Or check the pedersoli Mortimer combo on the classified area...both a rifle and smoothbore...
I know , right ?! The DAs are acting like they are offended ? Geesh ...My goodness, he’s not asking you guys to give up your cartridge guns, who cares what he decides for himself or what his reasoning is?
Amen Mike!Oddly, I wouldn't have chosen any of those.
Good Morning, Bob.I'm getting rid of all firearms and settling on only 5 and they are all going to be bp. 1 hunting rifle, 1 sxs shotgun, 1 fowler, 2 pistols (one for hunting one for protection).
My rifle will be a Pedersolie Missouri River Hawken in .50cal and maple wood.
My sxs shotgun will be a Pedersolie in 10 gage or a possible 12 of high quality.
I know nothing about fowler but I need one for small game such as rabbit, squire and the such. I want something that shoots shot and ball and is very accurate and not extremely long. What would fit this need.
My first pistol will be a Pietta 1851 in .44 cal with long 7.5 inch barrel for hunting.
My second pistol will be a Pietta 1851 in.44 cal but only a 3 inch barrel for protection.
After this I will never buy another gun unless one breaks and can not be fixed.
What fowler suggestions do you have and why. Something nice as it will be my only one.
I love my 20 SxS smoothbore. Shoots shot and ball. Patterns well. It was made by Pedersoli... light and easy to bring up into position. It is a perc not a flintI'm getting rid of all firearms and settling on only 5 and they are all going to be bp. 1 hunting rifle, 1 sxs shotgun, 1 fowler, 2 pistols (one for hunting one for protection).
My rifle will be a Pedersolie Missouri River Hawken in .50cal and maple wood.
My sxs shotgun will be a Pedersolie in 10 gage or a possible 12 of high quality.
I know nothing about fowler but I need one for small game such as rabbit, squire and the such. I want something that shoots shot and ball and is very accurate and not extremely long. What would fit this need.
My first pistol will be a Pietta 1851 in .44 cal with long 7.5 inch barrel for hunting.
My second pistol will be a Pietta 1851 in.44 cal but only a 3 inch barrel for protection.
After this I will never buy another gun unless one breaks and can not be fixed.
What fowler suggestions do you have and why. Something nice as it will be my only one.
I never hunt small game with a fowler. Don't like picking shot out of my teeth. Now birds on the fly,,, that is something else entirely. I have never ground sluiced a game bird,,, ever. Except turkey. Too hard to get them to fly... always want to run away.... cowards!!!I have got to rethink my fowler thought. I thought fowler were small smothered in like.45 cal I did not realize they were 20 gage. I may just find somebody to make a curly maple stock for a Seneca I have and just hunt small stuff in .36 cal.
Yes I have one Car but 6 honda four wheelers. If it wasn't for my car being a Honda I may have shot it and moved on to nothing but 4 wheelers.
Good evening, Bob a .54 caliber smoothbore is equivalent to a 28 gauge shotgun.What I need to do is ask for the definition of "fowler". I was under the impression that a fowler was small bore of about .45 cal to around .32 cal.
The point of this post it to find a long gun that would take over for what I would normally use a .22/410 for.
Good evening, Bob a .54 caliber smoothbore is equivalent to a 28 gauge shotgun.
.58 caliber is equivalent to a 24 gauge.
I use to hunt with my Grandpa Chubs
.22/410 Steven Savage in my youth.
Bob I apologize if I caused your frustration to grow.Thank you for the information. My point is I already have a rifle in 50 cal and a sxs shotgun in 10 or12 gage so why do I need a 54 cal smoth bore? I'm not using a 10 or 12 gage to shoot squirel and rabbit.
I want something in .45 or smaller and good for out to 35 yards.
I don't eat squirel or rabbit any more but I remember getting off the school bus as a kid and grabbing the .22 and head down the road and shooting squirel or getting the 410 and walking the fields and rabbit hunting. Grandma would cook regular dinner and whatever we killed she would cook it too. I use to love squirel and rabbit but now I'm not a big fan off it, too many years of eating beef.
I don't need a .54 cal to shoot small game. I need something small but I think I'm too frustrated to care anymore. I mean my goodness our entire sport is based on eastern small bore guns and later big bore as they went farther west and all of a sudden only thing people know is big bore musket size guns. Either I'm am very dumb or the community has drifter away to a different knowledge base than I know. I'm sure in 5 more years I will be told that only high capacity magazine muzzleloaders were ever used.
I remember that when grandma made chicken how we knew it wasn't store bought. Grandma would just step onto the back porch and shoot a chicken or roster with the 410 and later at dinner we would be pulling pellets out of our mouthed every few bites.
Is a fowler simply just a smooth bore gun or is a fowler a citizen made musket? What is a fowler and what was popular bore?
No your fine I just did not understand what a fowler is. Sorry bout that, I wasn't ranting at you I was not understanding most all post. Thank you for your comments as it has help me understand better and I need to rethink my squirel rifle.Bob I apologize if I caused your frustration to grow.
To my understanding a Fowler is a smoothbore.
Your could look for a .32, .36, .40, or a .45 caliber rifle.
Aging I apologize, just trying to help.
Gum Slough
Fowler is just an 18 th century name for a shotgun or smoothbore . They didn't call them shotguns back them , they called them fowlers. And guns were called guns , smoothbore , and rifles called rifles , rifled bore . Military guns were called muskets and fowlers that were specifically made for the Fur trade were called trade guns . Popular gauges, but not limited to , for civilian fowlers were 24 ga. , 20ga, 16ga.,12ga, 10 ga.Thank you for the information. My point is I already have a rifle in 50 cal and a sxs shotgun in 10 or12 gage so why do I need a 54 cal smoth bore? I'm not using a 10 or 12 gage to shoot squirel and rabbit.
I want something in .45 or smaller and good for out to 35 yards.
I don't eat squirel or rabbit any more but I remember getting off the school bus as a kid and grabbing the .22 and head down the road and shooting squirel or getting the 410 and walking the fields and rabbit hunting. Grandma would cook regular dinner and whatever we killed she would cook it too. I use to love squirel and rabbit but now I'm not a big fan off it, too many years of eating beef.
I don't need a .54 cal to shoot small game. I need something small but I think I'm too frustrated to care anymore. I mean my goodness our entire sport is based on eastern small bore guns and later big bore as they went farther west and all of a sudden only thing people know is big bore musket size guns. Either I'm am very dumb or the community has drifter away to a different knowledge base than I know. I'm sure in 5 more years I will be told that only high capacity magazine muzzleloaders were ever used.
I remember that when grandma made chicken how we knew it wasn't store bought. Grandma would just step onto the back porch and shoot a chicken or roster with the 410 and later at dinner we would be pulling pellets out of our mouthed every few bites.
Is a fowler simply just a smooth bore gun or is a fowler a citizen made musket? What is a fowler and what was popular bore?
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