Pine Marten
Well-Known Member
Hello everyone.
On Thursday morning, I saw that I had an email entitled "Important news about your Lotto ticket". Now it turned out that I had just won a lucky dip, but that was enough to set the Fantasy League Hunting brain circuits in motion again. Now as I've mentioned before, my Fantasy League Hunt is for moose in the Yukon, on horseback. That requires a bigger gun. This is fine, it's imaginary, I can choose anything I like. Now that said, even with imaginary funds I can't bring myself to be that profligate, so I wouldn't buy a rifle for a single trip that then would serve no further purpose. Also for me, a rifle isn't just a tool for the job, it adds to the experience, hence my somewhat esoteric choices until now.
Now I don't really want to discuss calibres. Let's say I just like the 9.3s and am pretty satisfied that these will knock over a moose and do an angry bear some damage should that happen, because in the Yukon, there's the danger that you're not the only hunter around or indeed the scariest animal on the tundra. A rifle in 9.3x62 or 9.3x74R would have the advantage of being perfectly adapted to Europe too, so not a single use item. Now there are no end of good rifles in that chambering, but I already have a very nice bolt-action rifle and somehow, I just can't build up any sort of excitement for another one. My brain likes the Merkel Helix for all sorts of reasons, it ticks all the boxes except that, well, there's no spark.
But, well, the Merkel 141 double rifle with adjustable barrels rather that hard-soldered ones, well, that's something else... Now I know that typically these are used at shortish ranges for driven hunting, but I can't think of any reason why they couldn't also be used like a single shot stalking rifle. I mean if you had an adequate scope on it such as a 1.5-10x42, which could quite happily be a stalking scope or a moving shot one, and you regulated/zeroed it at 100m, how is that any different to a single shot rifle? Sure, maybe you wouldn't have half-inch groups, but you don't need to, you need to hit something the size of a dinner plate. You may receive some funny looks too, but I'm used to that...
So can anyone think of a real, solid reason why such a rifle wouldn't be suited to this use should the next email from the Lotto be a but more exciting? Or even better, tell me this is exactly how you use yours and it's a great idea.
Thanks!
On Thursday morning, I saw that I had an email entitled "Important news about your Lotto ticket". Now it turned out that I had just won a lucky dip, but that was enough to set the Fantasy League Hunting brain circuits in motion again. Now as I've mentioned before, my Fantasy League Hunt is for moose in the Yukon, on horseback. That requires a bigger gun. This is fine, it's imaginary, I can choose anything I like. Now that said, even with imaginary funds I can't bring myself to be that profligate, so I wouldn't buy a rifle for a single trip that then would serve no further purpose. Also for me, a rifle isn't just a tool for the job, it adds to the experience, hence my somewhat esoteric choices until now.
Now I don't really want to discuss calibres. Let's say I just like the 9.3s and am pretty satisfied that these will knock over a moose and do an angry bear some damage should that happen, because in the Yukon, there's the danger that you're not the only hunter around or indeed the scariest animal on the tundra. A rifle in 9.3x62 or 9.3x74R would have the advantage of being perfectly adapted to Europe too, so not a single use item. Now there are no end of good rifles in that chambering, but I already have a very nice bolt-action rifle and somehow, I just can't build up any sort of excitement for another one. My brain likes the Merkel Helix for all sorts of reasons, it ticks all the boxes except that, well, there's no spark.
But, well, the Merkel 141 double rifle with adjustable barrels rather that hard-soldered ones, well, that's something else... Now I know that typically these are used at shortish ranges for driven hunting, but I can't think of any reason why they couldn't also be used like a single shot stalking rifle. I mean if you had an adequate scope on it such as a 1.5-10x42, which could quite happily be a stalking scope or a moving shot one, and you regulated/zeroed it at 100m, how is that any different to a single shot rifle? Sure, maybe you wouldn't have half-inch groups, but you don't need to, you need to hit something the size of a dinner plate. You may receive some funny looks too, but I'm used to that...
So can anyone think of a real, solid reason why such a rifle wouldn't be suited to this use should the next email from the Lotto be a but more exciting? Or even better, tell me this is exactly how you use yours and it's a great idea.
Thanks!