Quote:
Originally Posted by Russell E. Cleary
Garry and Alfred. So true.
Alluding to your father, Alfred, resonates with me. It is kind of what it’s all about: Successive generations appreciating experiences and things of quality.
My father introduced the “Parker mystique” to our home from the 1950s into the early 1970s. I can still picture him settled back and enjoying his copy of Peter H. Johnson’s PARKER -America’s Finest Shotgun; or, arriving home and uncasing for family viewing a newly-acquired gun.
I took no particular interest in the shotguns then but noted that there must be something special involved. The fact is, he was repeatedly characterized by others as being a perfectionist (which is not all bad, especially if you were his dental patient). And, when someone who is known as having such a punctilious bent such really likes something, it warrants notice.
These guns connect people and do so on a finer plane. So, I am motivated, as I use them, to maintain their originality as much as my conscience dictates is practicable.
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Russell, you have some wonderful family history made in a place where some of the most important and significant American history was made - a stone's throw from Concord Bridge where colonial American's exercised their own form of guerilla warfare on the highly regimented British Redcoats...
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"I'm a Setter man.
Not because I think they're better than the other breeds,
but because I'm a romantic - stuck on tradition - and to me, a Setter just "belongs" in the grouse picture."
George King, "That's Ruff", 2010 - a timeless classic.
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