View Full Version : single shots
GoodOlBoy
02-27-2006, 05:33 PM
I know I keep asking but am I the only person out there still perfectly happy with my Single Shot H&R with the IM choke? Sheesh.
GoodOlBoy
rem 700
02-27-2006, 06:10 PM
Originally posted by GoodOlBoy
am I the only person out there still perfectly happy with my Single Shot H&R with the IM choke?
GoodOlBoy
Probably :D
BILLY D.
02-27-2006, 06:55 PM
GOB
i hate to be the bearer of bad news.....but back in the last millennia the belt fed shotgun and rifle were invented. only the upper crust and those in the "know" use them.
we less cival types are relegated to single shots and the ever common pumps and told it is impossible to harvest game and are constantly reminded of our inferiority in the field.
strange; i have deer and antelope, and a few pheasants and some grouse and partridge in my freezer. the planets must have been lined in precise order when this game was taken. how else can you explain that phenomenon?
as long as i'm alive there will be two of us shooting single shots and still harvesting game. :eek:
tjwatty
02-27-2006, 07:46 PM
Does my Hawken 50cal. count?
fabsroman
02-27-2006, 07:50 PM
Most of my hunting as a child was done with single shots. Killed my first dove with a single shot .410 with a hammer on it. Used a 20 ga. single shot to pheasant hunt with, but never killed anything with it. I didn't really start killing much of anything until I graduated to my dad's A-5 and I killed two pheasants in that day. The next year, I got to shoot his o/u and that was the first year I ever killed more than a single dove in a day.
Truthfully, I like shooting doubles and triples on doves, and I also hate having wounded birds get away. Believe it or not, I'm not perfect, and occassionally I wound a bird. Luckily though, I take them close enough that I can get a second and third shot on the same bird if I have to.
No offense to you single shot guys, but the rest of us less than perfect guys need the additional ammo. LOL
I have been thinking about getting a single shot rifle (e.g., T/C or Ruger No. 1), but I just cannot justify spending money on one of them when I also want an AR-15, AR-10 and a Beretta PX4. Maybe, eventually, I will own a single shot rifle, but I doubt I will ever spend money on a single shot shotgun.
Good ol Boy -- well, uhhh, yup, you're in the few I'd say, along with Billy D.
Although I grew up using a single 20ga w/hammer. In fact still got it, somewhere stuffed in a closet as a last resort.
But, I have to say for a youngster starting out, learning proper gun handling, safety, etc. it is a first choice. I'll never forget the first Pat I accidently hit with that 20ga as it burst out from under a foot of snow one morning. Lucky yes, but it did the job. And it put a few more on the table in the coming years.
I'll stick with double o/u's, Waidmannsheil, Dom.
gd357
02-28-2006, 05:24 AM
Well, lets see. I've taken my first rabbit, squirrel, groundhog, quail, chukar, and probably a few more that I can't think of right now with single shots. Probably the most useful guns I've had around were either single shots or double guns. Hard to argue with that.
gd
popplecop
02-28-2006, 08:25 AM
Godd Ol Boy, even tho most of my shotguns have 2 barrels, not all. Both my turkey guns are built on NEFs, one is a 10 ga. with a peep sight (rainy day gun or snowy day) the other is a 12 ga. with tubes and a red dot scope. Both guns have killed numerous turkeys in my hands or others. I really like them, the 12 also has a rifled choke tube if I want to shoot slugs. Have a Berreta single shot 410 that gets shot mostly at clay birds, does work on squirrels too. No you are not alone in this field.
GoodOlBoy
02-28-2006, 09:57 AM
See thats the kind of pot stiring I like to see. Don't get me wrong I have a pump 12 guage, and a broke model 11 16 guage and I love to shoot them both. But as I get older I find myself drifting back to the basics. Last year and year before last together I took more than sixty squirrels, a nice little buck, two house cats (As they were feeding on hatchlings in my chicken pens), an armadillo, and a possum with that little single shot 20 of mine.
More modern style guns are good, and they work. For me though I think I have gone back to my old 20 to stay. Besides when I used the pump, or the semi I noticed on any given day of squirrel hunting I went through a whole box of shells and sometimes more and didn't come back with one more durned squirrel than I did on days I used my single shot. Last year I took thrity two squirrels and I still have shells left in the second box. I just tend to take more time with my single, and I don't seem to get that need to shoot now jitter that I get with a pump or semi.
Anyway I am far from perfect, I fudge my share of shots out in the field just like anybody, but as for me I fudge less of them using my single than I do anything else.
BTW I am with ya Billy D. So long as I am around there will be at least two of us as well.
TJ Yes yer hawken .50 counts, even if it ain't a shotgun. Blackpowder shooters got me beat for going back to basics I can tell you that fer sure and fer certain.
Note: I have also gotten one of my brothers into single shot hunting. I think he will probably wind up an addict just like me. :D
GoodOlBoy
rem 700
02-28-2006, 08:50 PM
Originally posted by BILLY D.
GOB
in the last millennia the belt fed shotgun and rifle were invented. only the upper crust and those in the "know" use them.
:D :D :D
indyhntr
03-02-2006, 04:42 PM
Of the last 5 guns that I've bought the one that I looked for the longest was a little Savage 220 hammerless single shot .410. I spent over 3 years searching every gun site on the net looking for one:rolleyes: I can't see that gun going anywhere except to the woods for a long time.
deadkelly
05-10-2006, 08:41 AM
i love me singles,trouble is i keep breaking them with 3 in magnums .baikals can take it but there action levers on the back of the trigger gaurd and realy belts ya fingers .
i've had big lumps after only 10 shots.why 3in cause shooting piggys at 5-10 meters on ya hands and knees in thick scrub its like 2 barrels at once,bb's & no2's flatten em buck shot iam not happy with thats in 2 3/4 in so i went to 3 in mags thats the ticket.
MN Tonester
05-14-2006, 07:08 PM
Among the guns I learned to hunt with as I as growing up was an H&R Topper .410. My brothers and I all took game with that gun (grouse and rabbits). My dad still has the gun and has been using it a lot more over the last couple of years. So there are at least three of you who hunt with a single shot (at least on occasion).
bulletpusher
05-17-2006, 08:46 AM
GoodOlBoy,
My son, yes I still like to shoot my H&R single barrel 20ga. I've only been shooting it about 42 years. I can still take'em (live and clay) with that shotgun.
I like it so much, that I'm thinking about getting me a new o/u or SxS in 20ga just to double my chances, and take twice times as much.
Nothing wrong with a single or double. You new fangled guys are alright too. With the pumpers and auto shukers, you guys can actually do anything with them things that I can with my single barrel 20ga. That is ifen you fellers try real hard. He He He :D :D :D
Bulletpusher
"BBRSSC #1"
8X56MS
05-31-2006, 03:00 PM
My first shotty (at age 7), was a Stevens 20 Ga single barrel with modified choke. I still have it. With that shotgun, I took my first deer (using a foster slug), a ton of squirrels, lots of ducks, rabbits, and a variety of birds (on the wing, of course!)
It is far from my only shotgun now, but when I go squirrel hunting in the early part of the season, I usually grab my old friend on the way out the door.
Str8shooter
06-03-2006, 06:44 AM
Hi guys -
Catching up on some older posts, I stumbled across this one.
There is no doubt in my mind that a single shot weapon can take game. In ancient times a rock did the trick from a sling. A question arises that makes me curious so help me out here please. If given the option of venturing out with a single shot or a weapon with more capacity, don't you think it is more sportsmen-like to choose the latter? Too many factors can add into the equation against dropping prey with one shot or successfully tracking it down. It seems to be more humane to have a back-up shot at the ready, just in case.
Your thoughts please.
fabsroman
06-03-2006, 12:39 PM
There are two arguments here. One is that a lot of hunters using firearms with more than a single shot don't concentrate enough to make the first shot, and sometimes they just wound the animal without every recovering it.
From what I have heard, most guides like to see a hunter come to them with a single shot because usually those hunters are going to make that first shot count.
A single shot also prevents a person from taking ill advised shots because there is no backup. Miss and that is it unless you are really good at reloading and getting back on target.
Me, I use firearms that have several shot capacities. However, I do not have a problem concentrating. The multiple rounds allow me to kill multiple animals. I have shot 3 deer on a couple of occassions and have shot 3 geese on several occassions. Killed plenty of doubles on deer, waterfowl, doves, quails, and crows.
I have contemplated getting a T/C Encore, but I already have too many bolt rifles. I have been teetering back and forth over the T/C but in the end I cannot justify it because I already have a muzzleloader, several shotguns, and several rifles. New rifle barrels for that gun cost $300 and that is almost half of a new rifle as it is. Might as well buy a new rifle. Then again, I have been debating the purchase of a Sako too, which is rather up there. Who knows, maybe once I get all the bolt rifles I want and the AR's I want, I'll actually get the T/C Encore.
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