Not every grouse covert is like mine are, especially in the west. There the shots at grouse are typically longer. My average shot at grouse in Saskatchewan was probably at around 25 yards. The cover is much less thick and the birds are scattered and not concentrated like they are in my home coverts. I used my shaptail and hun gun bored modified and full with #6’s and did well. I didn’t take shells specifically for the grouse. If I did, I would have probably shot 8’s.

I highly recommend that grouse hunters shoot some patterns at the typical ranges that they shoot their birds. If you hunt in thick coverts you'll see that tight chokes are a real handicap. Compare a cylinder or improved cylinder spread with a modified of full barrel and you'll see what I am talking about. Absolutely no room for error with the tighter chokes and birds messed up with many pellets on the one's you do hit. Go on out there and shoot some patterns and then tell me what you find.

I think some of you guys will join the ranks of Flanigan, Foster. Spiller and Schaldach. :)

Daniel Carter 05-22-2018 09:19 PM

Thirty years ago my sons and i paced off the distance to fallen woodcock, average of 13 yards. Grouse found in the same areas 20 yards. We went to spreaders and found much more success. Afternoons in the old orchards 25 to 30 yds with ic and mod. Your milage my differ. All in western Maine, most if not all in typical thick cover, some spruce, lot of alder.Number 8 mornings 6 afternoon in different cover. But the most important thing is how you point the gun not what is in it.

Tom Flanigan 05-22-2018 09:40 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Daniel Carter (Post 244546)
But the most important thing is how you point the gun not what is in it.

True but that doesn't diminish the need for open bores and light shot. This type of shooting is instinctual and open patterns of fine shots will turn misses into hits. You have a much larger margin of error. I would venture that few birds would be taken in my coverts with modified or full chokes and 7 1/2 shot. Which is why my grandfather calmed me down when I found a high brass 7 1/2 case in my coverts. He laughed when I told him what kind of shell and the shot size and said "don't worry, that fella won't be getting any of your birds".

Rich Anderson 05-23-2018 10:24 AM

I'm a fan of 8's and open chokes. I think the heavier shot will penetrate the cover better and when it reaches the bird it provides a cleaner kill. As the foliage drops and shots become somewhat longer I'll use 7's or 71/2 and a IC/M choke set up.

Tom Flanigan 05-23-2018 11:11 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Rich Anderson (Post 244565)
I'm a fan of 8's and open chokes. I think the heavier shot will penetrate the cover better and when it reaches the bird it provides a cleaner kill. As the foliage drops and shots become somewhat longer I'll use 7's or 71/2 and a IC/M choke set up.


That's an interesting thought. Number 8 shot would seem to be a decent compromise. I used to go to 8's in the winter when shots could be a bit longer. Even with the leaves down and cover opened up a bit, my shots are still relatively close and so I now stick to 9's throughout the season.

I’ll let my hero Wiilliam Harnden Foster weigh in here with a quote from his classic New England Grouse Shooting, first published in 1942. In my opinion, this is the finest book ever written on grouse hunting.

Speaking in the third person, Foster wrote:
“…….in his right hand barrel during the earlier part of the season, he finds No. 9 chilled shot the most effective with perhaps No. 8 in the left barrel for the longer ranges. Later in the season when the leaves are off, the shots longer, one may use No. 8’s in the right and 7 ½ in the left thinking to take advantage of the more sustained velocities of the of the heavier shot over the longer ranges. However, this is not the real answer for, with the change to the larger pellet, he is sacrificing his required density for it should be remembered that while there are some 585 No. 9 chilled shot in an ounce, there are but 345 No. 7 ½. This change to larger shot in a gun bored for the purpose of density of pattern with smaller shot is one of the chief sources of crippling and your thoughtful grouse hunter will prefer to stick to his No. 9’s (in the right barrel) and No. 8’s (in the left barrel) throughout the season and, at the same time, to his conservative ranges.”

Rich Anderson 05-23-2018 12:09 PM

I would take into consideration that in Mr. Foster's day the birds were far more plentiful and one could pick and choose his shots. Unfortunately this is not the case in grouse country (or any game country) today. Also I don't shoot a 1oz load but stick to 7/8 in my 16's and if the woodcock flights are in I like a 3/4oz load in the 20.
What works for one person might not work for another but 8's early on and 7's or 71/2 in the later portion of the season has worked for longer than I care to admit:)

Tom Flanigan 05-23-2018 04:34 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Rich Anderson (Post 244577)
I would take into consideration that in Mr. Foster's day the birds were far more plentiful and one could pick and choose his shots. Unfortunately this is not the case in grouse country (or any game country) today. Also I don't shoot a 1oz load but stick to 7/8 in my 16's and if the woodcock flights are in I like a 3/4oz load in the 20.
What works for one person might not work for another but 8's early on and 7's or 71/2 in the later portion of the season has worked for longer than I care to admit:)


I agree with everything you said with one small exception. It's true that there were more birds in Foster's and my grandfather's day, but I doubt that they passed on any fair shots. My coverts are similar to what Forster experienced, so his recommendations hit home with me. And not only because I came to the same overall conclusions but because the rules haven't changed for my type of coverts. Less birds but those that offer shots, present the same type of targets at the same ranges.

As I mentioned, not all grouse coverts are the same. So I wouldn't be foolishly presumptuous and try to tell others what to use. I can only relate my experiences and those of some who came before me with similar circumstances.

I remember one old time grouse hunter telling me as a boy, "what you need for partridge is an ounce of #9 and it don't make no difference what gauge you fire it from." Not sure I totally agree, but I understood his point.

Dean Romig 05-23-2018 05:29 PM

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I would venture to say the grouse covers in Bill Foster's day were much the same as today with consideration to where a fellow chooses to hunt. In many covers open shots are the norm and in others shooting through the foliage is the norm. I'm lucky enough to have it both ways where I hunt in Vt.
Living here in Andover and being quite familiar with the places Bill and his cronies hunted I'm pretty sure he could pick his shots when he needed to. In other words, don't risk the shot if it looks impossible or if you'll only maim the bird.

I'm going to guess the last etching is of a grouse taken at about 45 yards with the left barrel of his Cyl/Full Parker twenty and judging by the devastation of the bird, there wasn't much left for the cook to work with.....:eek:


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Tom Flanigan 05-23-2018 05:39 PM

Some things stay the same. I would imagine that any of us would pass up any shot that was questionable. The worst days for hunting grouse are windy days. They are on edge and rarely hold for a dog. They flush silently and generally at the edge of range. It always amazed me that grouse flushes can be so loud but yet then can fly away at the same speed with no noise at all.


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