I can see what you meant. Good point.
However, the part of the reason (for the 375 HH) is that I want a
do it all rifle with nice wood, interesting history, and superior caliber.
Apparently, I could not afford many of those. That's why I am (have been) selling all other stuff (with synthetic stocks, very practical and fun calibers) to
fund this new interest.
I 've been working out daily (jogging on a treadmill plus several push-ups), so carrying the weight might not be a problem for me at this age yet.
I might turn back to shoot .22 when I getting close to 60
or something like that.
However, the part of the reason (for the 375 HH) is that I want a
do it all rifle with nice wood, interesting history, and superior caliber.
Apparently, I could not afford many of those. That's why I am (have been) selling all other stuff (with synthetic stocks, very practical and fun calibers) to
fund this new interest.
I 've been working out daily (jogging on a treadmill plus several push-ups), so carrying the weight might not be a problem for me at this age yet.
I might turn back to shoot .22 when I getting close to 60
Now, if you just WANT a .375 H&H because you want one, then go right ahead. But you will be "driving a semi-trailer tractor unit" all the time. For me, the novelty would wear off very fast after a few trips to the mall. (Kind of stretching the metaphor, I know, but .......)![]()





























.






















