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    quite a few never see the range anymore. when I broke a nearly irreplaceable part last year, I quit shooting anything over 100 years old.

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    Most of them. Like coins or stamps, many of us buy them just to have them.

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    Quote Originally Posted by blackhawknj View Post
    Most of them. Like coins or stamps, many of us buy them just to have them.



    indeed sir. after seeing ZULU, I lusted after a martini henry. and ALL QUIET ON THE WESTERN FRONT sent me out in search of a ww1 german mauser with roller coaster sights and butcher blade bayonet

  4. #24
    Join Date
    May 2011
    Location
    A Banana Republic
    Posts
    662

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    In the back, a couple M1 Garands because two of them have to be at the end of the rows; a M1903A3 for the same reason as the M1’s; a first year production Remington 760 Gamemaster pump action rifle in .30-06 that was my Grandfather’s retirement gift from his buddies at the Langendorf bakery, there’s an engraved medallion on the bottom of the grip dated 1956, I don’t shoot it because it’s not very accurate; an Anschutz 54 match rifle that belonged to a good friend’s father who shot on the UC Berkeley rifle team in the early 1960’s, it’s a beastly heavy rifle, I don’t know why I don’t shoot it, did I mention what a beast it is...; a stainless Ruger Mini 14 w/a folding stock and flash suppressor, it’s a registered A-Salt Weapon with the State of Commiefornia so it’s hiding out in the back of the crowd, outta sight; and lastly an Ithaca 12ga. SxS that belonged to my Great Grandfather, it’s a little long in the tooth, but still, Great Grandpa’s gun!
    Last edited by Jay Johnson; 09-05-2018 at 07:34.
    ___________________________________________
    R.I.P. SERVICE RIFLE
    1903-2015

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