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This is my squirrel gun, a .60 caliber Fusil de Chasse, using ~65 grains of #6 shot. Killed a lot of squirrels with it.
6BE569D8-91DE-43C1-A0CB-CE264F26CABE.jpeg



This a Chambers .62 caliber smooth rifle. Only got to take it deer hunting once last year. Hopefully I’ll do better this year.
AA7B3B37-F07E-497A-8CC6-B92E3FBC7A37.jpeg


If I plink with them, I’ll hunt with them. If I hunt with them, I’ll plink with them. None of my guns are ‘beaters’. I use them, but I don’t abuse them.
 
I too don’t have a ‘beater’ none of my guns are fancy though two have highly figured wood. I’m careful with my girls in field or in a camp.
This century all my deer save one has been shot with a smooth bore. Two with my 28 bore, 54 cal, and rest with my fusil de chase.
All shots pretty close and all with round ball
 
The first thing I do with any new deer caliber gun I build or acquire is to hunt with it until I kill a deer with it. One of my guns may be the favorite that I hunt with the most, but favorites change, it looks like my latest Issac Haines build will be my favorite for a long time.

Here are just a few of the first deer these rifles killed.

TC kit gun that I put together, my brother found the kit in my dad's closet when he went to assisted living. The neck shot was a finisher, I broke both its shoulders on the first shot but he could get up on its hind legs and run about 50 yards every time I got close. I finally got close enough for the neck shot, I didn't want to mess up any more meat.

TC buck.JPG


My first flint longrifle that wasn't a TC, a gift from a friend.

silver buck.jpg


My first build, a Beck like rifle, I took it hunting before I finished it and hadn't browned the barrel.

mister beck and first doe.jpg


There were lots of deer in between the Beck and the Haines picture, another first for another TC and two first for each of my smoothbores.

Here is my Haines with its first doe last year.

hainess doe nov 25 23.JPG
 
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For hunting I favor the Hawkin type rifle. I mostly hunt in heavy cover so the short barrel helps. My current gun is a 50 cal flintlock TC Hawkin. It's a first year of production gun and the previous owner did some nice carving on it.

Ironhand
 
Only have 2 Flinters, both production no frills rifles, a 50 GPR Flinter and a Pedersoli 36 Flinter (for now). I have a few T/C's, 2 CVA's and a Traditions Crockett all Cap Lock. I will hunt, or have hunted with them all. The Crockett is just a pure pleasure to carry in the woods.

And to answer the last part of your question, in the woods, best place to hunt squirrels is in the woods.😉
 
For hunting I favor the Hawkin type rifle. I mostly hunt in heavy cover so the short barrel helps. My current gun is a 50 cal flintlock TC Hawkin. It's a first year of production gun and the previous owner did some nice carving on it.

Ironhand
I like the Hawken pattern also and that was actually my first build. Twenty years later I made the full stock flinter. Both are .54 caliber. The split Poplar logs were an experiment to determine if cap lock ignition offers increased power over a flintlock. They both had nearly identical penetration.

1729557018302.jpeg
 
My companion in the mountains and forests is a 58cal Colonial.

She shoots Great! 280gr roundball and 45gr of any powder for paper shooting.
60gr for Woods-walks.
20221106_072706.jpgAnd 110gr of 3fff yields 1850fps for Elk hunting.
20240401_133654.jpg
Found this set of big elk sheds this spring, laying just as they are pictured.
 
I built this one around 1980 and knew little about anything. That's why it has a Germanic Siler lock on an SMR. But it is a deadly accurate .50 rifle. Hey, an old mountain gunsmith could have had a Germanic lock lying around.
.50 southern mountain rifle.JPG


A little later I built this .32 squirrel rifle with a walnut stock and a little better architecture.

.32 squirrel gun 3.JPG
 
I built this one around 1980 and knew little about anything. That's why it has a Germanic Siler lock on an SMR. But it is a deadly accurate .50 rifle. Hey, an old mountain gunsmith could have had a Germanic lock lying around.
View attachment 357095

A little later I built this .32 squirrel rifle with a walnut stock and a little better architecture.

View attachment 357096
Look in Rifles of Colonial America Shumway shows several Southern rifles with Germanic locks.
 

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