Luckydog
.275 member
Reged: 27/02/08
Posts: 56
Loc: Huntin' In Colorado
|
|
I'm waiting on a new scope and then I'l give you a holler. I've got a few rifles that I switched the scopes on that need to be zeroed and a couple of new trigger jobs I'm dying to shoot. And yes Cherry Creek is still open.
Later Bryan
-------------------- Make Sure You Vote, And Make Sure Your Friends Vote!!
When they outlaw guns...I'll be an outlaw! Reese
|
Kalunga
.333 member
Reged: 16/06/06
Posts: 328
Loc: Germany
|
|
Listen to Bramble, You won`t regret it !
Kalunga
|
NitroX
.700 member
Reged: 25/12/02
Posts: 40609
Loc: Barossa Valley, South Australi...
|
|
Quote:
Quote:
What Bramble said..
I third that one. Not to sound snobbish, but it is gratifying showing up at camp with a classic rifle in a classic round. Not just for generating envy from your hunting pals, but for the connection you get to the great riflemen of the past. I'm goofy over old guns, and it is hard to pretend to be Corbett waiting over a tiger kill when I am holding a gun with a plastic stock.  You won't regret swapping a few new guns for a single classic. That said, the '06 is the way to go IMHO.
And why Huvius is one of our long term regular and true believer members.
-------------------- John aka NitroX
...
Govt get out of our lives NOW!
"I love the smell of cordite in the morning."
"A Sharp spear needs no polish"
|
NitroX
.700 member
Reged: 25/12/02
Posts: 40609
Loc: Barossa Valley, South Australi...
|
|
Quote:
Quote:
Quote:
What Bramble said..
I third that one. Not to sound snobbish, but it is gratifying showing up at camp with a classic rifle in a classic round. Not just for generating envy from your hunting pals, but for the connection you get to the great riflemen of the past. I'm goofy over old guns, and it is hard to pretend to be Corbett waiting over a tiger kill when I am holding a gun with a plastic stock.  You won't regret swapping a few new guns for a single classic. That said, the '06 is the way to go IMHO.
I hunt with synthetic stocks for several reasons:
1. No glare from sunlight 2. Moisture is not a factor, stock will never bend or swell 3. Scratch resistant 4. Very affordable 5. Very easy to take care of
I'm not trying to sound like an arsehole, but I could care less what the people in camp think about my gun. If the tigers dead, and I shot it, I wouldn't even be thinking about what the stock is made of. Of course this is coming from someone who has never been tiger hunting! LOL
I'm not against fancy guns, they just aren't that important to me. A gun is a tool and a means to an end. The better it preforms, the better I like it. I'm fine with anyone who prefers the other, but I prefer synthetic stocks on most of my guns. I prefer a heavier wood stock on harder kicking guns, because of the weight, and reduced recoil. JMHO
And perhaps why this member only stayed 11 months and not visited since?
-------------------- John aka NitroX
...
Govt get out of our lives NOW!
"I love the smell of cordite in the morning."
"A Sharp spear needs no polish"
|
NitroX
.700 member
Reged: 25/12/02
Posts: 40609
Loc: Barossa Valley, South Australi...
|
|
Quote:
Quote:
Quote:
What Bramble said..
I third that one. Not to sound snobbish, but it is gratifying showing up at camp with a classic rifle in a classic round. Not just for generating envy from your hunting pals, but for the connection you get to the great riflemen of the past. I'm goofy over old guns, and it is hard to pretend to be Corbett waiting over a tiger kill when I am holding a gun with a plastic stock.  You won't regret swapping a few new guns for a single classic. That said, the '06 is the way to go IMHO.
And why Huvius is one of our long term regular and true believer members.
I'm glad I am not the only mad man here, who loves to imagine what a one hundred year old rifle, plus or minus decades, was once used for, where, how and by whom. What game it hunted. What charges it stopped or didn't! Who smoked a pipe cradling it on a machan.
And just like Huvius, when sitting in a tree, cradling my walnut stocked classic .30-06, waiting in jungle like environs for the hog deer to appear and drink at the waterhole, I can imagine it is a maneating tiger I am waiting for ...... impossible with some ugly plastic contraption. 
As for others opinions of the camp, one can arrive at a conclusion as to one's camp's inhabitants. If they jeer at one's 1905 classic rifle in an age old cartridge chambering, and it is "drift woood" or a "fence post" and in a cartridge so out of date it is "useless". You are in the company of superficial mindless nogam drones. Keep them happy with an article "Ten New Must have New Rifles with New Cartridges". 
Or if they ooh and aah at the warm grain, the deep blue or even worn patina worn by hands in the jungles, deserts, mountains, forests, swamps ..... that that 115 year old cartridge is their favourite ..... then you know you are in the company of true believers and like minded souls. 
Seriously enjoy which ever you like and use, and always try to hunt with a firearm you actually like and love, as long as it is effective, whether designed for the artic and sodden forests, or deserts or swamps, walnut or God forbid even plastic stocks. If you are happy, the mob doesn't matter.
-------------------- John aka NitroX
...
Govt get out of our lives NOW!
"I love the smell of cordite in the morning."
"A Sharp spear needs no polish"
|
NitroX
.700 member
Reged: 25/12/02
Posts: 40609
Loc: Barossa Valley, South Australi...
|
|
Quote:
Listen to Bramble, You won`t regret it !
Kalunga
And all the like minded other members agreeing with another excellent comment.
-------------------- John aka NitroX
...
Govt get out of our lives NOW!
"I love the smell of cordite in the morning."
"A Sharp spear needs no polish"
|
Rule303
.450 member
Reged: 05/07/09
Posts: 5238
Loc: Woodford Qld
|
|
I'd get rid of the 30-06 in a flash and keep the rest. If I wanted an 06 I would get the original, an M98 in 8X57, now that is a classic.
|
Marrakai
.416 member
Reged: 09/01/03
Posts: 3700
Loc: Darwin, Top End of Australia
|
|
Quote:
If I wanted an 06 I would get the original, an M98 in 8X57, now that is a classic.
Agreed, Greg. ...but there will always be room in my gunsafe, beside the 8x57 Walter Locke-retailed Type B Mauser 98, for a pre-'64 Model 70 Super-Grade in .30-06, the "Rifleman's Rifle".
I'm just a sucker for all the classics! ...no matter where they originate! 
To me, 300 RUMs just sounds like a big night out on the piss!!
-------------------- Marrakai
When the bull drops, the bullshit stops!
--------------------------------
www.marrakai-adventure.com.au
|
3DogMike
.400 member
Reged: 29/01/15
Posts: 1487
Loc: Western Slope, Colorado USA
|
|
Quote:
Quote:
If I wanted an 06 I would get the original, an M98 in 8X57, now that is a classic.
.....(snip)...... To me, 300 RUMs just sounds like a big night out on the piss!!
Ah, now THAT is a great quote! I shall remember it.  - Mike
-------------------- "Will Rogers never met a fighter pilot"
- Anon
“Always carry a flask of whiskey in case of snakebite, and furthermore always carry a small snake."
-- W. C. Fields
|
Rule303
.450 member
Reged: 05/07/09
Posts: 5238
Loc: Woodford Qld
|
|
Quote:
Quote:
If I wanted an 06 I would get the original, an M98 in 8X57, now that is a classic.
Agreed, Greg. ...but there will always be room in my gunsafe, beside the 8x57 Walter Locke-retailed Type B Mauser 98, for a pre-'64 Model 70 Super-Grade in .30-06, the "Rifleman's Rifle".
I'm just a sucker for all the classics! ...no matter where they originate! 
To me, 300 RUMs just sounds like a big night out on the piss!!
Nah mate the Rifleman's Rifle was a Win 1892 in 44-40. I watched enough of the series as a kid, I should know.
|