Tuesday, August 23, 2005

The Beauty of Weapons 1

Fall is in the air in the New Mexico highlands, and my hounds and hawk are restless, whining at the front door, or rowing wings in the quickening wind. You will be hearing more about them, I promise.

Click for larger viewBut a natural transition from the fluted points of prehistory is the beauty humans-- all right, mostly men -- have bestowed on their hunting tools.

Click for MUCH larger viewI present you with photos of a rare and obscure English "Best" shotgun, a Griffiths, shaped and filed by hand to the tolerances of a particle of smoke, in Manchester in 1878. You can still buy a new London or Edinburgh or Birminghan Best, but it will take a couple of years and cost anywhere from forty to eighty thousand POUNDS. This one cost me less than $1500, including having the Damascus barrels re- finished by Chuck Webb at Briley.

Click for MUCH larger viewThis black and white photo from the late Geoffrey Boothroyd's Shotguns and Gunsmiths shows the Damascus pattern more clearly. We believe it is of my gun!

You have to study old guns. My old friend the Albuquerque rare gun dealer Ron Peterson offered me this one, or a comparable one, of similar age, by the famous Westley Richards. We both agreed that this one had better details and balance, but someone relying on "names" would have gone with the other.

Click for MUCH larger viewIt shoots light modern ammo as well as it did over 100 years ago, and I will open dove season with it. These things are made to last! I have handled a muzzle- loading gun made by Joseph Manton, the first maker of London Bests, that still worked; it dated from the 1790's. I am told some such still see action on the grouse moors of Scotland-- though I suspect only in good weather....

3 comments:

Anonymous said...

Beautiful gun, how does one know that the damacus barrels are safe? I have been raised for 40 years with the warning labels on shell boxes and am not sure I could get past that imprinting. Thanks

Steve Bodio said...

The "unsafe Damascus" is an (American) mostly- myth that I suspect derives from people stuffing old guns with too- long heavy loads. The English routinely prove Damascus guns for modern loads, including even such things as 8 bores! Game guns like this are no problem at all if they are in good shape, have sufficient barrel wall thickness etc.

Double Gun Journal published an extensive set of tests showing that Damascus can be as strong as steel. Outfits like Briley can give you a good read as to safety, as can some English gunsmiths in the US.

Anonymous said...

Thanks Steve, Love your stuff.