"Déjà vu"...I've seen this motorway before...

I had not long returned from a (fruitless) trip up North on the Sika Stags.

Don't ask.😖

However if you really want to know, a quick search on this site will enthral you, with the staggering lack of success I achieved.

Happenstance dictates that I had no longer arrived back home (just over 1,500 miles), than I had just enough time to change my socks, before turning the old Jalopy around again, and heading back up the M6.

Don't get me wrong. I don't hate the M6.

As motorways go, it is a fine motorway, it's just that you can have too much of a good thing, I had already had about a 1,000 miles of it - it turns out I was to have another 1,000 miles of the damn thing.

Anyhoo.

Rifle of choice this time is my .275.

Whilst she is 'new' to me, she is a Lady with some pedigree. She is based on a 1912 7x57 Action, and other than 'checking zero' with her, she is 'unused' as far as I am concerned. She is my favourite rifle and I love her. She wears a Schmidt & Bender 1.5-6 x 42.

Now I know what you are thinking, (especially if you have read my drivel on the Sika trip).
Another 6 power scope.:rolleyes:

I know.

But this time it will be on the Hill. Not in some shitty Highland forest, with leg-stepping "baby-heads", dark, horrible, shitty, shitty forest.

This time it will be different. A x6 magnification will be plenty. You'll see...

Let's not even mention the fact that this rifle is not fitted with a bipod.

I did say not to mention it...


Ammunition for the trip is homelands.

Rigby brass, 124gr @Yew Tree Fieldsports bullets, 45gr of RS60. Original NP primers (been sat in that brass for at least fifteen years. What could possibly go wrong?

My Stalker for the day is a young lad (fairly sure my boots are older than him). He is young. He looks fit. He looks nimble. I decide there and then to hate him.

Because he is young, he uses a Vorn. Because he uses a Vorn, the other Stalkers (all much older than him) also hate him.


We drive over to the range; where I manage to send three rounds into a target such that I am not immediately sent home. This rifle is unmoderated. Now everyone hates me.

We pile into the trucks, and head on out to what I always think is the nearest thing to Heaven on Earth. The Highlands. Dear God I love the place.


IMG_5988.jpeg

I am always amazed at the old crofts that litter the vast lands of Scotland. What is their history?
How were they built? Who built them? What happened to them?

IMG_5999.jpeg

The Stalker and I set off. He has my beautiful rifle in his Vorn. Good. It is nice and safe in there. It should have stayed in there.

We can hear a wee bit of roaring.

I can see the Stag who is roaring, holding Hinds away off to the right. He is an option. We track away in the other direction, working the wind.

The forecast is about 30% rain, but it seems to be holding off.

Then through the binoculars we see Stags. They are 370 yards away.

"The only way to get into him is to crawl. Are you OK to crawl?"

I did say I hated him right?

"Yes. Of course" I lied...

He then took my rife out of his Vorn, silently chambered a round, and slithered away like something out of a Harry Potter film.

I fell onto my face, and made after him. I was dragging his Vorn through the peat hags, the deer shite and the mud. He was returning the favour by doing the same with my beautiful rifle.🥺

I kept half a body length behind him, so I would 'arrive' at my rifle, just in time to see him drag it the next yard. This went on for (I sh*t you not) 300 yards. It was without doubt the longest crawl I have ever done.

Fun fact.

I had my 'piece' in a Tupperware box, jammed into my jacket pocket; flaps down and buttoned tight. I also had several packs of sweets about my person. When I arrived at our final destination I had lost the lot. My cheese and pickle sandwich (not to mention my wife's Tupperware box) is still on the shagging Hill, along with a 'bread crumb' tail of confectionaries.🍬🍭🍫

Somehow we arrive at our destination. The deer are now 70 yards away...

IMG_6009.jpeg

I check through the binoculars for confirmation that the mammoth crawl was worth it...

9f4db1e2-1548-4603-bf32-3c1a3e5831db.jpg


The Stalker whispers for his Vorn, and places what is left of my rifle onto it...




IMG_6013.jpeg

Satisfied that we have given ourselves a sporting chance, I settle in behind the rifle.

I then spent the next thirty minutes, wishing the rifle had a bipod on it.
Looking through the scope I also wish there was more magnification - hey ho.

"If I knew how to roar, now would be a good time to do it" said my young Stalker.

I have seen the 'patina' he has inflicted onto the stock of my rifle, and so I am ignoring him.

"Can you see the antlers through your scope?" he asks.

I am having trouble seeing anything through the tears when I think of the damage he has done to my beloved rifle.


Eventually, the Stag stands.

He is facing to my left. He is 70 yards away.

The rifle if resting on a Vorn rucksack. The magnification is half what I would like.

However. I am settled (apart from the constant sobbing about the stock) and take the shot when it presents.

Whilst the rifle is unmoderated, I do not hear the shot (I never do) but every deer in front of us does, and they take off to our left.

The Stalker immediately stands to watch the deer, and to see what happens to the one I shot (at).

He says, "It's leg is swinging".

I am still struggling to get to my feet, but eventually manage to do so.

I am confidant (arrogant) in my shot.

"He is dead" - I tell him.

We walk about twenty yards, and there about one hundred yards from the shot site is our Stag.
He is dead. The shot was good and that rifle has been 'bloodied' - in more ways than one.
 
Last edited by a moderator:
Great description, I enjoyed and empathised with you, while chuckling at the same time - maybe you will love the marks one day as you look at them both and feel the memories of it all.
What's the story of the rifle? It does look like a lovely thing. Who built it? I do love a classic rifle!
Vorns should be made illegal and only allow canvas Brady slips for the hill!
 
Love the write ups you've got a fair old sense of humour, I'd have to have the wife to edit and check the grammar if I ever wrote one not my strong point
 
Brilliant. I to absolutely love Scotland. 3 trips on the hinds again this season. Excited doesn't describe it even after 35 years of going
 
I am always amazed at the old crofts that litter the vast lands of Scotland. What is their history?
How were they built? Who built them? What happened to them?
If you ever get the chance, try reading the book "Set adrift upon the World - The Sutherland Clearances" by James Hunter. Not a light read by any means, but a well researched book about how the crofters and their kin were treated by their "betters"....
 
  • Like
Reactions: Hod
Not a light read by any means, but a well researched book about how the crofters and their kin were treated by their "betters"....

@opticron1

I recall; once climbing to the top of Ben Bhraggie in Sutherland. There is a magnificent statue of the Duke of Sutherland (known for this role in the Highland Clearances).

Unknown.webp

On one of the bases, someone had (rather beautifully), graffitied the word "MONSTER".

I rather admired the dedication of the "artist"...👏
 
Now the power's back on, @Stalker62 that looks very like Geldie Lodge. And those trees are at the big Daibhaigh wood. So it's the geldie and not the dee.
 
Yet another thread that is a pleasure to read @Stalker62. Your writing style is such that it would appeal to those with no previous interest in the subject matter. If I didn’t know better, I’d have assumed your working life had been spent writing engaging and entertaining articles. To be fair without reading them, maybe it was 😄

As mentioned above, the ruined cottages strewn across the highlands (the highland clearances) is a sad and shameful part of history. One can only wonder what the place would look like had these communities and buildings remained, been supported and been allowed to grow and prosper. Conversely the wider world would have not had the resulting displacement of Highland Scots.
 
Back
Top