satwel
40 Cal.
I couldn't have said it better myself. I have lived more than 50 years in MA towns that sent Minutemen to Concord on the morning of April 19th with a smoothbore on their shoulder. In addition to the Rev War, the town in which I grew up repelled an attack by native peoples during King Philips War in 1675 and It even sent a few militia men to the first siege of Louisburg in 1745. The historical aspect plus the fun of shooting flintlock muskets and fowlers appeals to me..
- The Challenge How well can I shoot using only my eye and cheek as a rear sight? It varies from day to day.
- The History I live in a part of the state which was included in French Louisiana. The French Canadians traded with the Kansa, Osage, Pawnee, Wichita, and others. There was even a French military/fur trading post near what is now Leavenworth, KS built in the 1740s.
- Personal Aesthetics French trade guns just look too cute to be believed. You have to love that pied de vache butt stock and that long. slim barrel.
- Versatility As a hunting arm, the trade gun can't be beat. You can go buffalo hunting on Saturday, and rabbit or turkey hunting on Sunday, all with the same gun. In 20 ga. there's only one animal on the North American continent that can't be taken with the trade gun; the grizzly bear.
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