- Location
- Southern Vancouver Island
I wonder if my Remington Lee 303 would look "Fit for a Gentleman" with some cleaning and polishing.
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Oh Fook Yeah!
Sure be a nice one to work with fer sure.
I wonder if my Remington Lee 303 would look "Fit for a Gentleman" with some cleaning and polishing.
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I think you'd be some hot in lederhosen and a funny feathered hat.![]()
i had lederhosen as a kid... And the hat is not friggin' funny!
Yeah... ur the smartest guy...![]()
Not much a fan of nice wood, she’s borderline.
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Ruger M77 MKII Express in .30/06...
Assuming you are using the word "gentleman" to describe yourself . . . but perhaps you should offer some reliable references!
..........well said.......Kind of interesting what this thread raises regarding "gentleman". When I read the OP's original posting, I got to thinking about the movie - "The League of Extraordinary Gentleman", and a certain rifle named "Matilda", as I recall. So, me being the definitive red-neck western-canadian trash colonial, I am probably about totally opposite to what a British Gentleman might be. I can only guess. Based on Hollywood, and books, I would say that a Gentleman's stuff is always "understated", doesn't stand out. The man himself is contained, reserved, confident - not a loud mouth lout looking for attention, neither is his stuff. I would think his hunting duds would be real Tweeds, in wool, with long, calf high leather boots. He would probably smoke a pipe. And, he would hunt wearing a "sports jacket", and a tie, and short pants, climate permitting. I do not know anyone like him, but have read of the sort. His rifle would be a Rigby, or Holland & Holland or Wesley Richards, or any other of the British gun makers who used German Mausers to make really nicely engraved hunting guns. Oddly enough, I think many came equipped with brass balls, if you follow the stories of Bell, Corbett and those guys. Altogether, a curious bunch...




























