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#23 | ||||||
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I habitually use 8's for Grouse esp in the right barrel as the season wears on the left tube will get 7's or 71/2. I almost never use a load heavier than 7/8oz in both the 16's and 20's the 28's are obviously less and while I'm no fan of a 12, a Purdey light game gun caught my attention a while back. It's a tad over 6lbs and the 27 inch barrels are choked .004 and .008 and it's just about perfect. The only shells iv'e used are RST 2" paper and 3/4oz of 7's or 8's.
A good dog can make a bad shot become a great one. I have had the dog retrieve grouse and pheasants that I didn't think were hit or not hit hard enough and would have been lost to coyote bait. IMHO bird hunting with out a dog is just a walk in the woods with a gun. Grouse season is a short ten months away. It will be a special October as it will be Ike's first full year in the uplands. I'm thinking he will need a gun in his honor and it should be a 16 with 26 inch barrels and open chokes ![]() Ted RST makes a shell with #10 shot. They worked fine on woodcock and quail but hunting in the thick cover of the Upper Peninsula and never knowing what's at the end of a point be it grouse or woodcock I lean towards a larger shot size.
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There is no hunting like the hunting of man, and those who have hunted armed men long enough and liked it, never care for anything else thereafter...Earnest Hemingway |
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The Following 2 Users Say Thank You to Rich Anderson For Your Post: |
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#24 | ||||||
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I can vouch for the effectiveness of RST's #10 shot loads for woodcock, especially the spreaders. I began using them the season before last and the patterning is most impressive. I shot them (spreaders) first out of a 28" Fox AE 20 ga. choked M & F with 2 1/2" chambers to open up the patterns, then shot the standard 2 3/4" regular (non-spreader) loads out of my Fox Skeet & Upland Game Gun, using # 7 1/2 in the CYL barrel and #6s in the IC bbl. for grouse. Both proved to be great combinations.
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#25 | ||||||
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Rich, I count six full months til the first of October.
I use 7/8 oz. of #8 in the early season in my 16 gauge grouse and woodcock guns and 3/4 oz. in my 20 gauge grouse & woodcock guns and 5/8 oz. in my 28 gauge grouse & woodcock guns. When the leaves are down I go to 7 1/2 shot in the same oz. loads. .
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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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#26 | ||||||
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Boy its good go hear from you Milt. Yes, I did black and white Damascus years ago. I'm back doing my personal guns and have 4 barrels in process now.
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