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HISTORY, TRADITIONS & BARRELED MEMORIES WRITTEN BY JEFF “TANK” HOOVER

How many times have you thought, “Boy, if this thing could talk,” while picking up a gun to admire it? Here’s a tale where we know not only the history of the gun but several relevant, interlocking stories within the story.

Pap Baker

It starts with my Pap Baker, my mom’s father. A second-generation farmer, he bought the farm from his dad. Pap married and had six children — three boys and three girls. The oldest was my uncle Donny. A big, strong, strapping man, he once picked a hay elevator off my Pap when it collapsed on him, breaking his back.

Donny died in a tragic farm accident shoveling snow off his barn roof for fear of collapse back in January of ’78. My cousin Brad (nicknamed Barrel) found his dad on the ground, buried in snow after the roof snow avalanched on him. Brad and his younger brother, Jay, took over the family farm afterward.

A good day for the West Virginia opener.

New Tradition

My uncle Jerry took Brad hunting in West Virginia that fall of ’78, starting a new tradition. It was a way for them to get away from their farms, bond, and spend time doing their favorite pastime — deer hunting — after the tragic loss of Donny. Brad and Jerry hunted West Virginia every year after that. I started going in 1990. In 1996, my cousin Brent started coming. Jerry was tickled, having three nephews in tow to hunt with him. But this hunt ended tragically. Jerry died on the third day while shooting at a 9-point buck during a drive. We were shocked, to say the least. He had just turned 50 a few months before and was in good shape from farming.

We continued the West Virginia hunt tradition, but it was never quite the same. My uncle Gary, Brent’s dad, started coming along up until last year. Being on oxygen for the past two years, he never ventured far from the road but still loved the woods and hunting. Even while on oxygen, he’d hunt dark to dark back in Pennsylvania. He’d strap the oxygen tank on his ATV and bring enough hose to reach his stand while the bottle remained strapped to the ATV.

Gary died a few months ago. Brad needs ankle and knee replacements. Milking cows for the past 50+ years simply wore them out. He missed the last two seasons in West Virginia. I missed the last few for various reasons.

There’s something about the death of a loved one that makes you want to repeat the past. After Gary’s funeral, I committed to going to West Virginia, as did Brad.

A happy hunter indeed

Sacred Ground

Brad would hunt from Gary’s spot, a few hundred yards from the road. He wanted his hunt to be special, so he brought his dad’s gun. The gun is a Savage Model 99 chambered in what else? .300 Savage. Pap gave the brand-new gun to Donny in 1956 as a high school graduation present. Donny shot his first buck with it and hunted with it for years before going the bolt-action rifle route. Donny later gave the Savage 99 to his son, Brad, for his first deer rifle, at age 12.

Hail, hail, the gangs all here. Tired, well-fed hunters after opening day.

New Blood

Brad admitted to shooting a doe with it when he was younger, but he never shot a buck with it. On opening morning in West Virginia this year, Brad carried the gun our Pap gave his dad to Gary’s hunting spot — a wind-blown tree. It was a special hunt, whether Brad got a deer or not.

Call it magical, maybe even spiritual, but something wonderful happened on that ridge.

Just before 9 a.m., Brad saw a buck running 60 yards in front of him. One perfect shot, and the buck was down. Everyone was happy for him. We all knew and believed Brad had help from Pap, his dad Donny, Jerry and Gary. It only makes sense when carrying a special rifle, one so ingrained with a rich family history and memories, that something special was bound to happen.

Whatever it was, there’s no denying it was a wonderful hunt, one that left us all feeling good.

After the deer were taken care of, we had a great meal of pork loin, sauerkraut and potatoes that had been simmering all day in the crock pot, along with buttered rolls, fresh from the oven.

The making of great memories can only tighten family bonds. After all, memories are the only true thing we leave this world with that are truly ours.

More Memories

Next week is Pennsylvania’s opener, and I’ll get to see my cousins again. After hunting all day, we’ll meet up in the “butcher shop” to rekindle the day’s events, hopefully, cut up a few deer and eat fresh venison backstrap, as we’ve done for years. We’ll remember those who’ve left us while the youngsters are welcomed amongst the ranks as they tell the tale of their deer hunt, as hunters have been doing for centuries.

Life’s cycle is certainly amazing, as well as deceivingly quick. One day, you’re an 8-year-old kid, and the next moment, you’re one of the oldest family members standing in the back, taking it all in, wondering how you got to where you are. The older you are, the faster that boulder rolls downhill. That’s why barreled memories are special to those willing to understand. Life’s too short to live otherwise

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All About Guns Ammo

416 Rigby vs 416 Rem Mag

Okay now let us come back to Planet Earth guys & ladies. Sadly most of us will not be going to Alaska or the Game Rich land of Africa anytime soon. Also the chances of a problem breaking out at the circus are mighty slim to say the least. Plus Godzilla is dead.

Now I am as gulity as the next fellow. In that have owned and shot a LOT of the big boys guns. Frow the 300 H&H up to the 50 Calibers.

Yes I include my time in the Army and still love Ma Deuce with a passion. The same with the Barret, but thanks to old ARNOLD. (Yeah, you thought I forgot about you old Steriods Junkie you huh!?! Not Bloody likely!!!!) Let us say, the chances of me legally owning either one in LA. Well let us say that they are mighty dim to say the least.

Now to be fair it is a real ego booster, when you crank off one of these Monsters at your local rifle range. Then go”Thats right you bunch of pussies, this is what a REAL MAN shoots!” To the peasants astonished faces.

But then you get home and there is this huge and painful welt on your shoulder & your back is saying “What the F*ck did you do to me?”  Plus there is a slight matter of your wallet saying “HOW MUCH DID YOU PAY FOR THAT IFLE & AMMO!?! And trust me your wallet knows Brother!

So the Bottom Line really is this,so when propaganda like this comes a long. Try to remember that unless you are a gun writer that gets published. Or win the Lottery and Uncle Sam leaves you a substantial amount of  your winnings.

There really is no real reason on why the average gun owner should own one of these Guns of Navarone.(Another hint-A great war movie & worth buying the DVD of it!)Yeah I know, I know! It is a lot of fun to whip one of these monsters to show to your gun buddies.But maybe this broken down rifleman. Just might know wtf he is talking about?Nah!!! * Grumpy

  • Why does the terms “Young Dumb & full of cum & or Pride goes before a Fall”?
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Well I thought it was neat!

If you remember this than you are OLD!!!!!!!!!!!!!!

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All About Guns Anti Civil Rights ideas & "Friends"

Supreme Court Will Take Up “Ghost Gun” Case This Fall By Mark Chesnut

By a razor-thin margin, the U.S. Supreme Court on Monday agreed to hear the challenge to the Biden Administration’s “ghost gun” law.

The case, VanDerStok v. Garland, challenges the Department of Justice’s 2022 Final Rule that redefined important legal terms dealing with guns, including “firearm,” “receiver” and “frame,” making the longstanding American tradition of building personal firearms pretty much a thing of the past.

The vote to hear the case was 4-to-3, with no information released as to who voted for or against hearing the case. It takes four “yea” votes for the Supreme Court to grant a review in a case.

At issue is whether the DOJ and Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives (ATF) overstepped their bounds in promulgating the Final Rule. Plaintiffs in the case argue that the rule is just another example of the bureaucrat-run agencies overstepping their bounds by making laws instead of enforcing them.

That’s exactly what a three-judge panel of the Fifth Circuit Court of Appeals found last November when it unanimously ruled to uphold an earlier district court decision on the matter. In that ruling, Judge Kurt Engelhardt, who wrote the majority opinion, agreed in no uncertain terms that the rule was an overstep.

“ATF, in promulgating its Final Rule, attempted to take on the mantle of Congress to ‘do something’ with respect to gun control,” Judge Engelhardt, a Donald Trump nominee, wrote in the opinion. “But it is not the province of an executive agency to write laws for our nation. That vital duty, for better or for worse, lies solely with the legislature.”

Judge Engelhardt further wrote that the Final Rule “flouts clear statutory text” and “exceeds the legislatively imposed limits” on agency authority.

“Because Congress has neither authorized the expansion of firearm regulation nor permitted the criminalization of previously lawful conduct, the proposed rule constitutes unlawful agency action, in direct contravention of the legislature’s will,” the judge wrote. “Unless and until Congress acts to expand or alter the language of the Gun Control Act, ATF must operate within the statutory text’s existing limits.”

The lawsuit was brought by the Firearms Policy Coalition (FPC) on behalf of itself, two individual FPC members and Tactical Machining LLC. News that the Supreme Court would hear the case brought a positive reaction from FPC Founder and President Brandon Combs.

“FPC and our members look forward to the end of President Biden’s unconstitutional and abusive rule,” Combs said in an FPC press release. “We are delighted that the Supreme Court will hear our case and decide this important issue once and for all. The Fifth Circuit’s decision in our case was correct and now that victory can be applied to the entire country.”

Cody J. Wisniewski, FPC Action Foundation president and counsel for the plaintiffs, said the case should teach the ATF a lesson about who is charged with making laws in the country.

“This is an important day for the entire liberty movement,” Wisniewski said. “By agreeing to hear our case, the Supreme Court will have the opportunity to put ATF firmly in its place and stop the agency from unconstitutionally expanding its gun control agenda. We look forward to addressing this unlawful rule in the Court’s next term.”

The case has been added to the high court’s calendar for the session beginning in October. Oral arguments in the case are expected to begin sometime this fall.