Ontario Hunter
AH ambassador
I'm split I guess. Big game hunting started in 1964 with the 30-06 WWII 03A3 Springfield my Dad dolled up for me. It's been overhauled and tricked out several times since but still doing the job sixty years later.
But for birds and clays I had to give up on wood, although I cling to my 1960s Browning A5 "Magnum Twelve." After wearing out two sets of wood I switched to plastic. I can shoot the lights out with that ugly old beast whether at the range or in the field.
However, it may be sitting on the bench for a while at the range. My 11 year-old grandson went skeet shooting with me yesterday, his second attempt. Brought along the used 12 gauge Citori I bought for a steal a few years back and cleaned up. I don't shoot it nearly as well as the A5 (it has slightly shorter and thicker stock) but I will take it out occasionally for a change. Grandson was struggling with the Black Monster bird killer so I asked him if he'd like to try something different. The Citori doubled his score! Now he's hooked. Regulations require that I have to stand behind him while shooting and he cannot carry the gun, even to the station. So until he turns 12 and gets his federal license, it will be one gun only at the range. Guess you know what gun I will be shooting.
Back to classic.
Two years ago I built a sorta classic 404J on Czech 98 Mauser. Finished it in time (barely) for my fourth safari but didn't shoot anything. Oh well. I built the gun for the fun of it. Very challenging project.
But for birds and clays I had to give up on wood, although I cling to my 1960s Browning A5 "Magnum Twelve." After wearing out two sets of wood I switched to plastic. I can shoot the lights out with that ugly old beast whether at the range or in the field.
However, it may be sitting on the bench for a while at the range. My 11 year-old grandson went skeet shooting with me yesterday, his second attempt. Brought along the used 12 gauge Citori I bought for a steal a few years back and cleaned up. I don't shoot it nearly as well as the A5 (it has slightly shorter and thicker stock) but I will take it out occasionally for a change. Grandson was struggling with the Black Monster bird killer so I asked him if he'd like to try something different. The Citori doubled his score! Now he's hooked. Regulations require that I have to stand behind him while shooting and he cannot carry the gun, even to the station. So until he turns 12 and gets his federal license, it will be one gun only at the range. Guess you know what gun I will be shooting.

Two years ago I built a sorta classic 404J on Czech 98 Mauser. Finished it in time (barely) for my fourth safari but didn't shoot anything. Oh well. I built the gun for the fun of it. Very challenging project.