I attended the show yesterday. It also runs today. It is a large, well-run show with an effective security system at the one exit ( a good thing in view of an expensive shotgun being stolen from a table at the Penticton show 2 wks ago).
There was a reasonable selection of MILSURPs incl the usual bobbed Lee-Enfields, P14s and Rosses, RC M98 Mausers, full stock Lee Enfields, and Mosins (incl 2 nice Finn re-worked M'91s) Also saw a few Swede Mausers. My Garand and M1903 Springfield radar was out. There were a couple of Springfield M1s priced @$2000 and a 1911 vintage low-number M1903 with a replacement 1941 barrel and a $1500 tag. The M1903 seller had a detailed write-up explaining the rarity of this piece due to it`s early make, plus the fact that it had been re-heat treated at the arsenal. Low number M1903s were NOT re-heat treated by the military. Folks should be careful about paying a premium price for early production M1s and M1903s unless they remain in their original configuration with original barrels, stocks and other parts. Other than that they are just a curiosity due to their early production and are just another receiver that went thru the re-build and overhaul process one or more times. I also saw an M1 bayonet and scabbard with a $225 tag on it, about 3x the going rate. There was a CNo7 sitting in the proper crate with accessories and a $1500 tag on it. All of these things were still available as of 3 PM.
There seemed to be a lot of the SKSs with a hockey-sock full of various aftermarket stocks, mags, sights, flashlites and other bolt-on whifftickers that are being flogged for them. There were many of all of the Winchester lever guns worth looking at, incl some that a fellow had color-casehardened at some point. A few of the older Winchesters showed various examples of bunkhouse wood carving with charging bears, leaping stags,etc. I was taken by an early M99 Savage TD rifle in .22HP that looked almost too good to be true-a far cry from my Grandpa`s homesteader`s original with a cracked stock that he had clubbed a coyote with to save on ammo! There is always a table with a selection of Nazi and German militaria on it. A few yrs ago there was a handsome portrait of old AH himself, which had been de-Nazified by over-painting the swastika on his armband. I wonder where this stuff keeps coming from.
This show is always worth seeing. I`ve had a table in the past and think I`ll reserve another one next yr.
There was a reasonable selection of MILSURPs incl the usual bobbed Lee-Enfields, P14s and Rosses, RC M98 Mausers, full stock Lee Enfields, and Mosins (incl 2 nice Finn re-worked M'91s) Also saw a few Swede Mausers. My Garand and M1903 Springfield radar was out. There were a couple of Springfield M1s priced @$2000 and a 1911 vintage low-number M1903 with a replacement 1941 barrel and a $1500 tag. The M1903 seller had a detailed write-up explaining the rarity of this piece due to it`s early make, plus the fact that it had been re-heat treated at the arsenal. Low number M1903s were NOT re-heat treated by the military. Folks should be careful about paying a premium price for early production M1s and M1903s unless they remain in their original configuration with original barrels, stocks and other parts. Other than that they are just a curiosity due to their early production and are just another receiver that went thru the re-build and overhaul process one or more times. I also saw an M1 bayonet and scabbard with a $225 tag on it, about 3x the going rate. There was a CNo7 sitting in the proper crate with accessories and a $1500 tag on it. All of these things were still available as of 3 PM.
There seemed to be a lot of the SKSs with a hockey-sock full of various aftermarket stocks, mags, sights, flashlites and other bolt-on whifftickers that are being flogged for them. There were many of all of the Winchester lever guns worth looking at, incl some that a fellow had color-casehardened at some point. A few of the older Winchesters showed various examples of bunkhouse wood carving with charging bears, leaping stags,etc. I was taken by an early M99 Savage TD rifle in .22HP that looked almost too good to be true-a far cry from my Grandpa`s homesteader`s original with a cracked stock that he had clubbed a coyote with to save on ammo! There is always a table with a selection of Nazi and German militaria on it. A few yrs ago there was a handsome portrait of old AH himself, which had been de-Nazified by over-painting the swastika on his armband. I wonder where this stuff keeps coming from.
This show is always worth seeing. I`ve had a table in the past and think I`ll reserve another one next yr.
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