About three years ago the decision was made to give away my
firearms. One of my colleagues at work
wanted to teach his two sons about rifles and shotguns, so I gave him my .22
and my 12 gauge single shot. A friend
of mine was an actor extra and needed to put together an authentic pirate
outfit. I handed him my old flintlock
tower pistol. My .357 went to a law
officer. My .28 gauge went to a
collector. My .410 went to a friend who
wanted to go rabbit hunting. My 9mm is
now in the hands of a weekend shooter.
It feels good to just say, “Here, take this.”
A few months ago I was visiting my nephew in a nearby
city. He is nearly thirty years old,
but we have rarely had the opportunity to even see each other, much less sit
and talk to each other. I learned a lot
that day. I learned that he and his
father-in-law often spend weekends at a shooting range, and he has always
borrowed the firearms he uses. I
decided that day to give him two of my four remaining long guns. These two firearms were passed to me from my
two grandfathers—two of his great-grandfathers.
The first one I gave him was the twenty-gauge bolt-action
shotgun I had inherited from my mother’s father when I was a teenager. He had never seen anything like it. When I gave him the history of the old gun,
he almost cried. He had never owned
anything in his life that had history, much less family history. Then I brought out the rifle. My father’s father had purchased it new for
a hunting trip in 1953. It was a
Winchester Model 70 in .30-06 with every deluxe feature that it could possibly
have. To top it off, it came with the
original target and paperwork from the day it was factory proof-fired. That date, Wednesday, August 24, 1949, was
the day I was born. I have held finer
rifles, but I never held a better rifle.
And now it is his.
Over the years I have owned and sold many firearms. I bought a strange-looking shotgun at an
estate sale that turned out to be a W.J. Jeffrey Double Rifle .600 Nitro
Express. I fired it twice. I unloaded the right barrel, and a few days
later after the pain subsided, I pulled the trigger on the left barrel. Enough was enough. I turned a decent profit on it.
Almost as painful was a double-barreled 4-gauge flintlock rifle. This beast threw a 4-ounce, 1-inch round
ball. And it was a sad day when I sold
it, but the offer was just too good.
I like muzzle-stuffers.
Charcoal burners just seem to me to be a more fair way to hunt, giving
the animal a better chance than is allowed with the modern high-tech weaponry. Even the modern bow hunter has advantages
over most of the click-boom shooters.
But I just like the process of loading and shooting the way it was done
a few hundred years ago. There is
something about the smell of burning sulfur that brings out the ‘Daniel Boone’
in me. Or at least it did at one
time. I gave away my tomahawk, Green
River knives, and possibles bag to a neighbor who works with kids in outdoor
adventures.
All I now have left are my .30-30 and my .50 cal. black
powder rifle. I’m making a new saddle
scabbard for the .30-30, and when it’s finished my nephew will receive it. The history for this rifle is simple: I
purchased it new on my 21st birthday. That leaves the .50 cal.
This one is hard for me to hand away.
My wife gave it to me on our first wedding anniversary. I think I will leave it to him in my will.
I’m not planning to visit the ground any time soon; I’m just
not able to hunt any more. In a few
years I may have to make the same decisions about my fishing gear, although I
hope to be bringing in trout twenty years from now, even if it is just a few
steps away from the car instead of a few miles up a stream.
I benefited from many who came before me. The generations of experience they passed to me was jealously guarded for well over half a century. But now it is time to entrust it to someone much younger. And I already know he will pass it to his children.
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