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Says when you're ready to shoot ' Go ahead. barrel cot does not have to be removed and doesnt significantly reduce your accuracy.
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That's a big WOW! Good reporting guys.
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I've never covered my bore with tape or balloons...This includes over 30 years of hunting with flintlocks...
I just don't turn the bore up to the rain, no problem... |
Originally Posted by nchawkeye
(Post 3807032)
I've never covered my bore with tape or balloons...This includes over 30 years of hunting with flintlocks...
I just don't turn the bore up to the rain, no problem... Don't ask me how I know about that. :( |
Originally Posted by Muley Hunter
(Post 3807034)
Ever shove the muzzle in the snow? :biggrin:
Don't ask me how I know about that. :( But, I never slip in the snow either... Oh! and then there is the fall drop of Larch needles and always in the hunting season... that is a fun one also... Maybe you do not have Larch trees back there in Colorado though. Just much safer and more comfortable with a covered bore in rotten weather. |
Originally Posted by sabotloader
(Post 3807037)
.............................the fall drop of Larch needles.............................
Yup, we always put electricians tape over the end of our barrel in those day. I don't think i have seen a Tamarack/Larch for at least 30 years. Now that i think about it, i haven't seen any of them big Cedar for 30 year either. Wow they grow big around. I imagine there are a lot of Cedar around Moscow. They only seemed to live in far Western Montana. |
I'm not familiar with a Larch tree. Does Colorado have them?
Lots of Pine and Aspen here. |
I looked them up. Not something i'd want on my property thats for sure! LOL.
They do look pretty in full color |
Originally Posted by ronlaughlin
(Post 3807064)
Gosh, what memories came rushing through my brain when i read about Larch. Growing up in Western South Dakota, i had never seen one of them tree. When we moved to Missoula, that first fall was quite an eye opener. Them larch turning golden a way up on them evergreen slopes. I will never forget a friend of mine traveling from Helena, on the east side of the mountains to Missoula on the west side, asking why all them trees were dying. He was a biologist too, and had never seen a conifer turn golden in the fall. Tamarack is what we called them sometimes, or Larch. They made a good firewood too. For some reason, we didn't like hunting where there was a lot of Larch. I don't remember why or what for.
Here are some memories.... ![]() Yup, we always put electricians tape over the end of our barrel in those day. I don't think i have seen a Tamarack/Larch for at least 30 years. Now that i think about it, i haven't seen any of them big Cedar for 30 year either. Wow they grow big around. I imagine there are a lot of Cedar around Moscow. They only seemed to live in far Western Montana. This is thee Giant Red cedar right here in Idaho, near Elk River. I designed and built the deck arounf the tree to protect the roots from compaction... Well actually my trail crew and I built the deck. Near the small town of Elk River, Idaho is the largest tree in North America east of the Cascade -Sierra Crest. The tree is a Western Red Cedar that is 18 feet in diameter at breast hight and 177 feet tall. The sign near the tree identifies it as the "Giant Cedar" but I have also seen it called the "King Cedar" (that is wrong it is called the Giant Cedar. The king Cedar is only a stump over by Bovil, Idaho. This tree is estimated to be about 3000 years old |
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