Nice Ithaca M37 20ga

they are very light guns, never had one with a VR.

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Very nice find indeed. I'd love to find one of the older ones with the corncob forestock. Good thing you moved fast. I hesitated on a rifle that was up on another forum yesterday. Thought it would go quickly, and oh well ... my hesitation saved me several hundred $.
 
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Not as good a pic as SC's. 1971 made M37, and the previous owner worked it real hard on the BC lower mainland. The corncob fore-end and newer barrel were add ons from myself. Hard to see but it's about 6.2 lbs. The plain full choke barrel deserves to be chasing huns or pheasants on the flatlands, it's just a bit too tight for close bunnies but it works.
 
Nice little piece of shooting equipment. Should be great on upland birds such as ruffies, woodcock, crows or the like. Never were the smoothest "pumpers" but very reliable.
 
Fine old shotguns!

I hear you Hook, up here I stumbled across a 1940 made M37 with the factory original plain modified barrel in not too bad a condition. The owners really did not know much about thier pile of inherited shotguns. That is, until I told them exactly what they had. Thier teenage son had a change of heart for a sale or two, and suddenly had a new appreciation for older, well made shotguns. It was hiding behind another nice 20 gauge, a Remington Model 17 pumpgun. Thier grandfather bought all his hunting long guns, Savages, Ithacas, and the one Remington, all locally in Upper New York state before he moved to Canada.

Oh well, at least they know now...............:)
 
Nice find, it looks like you found exactly what you had been waiting for.

I'd like to own a nice one some day, a reliable one....

I have two memories of this model that will be stuck with me until the day I die:

....as a young hunter aged 16 my buddy got snow in the barrel while rabbit hunting - tried to shoot the snow out...bulged barrel and had to order a new barrel...it was his dad's gun, a real beauty that everyone wanted to handle.

....years later another buddy wanted to hunt bunnies and pheasants a little bit, no firearms licence, he picked up an old green spray painted 37 from his old man's friend, the gun consistently jammed at the worst times it was almost comical, the hunts would become very entertaining to say the least..
 
....years later another buddy wanted to hunt bunnies and pheasants a little bit, no firearms licence, he picked up an old green spray painted 37 from his old man's friend, the gun consistently jammed at the worst times it was almost comical, the hunts would become very entertaining to say the least..

Ahh the dumb white trash, yet most of them have PALS!!!. Really WHAT THE #### ARE YOU CFSC "Instructors" doing? Show some professionalism at least!!!!

They really should play some banjo music each time a small town gun show opens the doors to the unwashed masses!

Such is my experience in Alberta and Saskatchewan.

Not all of them of course, but the vast majority of patrons. Many even complaining they had to pay $5 to get in....

The arena does not rent itself.
 
I love them also and need just one more to complete the set a 28ga. But I will be dammed to pay $1100 and tax for a standard grade pump.
Not sure where Ithaca's thinks they are going to sell those for that money you would want more than standard grade. One would think the company would be trying to compete with the wingmasters and keep their prices in that range but no so.

Ya, they are wickedly overpriced even if they are made in the USA but the new Winchester Lever guns are priced in the same $1000+ range too. Must be the nostalgic factor.

Farmboy, whats the deal with having the AAA $700 bucks more than MSRP?
 
Ya, they are wickedly overpriced even if they are made in the USA but the new Winchester Lever guns are priced in the same $1000+ range too. Must be the nostalgic factor.

Farmboy, whats the deal with having the AAA $700 bucks more than MSRP?

Blame the pitiful "canadian" market for guns.

The importers know that and mark prices up accordingly.
 
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