Good news: The house repairs are almost finished. On a smaller scale, I finally found a source of affordable cartridge brass for my 1889 Martini-Henry rifle. (For those interested in such things, Gad Custom Cartridges, $30 for 20 unprimed cases, $45 for 20 rounds of loaded ammunition.) I also got a pointer from lwj2 for 5-round magazines for my M14. Either of those would give me a shot (literally) at putting a deer or two in the freezer to help with the food bills. (Though my gradually deteriorating vision would be a handicap. I can't see iron rifle sights clearly any more, and I don't have a working 'scope mount for the M14.)
Bad news: I can’t afford to actually buy any, because New Hampshire unemployment is now eight weeks behind on cymrullewes' unemployment benefits. That's about $3600 owing to us, without which we don't have enough in the bank to cover the mortgage, the car payment, and the electric bill¹ this month — let alone fill the kerosene tank² or buy propane for winter heat.³ We can't get any clear answers out of them as to what's going on; just "We'll get back to you".
Supposedly, they're switching over to a different system that uses direct deposit instead of mailing checks. But come ON, people! When you're changing a system that's vital to many people to keep a roof over their heads, you test it BEFORE you switch over to it!
[1] On which, I discovered when I went to pay it this morning, we're a month behind. The combination of "where the hell are the unemployment benefits" and the chaos of emergency house repairs has really disrupted our routines.
[2] Granted, the kerosene tank only supplies our demand water heater and the emergency-backup monitor heater in the dining room. The quarter-tank that's in it now will take us most of the way through the winter — basically we use about three quarters of a tank of kerosene per year — and we only used 50 gallons of propane (for cooking) since about April when we turned the heat off for the summer. But with the totally inadequate insulation in our roof, we go through a LOT of propane for winter heat. (It's insulated to maybe R-10, whereas the roof insulation recommendations for this climate zone now call for R-60.) We didn't know the roof was this poorly insulated when we bought the house, and fixing it requires rebuilding the roof.
[3] We applied for energy assistance, because we didn't know how we were going to cover winter heat bills on just cymrullewes' unemployment and my disability, but we were notified yesterday that we got denied because we're apparently over the income limit by a couple of hundred dollars a month. We don't know yet whether this means we're also not getting the winterization they promised us in return for letting them use our house as a test house for energy-auditing students.
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Buckshot works to 75 yards.
I don't know why you're having problems with the scope - are you sure it's moving zero, or is is lack of consistant cheek-weld?
I got a Karsten Cheekpiece and with the cheapy scope mount and a Leopold mine holds zero great.
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It's definitely a mount-not-holding-zero problem, though a cheekpiece would help too. Tighten everything up, fire three or four rounds, and the screws are loose again because the mount is soft extruded aluminum.
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Anybody around who's got a .30-30 you can borrow? Or needs some deer thinned?
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I think the underlying problem is that all the mounts I've tried so far have been aluminum ones — and, whether extruded, cast or forged, the truth is every one of them has been worthless. But at the time, aluminum mounts were all I could find.
I've yet to find out good hunting locations in the area. We have friends in Deerfield who have 20 acres, but they got pretty much clearcut last year by a freak tornado.
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Deer eat shoots and such, not usually grass, so clearcut areas are usually great places to find them eating on the new growth.
No other choices for guns?
Actually, ever tried slugs in the shotgun?
* - At least down here that's a great rule of thumb.
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Well, I can ask DJ whether he gets deer and how he feels about hunting on his land.
I've tried slugs in the shotgun, but never tried using it for deer. Basically, given ammunition supplies on hand, my practical options are shotgun (Rem 870), M14, or Ruger Super Blackhawk.
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Also depends what kind of trees and other habitat is around. If there are a lot of hardwoods dropping edible nuts, they won't be in the cutdown as much, if they're pines (or things like walnuts and pecans, never seen deer eat them), they'll be hitting it a lot harder.
Buck out of the 870 should be usable to 40-50 yards. Ever patterned it to check it out? That's not an impossibility, and there have been several deer I've shot within that range.
Check around for a new full-choke barrel for the 870, and then it's usable to 75-100 yards with buckshot, and possibly cheap upgrade.
Or get some sabot slugs and try them. My 590 with a ghost ring is accurate enough to 100 easily with them. That's the lowest-cost option. I've tried the "rifled" slugs, but the sabots kick their asses.
And there's nothing wrong with the super blackhawk. I think you can easily get to 50 yards now with the 870 or Blackhawk, depending how well you shoot it, and maybe 100 if you go slug... A good choice of stands and scouting should be able to work that into some meat, hopefully.
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gotta get me some spare quatloos (or that new job i'm gunning for, but a 12 gauge is in my future, at least ghost sights, maybe more).
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http://northeastshooters.com/vbulletin/forumdisplay.php?f=27
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