I will apologize in advance to my moral and intellectual superiors out there. I know I'm doing it wrong and that I should probably be hung from a lampost and bayonetted foreven thinking about it.
But.
When I am hunting and my bush radar is red lining...I like to carry my gun with one up the spout and the safety on. I like to sling the rifle that way too when I am out tramping in the bush or sneaking down a game trail.
I know that I could trip over my shadow; I know that my foot could accidentally come out of my boot and my big toe could get inside the trigger guard, that the safety could accidentally come off and I could accidentally discharge the rifle and effectively dispatch myself from the gene pool in classic Darwinian Moment.
I could also win Lotto 6/49 too; but that doesn't mean I am going to abandon my RRSP's and convert them into lottery tickets. When I am alone in deer country and it is safe to do so, I carry my rifle loaded and safed. I have coins for the nannies and safety nazis out there - go to a pay phone and call somebody that cares.
Having said all that...My last bolt gun had a two position safety and the damn thing nearly drove me nuts. When walking with the rifle slung over my shoulder, the bechitted contraption would work itself open and the round up the spout would fall out. If I didn't notice it in time, the ones in the mag would flip out too because the spring tension on the floor plate was so lame. And yeah, it came from the factory like that! I once unslung the rifle to line up on a little doe for the freezer - and the bolt was open and there were no shells in the gun! Needless to say that friggin POS went up on the used gun rack on a trade, and I developed a searing contempt for two-position safeties. If I had to depend on that rifle for my supper I suspect I would starve to death and Darwin and the Devil would have me again!
I like the Mauser safties or ones that effectively lock up the action AND safe the rifle. My question is this: do the Sako rifles have a safety like that? I think Winchester and Ruger do, don't they?
Your scholarly opinion is appreciated...
But.
When I am hunting and my bush radar is red lining...I like to carry my gun with one up the spout and the safety on. I like to sling the rifle that way too when I am out tramping in the bush or sneaking down a game trail.
I know that I could trip over my shadow; I know that my foot could accidentally come out of my boot and my big toe could get inside the trigger guard, that the safety could accidentally come off and I could accidentally discharge the rifle and effectively dispatch myself from the gene pool in classic Darwinian Moment.
I could also win Lotto 6/49 too; but that doesn't mean I am going to abandon my RRSP's and convert them into lottery tickets. When I am alone in deer country and it is safe to do so, I carry my rifle loaded and safed. I have coins for the nannies and safety nazis out there - go to a pay phone and call somebody that cares.
Having said all that...My last bolt gun had a two position safety and the damn thing nearly drove me nuts. When walking with the rifle slung over my shoulder, the bechitted contraption would work itself open and the round up the spout would fall out. If I didn't notice it in time, the ones in the mag would flip out too because the spring tension on the floor plate was so lame. And yeah, it came from the factory like that! I once unslung the rifle to line up on a little doe for the freezer - and the bolt was open and there were no shells in the gun! Needless to say that friggin POS went up on the used gun rack on a trade, and I developed a searing contempt for two-position safeties. If I had to depend on that rifle for my supper I suspect I would starve to death and Darwin and the Devil would have me again!
I like the Mauser safties or ones that effectively lock up the action AND safe the rifle. My question is this: do the Sako rifles have a safety like that? I think Winchester and Ruger do, don't they?
Your scholarly opinion is appreciated...




















































