The "sporterized" P14 rifles were all over the BC coast at one time. They were popular boat guns. A friend dug the barreled action of one out of his garden and hung it on the wall.
I worked on a guy's crab boat one time and he had a thoroughly rusted one hanging up on two nails behind the stove. I got the action moving and bore cleaned out with WD40 and whatever light oil I could find on the boat but I don't remember if I ever found a cartridge on that boat. A friend bought an old gillnetter and it came with one hung over the bunk. He showed no interest in it all despite being gun nut, having worked for Lever Arms at one time and harbouring a small but interesting collection at home.
One time I was assigned to the fish packer Lady Augusta as cook for one herring season and when I was making up my bunk, there was a large lump under mattress and when I lifted it up there was a P14. I found a spent 303 cartridge and chambered it and though the bolt extracted the brass, it wouldn't eject it. I could have taken that rifle home but I stood it up in a closet and left it on the boat.
I worked on a guy's crab boat one time and he had a thoroughly rusted one hanging up on two nails behind the stove. I got the action moving and bore cleaned out with WD40 and whatever light oil I could find on the boat but I don't remember if I ever found a cartridge on that boat. A friend bought an old gillnetter and it came with one hung over the bunk. He showed no interest in it all despite being gun nut, having worked for Lever Arms at one time and harbouring a small but interesting collection at home.
One time I was assigned to the fish packer Lady Augusta as cook for one herring season and when I was making up my bunk, there was a large lump under mattress and when I lifted it up there was a P14. I found a spent 303 cartridge and chambered it and though the bolt extracted the brass, it wouldn't eject it. I could have taken that rifle home but I stood it up in a closet and left it on the boat.