One Day...
AH elite
Amen @rookhawk!
In the late 1980's, before the kids went to college (=enforced poverty!), I had Paul at Griffin & Howe build me a .340 Wby on a Brno 602 action magnificently slicked up and jeweled (original magnum length Mauser actions were not to be found in those days and even Rigby of London used the Brno action!); 3 position safety; gorgeous G&H pattern European walnut stock; integral front sight, barrel band and quarter rib mid-heavy contour barrel; express sights actually regulated for 50 m, 100 m and 200 m (Paul filed them down as I was shooting); claw mount 1.5-6x42 Schmidt & Bender; stoned 602 trigger (not the CZ550 set trigger thing); etc. A thing of beauty!
I was sucked into the .340 Wby "legend" (it is actually a truly unique caliber combining the energy of a DG gun with the trajectory of a varminter, well, almost ;-) by a famous article from Ross Seyfried in a vintage Gun & Ammo magazine, and I never looked back. The scoped gun approached 11 lbs (never bothered me, I used to carry the squad machine gun in another life, and anyway this is pretty standard for a scoped .416 Rigby), and to me (love in the eye of the beholder?) the recoil was never an issue. I have been kicked worse shooting 3" steel shells at geese. I loved that gun for moose, elk, grizzly, etc. and took it among other places to Newfoundland and British Columbia. It was going to be my universal plains game gun...
Sadly, a conscientious baggage handler at the Phoenix airport decided that it would be better reconfigured as scrap metal and kindlewood, and speared the steel gun case with a forklift fork... American Airlines offered $250 or so, whatever the international traveler rate per pound of lost luggage was in the early 2000's, and, more happily, my umbrella home insurance covered some of the loss. But times had changed and I never could afford to replicate the gun.
I think about it every time I pull the Roy .340 out of the safe...
In the late 1980's, before the kids went to college (=enforced poverty!), I had Paul at Griffin & Howe build me a .340 Wby on a Brno 602 action magnificently slicked up and jeweled (original magnum length Mauser actions were not to be found in those days and even Rigby of London used the Brno action!); 3 position safety; gorgeous G&H pattern European walnut stock; integral front sight, barrel band and quarter rib mid-heavy contour barrel; express sights actually regulated for 50 m, 100 m and 200 m (Paul filed them down as I was shooting); claw mount 1.5-6x42 Schmidt & Bender; stoned 602 trigger (not the CZ550 set trigger thing); etc. A thing of beauty!
I was sucked into the .340 Wby "legend" (it is actually a truly unique caliber combining the energy of a DG gun with the trajectory of a varminter, well, almost ;-) by a famous article from Ross Seyfried in a vintage Gun & Ammo magazine, and I never looked back. The scoped gun approached 11 lbs (never bothered me, I used to carry the squad machine gun in another life, and anyway this is pretty standard for a scoped .416 Rigby), and to me (love in the eye of the beholder?) the recoil was never an issue. I have been kicked worse shooting 3" steel shells at geese. I loved that gun for moose, elk, grizzly, etc. and took it among other places to Newfoundland and British Columbia. It was going to be my universal plains game gun...
Sadly, a conscientious baggage handler at the Phoenix airport decided that it would be better reconfigured as scrap metal and kindlewood, and speared the steel gun case with a forklift fork... American Airlines offered $250 or so, whatever the international traveler rate per pound of lost luggage was in the early 2000's, and, more happily, my umbrella home insurance covered some of the loss. But times had changed and I never could afford to replicate the gun.
I think about it every time I pull the Roy .340 out of the safe...
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