I don't really think he would have cared if I asked to take photos. But I was trying to play it cool, having just bought that Winchester off him. And I've missed many guns over the years by waiting "to think about it" too. Once, in New Mexico, before the internet was very big in the 1990s, a guy was advertising a Ballard in the local Dandy Dime paper. I called him, and he brought it over to my house. At the time, I had my Shiloh, a Trapdoor, and not much else. But i'd been oogling all the obscure single shots in all the classic books for 10 or more years. He arrived at the door with the rifle, a mid-range of some sort, with a tang sight and Marbles flip front. It was in a good caliber, and had a ring lever. It was his grandfather's. I loved it, he wanted $900. As I started to negotiate, my wife started mouthing "we can't afford it..." to me. We'd only been married 2-3 years. I stalled, trying to think of a way to come up with "non-family money", and it was sold a few days later. After that and a few others, I learned to jump when the price is right, like the Win 52 I got a year ago. That was another guy, retired, and I'd seen the rifle a few years before and told him if he ever wanted to sell it, call me. Ironically, my wife was with me this time too, when I bumped into him in town. He said he knew I wanted it, and would give me a really good price. I figured $1500 or so. I said I just didn't have the money. He kept coaxing me, and finally said, "how about $600?" I drove over, left the wife in the car, and got it!
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