Sometimes I forget just how nice a "plain Jane" and no-frills small caliber single shot can be. A couple weeks ago, a dealer who I buy from when he has an interesting antique single shot had a customer trade in a LNIB Ballard LLC reproduction of a Ballard No. 3 sporter in a 22LR. Nice but standard grade wood, nice (but again 'standard' for the new Ballard's high standards) case coloring, and a lighter, octagon barrel with a plain blade and buckhorn sight. I already had a fairly 'loaded' Ballard LLC Shuetzen or No 3 Gallery in 22LR with the palm rest, fancy wood, tang sights and globe, etc, but this one seemed so nice and the price was right, I said, "sure." Now the point is that I shoot a far more 'state of the art' single shot for competition with other old farts (I will be 58 in a couple of days), and Anshutz 2013 in their latest, high tech synthetic, adjustable 500 ways from Christmas, barrel tuner, 36X Weaver target scope, etc when we 'pill shoot' at 100yds. (Take a bunch of asprin, glue them to the targets, and bang away from a rest, using the best possible 22 match ammo.) So when I finished yesterday, I hauled out the Ballard. I forgot just how much fun a simple but well built single shot with the simplest of iron sights can be. Even with the blade and buckhorn (I will screw on a tang this morning as it is drilled and tapped for one) I was doing damn well at a hundred with this lighter rifle. Was I hitting pills? No, and with my old eyes and those sights, not a chance. But the little puppy uses a match grade barrel and with the same ammo I was feeding the Anschutz, it grouped as nice as any 'modern' 22. Plus, the fun was just pop it open, slide in a round, aim, shoot, open the action and put in another. Too often we get involved in which cartridge is best at long range (45-70 vs 45-90 vs. 45-100) or loads for BPCR and forget the humble but lots of fun single shot 22. We should all have one. They are a blast. Dave
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