|
Notices |
Welcome to the new PGCA Forum! As well, since it
is new - please read the following:
This is a new forum - so you must REGISTER to this Forum before posting;
If you are not a PGCA Member, we do not allow posts selling, offering or brokering firearms and/or parts; and
You MUST REGISTER your REAL FIRST and LAST NAME as your login name.
To register:
Click here..................
If you are registered to the forum and keep getting logged
out: Please
Click Here...
Welcome & enjoy!
|
 |
A Parker Miracle: Blooding a BHE 20 |
 |
01-03-2025, 01:24 PM
|
#1
|
Member
|
|
Member Info
|
Join Date: Jul 2013
Posts: 5,521
Thanks: 15,602
Thanked 11,959 Times in 3,706 Posts
|
|
A Parker Miracle: Blooding a BHE 20
I'd been carrying my "new" BHE 20 (courtesy of a good PGCA friend) for a couple of weeks waiting for the right time and place to fire its first shots. I'll admit that for me the first shot fired from a special gun is a reverent occasion, requiring the right place and time. We'd been saving a farm for just the right weather, and after a spate of gloomy days, the weatherman got the forecast wrong and the sun came out. We headed South to Carroll County, Missouri for a farm that seldom lets us down.
The covey we found, trailed by Rill down a dry creek bed, flushed wild in thin cover, as every self-respecting bevy will during the late season. We could not see their flight path and so ventured into the heavy big bluestem cover knowing our work was cut out for us (or at least Rill's was).
Rill found a couple of singles that offered no shots, and I bumped one into an easy straight away shot that I did not take, wanting this special shot to be over a point by our puppy. So, when Rill pointed again, I was feeling the weight of the moment as I approached. The bird went out behind me, close, and as I twisted to shoot, I lost my footing and stumbled just at the moment of pulling the trigger. Another bird went out at the shot in the other direction, distracting me from watching the first bird. I consigned myself to the miss, and we continued our search for more singles. Finding none, Elaine suggested we head back for the bird I shot at, she having marked it down in a fence row. Thinking we might get a second chance at it, we steered Rill back and she soon went on point. As I walked in to flush the bird, it jumped up and tried to run, but Rill corralled it after she and I made like the Keystone Kops trying to catch the bird. I won't share Elaine's video of this.
So, my Parker miracle came to be. I hit that bird, but never would have recovered it without Elaine's sharp eye and Rill's keen nose (and a few embarrassing moments where an old man played chase with dog and bird). Gun blooded. Mission accomplished.
The gun, written about beautifully by the good Mr. Roberts of Indiana in a recent Parker Pages article, is characterized by the 1904-era engraving I love so much, and sports a straight hand and splinter with some of the best wood on any Parker I'll ever own. Nice high dimensions, 30 inch "prairie barrels" choked just right for Missouri Bobs over points are just what the doctor ordered for our North Missouri covers.
Thank goodness for, and many thanks to, my great friends of the PGCA.
Photos:
1. We've lost too much good quail land to hunt, but this farm is still one of the last, best places.
2. Elaine managed to catch my "first shot" bird as it sped by against the blue Missouri sky. My shot was fired as I stumbled and the bird just left the camera's viewfinder.
3. A cold, but happy hunter with his Parker miracle bird, courtesy of his wife and dog (who is busy still looking for singles in the background).
4. & 5. This beautiful example of what I think might be the best Parker grade was one of a batch of similar guns ordered by a wealthy insurance executive. Just by chance, my good friend and fellow PGCA member, Dean Weber, has another of the guns ordered along with mine. I got to see and hold his -- a beautiful Damascus barreled 16 -- on a recent grouse hunt with Dean. Someday I hope to reunite the guns on the Prairie.
__________________
"Doubtless the good Lord could have made a better game bird than bobwhite, and better country to hunt him in...but equally doubtless, he never did." -- Guy de la Valdene (from A Handful of Feathers )
"'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)
|
|
|
The Following 49 Users Say Thank You to Garry L Gordon For Your Post:
|
allen newell, Bill Jolliff, Bill Murphy, bob lyons, Brett Farley, Brett Trimble, Buddy Marson, Chris Pope, Chris Riley, Clark McCombe, Craig Larter, CraigThompson, Dan Steingraber, Daryl Corona, Dave Tatman, Dean Weber, edgarspencer, Garth Gustafson, Gary Bodrato, GunnerGrilli, James L. Martin, james whittington, Jeff Christie, Jerry Harlow, Jim Beilke, Jim McKee, Jim Wescott, Josh Loewensteiner, Ken Descovich, Larry Stauch, MARK KIRCHER, Marty Kohler, Matt Buckley, Mike Koneski, Mills Morrison, Paul D Narlesky, Pete Lester, Phil Yearout, Randy G Roberts, Reggie Bishop, scott kittredge, Scott Smith, Stan Hillis, Stan Hoover, Timothy Salgado, Tom Brown, TOM DAMIANI, Tom Kidd, William Woods |
|
01-03-2025, 02:17 PM
|
#2
|
Member
|
|
Member Info
|
Join Date: Feb 2014
Posts: 5,633
Thanks: 18,011
Thanked 11,034 Times in 3,262 Posts
|
|
I like that knife. BTW, nothing like bloodying a gun or rifle. I know how you feel. Somehow I seem to bloody a new rifle or two every year.
BTW, check your barrels for an obstruction. In photo 3 you have a dog stuck in one of your muzzles.
|
|
|
The Following 3 Users Say Thank You to Mike Koneski For Your Post:
|
|
|