AND shortly after consumption run out behind the barn and stick index finger down throat.
AND shortly after consumption run out behind the barn and stick index finger down throat.
[QUOTE="TFoley, post: 1992517, member:
You missed the best bit to go with the haggis. Neaps ( turnip) and mash potato Then large helpings of sauce. Made of cream secret stuff and 60% whisky. A big glass of whisky to help it doom You even get vegetarian haggis guaranteed free range organic it’s ok but the playing of bagpipes oh no
Hat duly eaten, Sir. With a large helping of crow pie, too.
However, I will iterate my post back a page or two - #76 - in which a journalist visited the H&H gun room and saw, as he wrote and I quoted [hence my ottment of hat/humble and or crow pie and keyboard] that 'My favorite of the night was one of 10 replicas of the English Brown Bess. This musket was standard issue to the British soldier during the American Revolution or, what H&H might call, "The American War for Independence."
Let’s slow down a bit tomorrow I’ll get in touch with H&H London pop up to see them even and discuss the matter They may have had no idea what went on in The USA Seems the exhibition or whoever the company was who built the stand or exhibition hall did enhanced it with a number of Indian made Bess guns done up as H&H guns. , this is purely speculation, later the exhibition broken up and one found its way to a little old lady
I received another email from an English expert in this field. Please bear with me, we have to get to the bottom of this.
The seller could have checked with H&H as a first move. But if this one has Indian and cast repro parts it's not something H&H would have turned out. They would have worked the parts into a quality piece they could put their name on. It could be a fake version of H&H's 1976 A&F order. After 5 pages of comment they've beaten this one to death.
Happy to meet sorry to part but happy to meet again I wish both sides of this argument well
So H&H DID make likely make ten of these guns, not being famous for showing the products of OTHER gunmakers in their showrooms, and the original poster was NOT trying to pull the wool over our collective eyeballs.
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This one came of