I hunt spruce grouse with a passion in Alaska,they seem to be everywhere. Use both shotgun and .22 handgun. But I quit them after the first snow. That's when they live up to there name and eat spruce needles. I have opened October grouse that where full of needles and smelled like turpentine.
The more I think about this... "I will never go anywhere I can't carry" So no more airline travel? Drive only? Hard burden you folks put on your selves.
That's no way to live. I assume you carry routinely where you live. Exactly how many times has your CC Gun saved your life? Often? Never? So you are willing to never expierence the great citys of the world because you can't carry? So you will never see the great pyramids, the castles of Europe...
This is getting way to far off the OP so I will not pursue it further. Perhaps in a new thread?
By the way, copper is not a very noble metal. In fact it's not even a regular noble metal.
I glass bed the action and first 3/4 inch of the barrel on all my wood guns. Rest of barrel free floated. I mean free floated with a very noticeable gap. Never had a zero change.
Thanks entropy. I will keep a eye out on Numrich. I love the gun but the bore is really bad. Its a 30-06 and I would like to keep it that way rather then reborn to .35.
You're way off base. I was not referring to the OP's question. If he prefers a stainless/synthetic gun that's fine. I sure see no harm in it. I was responding to your statement that calling a blued/wood gun the Alaskan is some sort of false advertising (and by implication not suitable for...
This drives me crazy. I have been hunting Alaska for over 20 years. From the southeast rain forests to the open tundra of Western Alaska. My primary gun? A 1951 Win model 70 30-06. Often 200 miles from the nearest road. Two week hunts. Gun fails hunt over. I have NEVER had a problem with it...
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