Merkava wrote on Dec 23
rd, 2021 at 8:37pm:
You are 8 years old. You are the all American farm boy. It's early 1960s. You own a Remington 510 single shot .22 rifle. You were taught to shoot properly and efficiently with a single shot.
You have hunted everything and carried that rifle many many miles.
Other kids have semi auto repeaters. Lever guns. Pumps.
One shot is all you have.
And one shot is all you need.
When parents give their children what the gun trade pushes, well,
You are what you eat, you are what they give you.
My 510 Remington has been a great companion.
I still use it often.
If everyone shot a single shot, well, no different then everyone
driving blue VW Bugs.
I was that boy. It sucked. My dad had 3 guns, all utility; for use on the farm. A Stevens single shot .22. A 303 british MkIV#1. A 20 ga single shot shotgun. I hated using the single shots. Was a pain to fish in your pocket for your next shot on rabbits or squirrels or chucks. Only get one pheasant when 3 rose out of the corn. We also had a VW bug and 4 kids. Crammed the whole family in there to go to town. Or in our 57 chevy pickup, with the kids in back, a homemade quilt in the winter to keep us alive. My folks and their friends talked like the above; how it was great to have a single shot because you had to make every expensive bullet count, and the people that had new fangled bolt action repeaters with scopes were lazy and stupid and poor shots. How my dad and his buddies had been the best on the range with their Garands in the Corps, no sissy scopes, that's what iron sights are for. How the family that had a Suburban looked like a survey crew or prison work gang driving around town, all them with their sissy seat belts on and no coats. Or windows up in the summer because wasteful air conditioner. How those kids were going to grow up lazy and stupid and end up on welfare or in prison. All that is something I would rather be from than be.
When I was about 16 or so, I bought a Winchester hammerless lever action .22, and bought a 4 power rimfire tasco scope to put on it. That was amazing; my range extended about 25 yards more, and could take more than one shot without reloading. Bought a Ted Williams pump shotgun. Now had a chance at a second pheasant! Bought a 788 in .308, 4 power Bushnell scope and could effectively kill deer and elk.
Single shots are amusing and fun and I like to work on them (along with bolt guns, too).