wayupnorth
CGN Ultra frequent flyer
- Location
- Northern Alberta
The Great Survival Rifle / Pack Rifle Experiment of 2016/17
Most people are intrigued by the theory behind the Survival Rifle, even more so when you start talking about a pack rifle or hiking rifle. We have seen an upsurge in different 22LR rifles over the last couple years that are vying to claim a stake in this unique market. I myself will admit that I am just as guilty about wanting a nice survival rifle – and who wouldn’t! With all the TV shows about prepping and ‘end of days’ not to mention the political turmoil around the world - it’s a very appealing market place because everyone’s mind goes to these bad situations when they lay in bed and sleep does not come for them.
Over the years I have tried to make my own pack rifle with some pretty good but limited success. Taking a 22LR rifle I own and swapping out the stock for as short and light of one as you can find and trying to shave weight where you can to make the rifle as portable and packable as you can. Everyone’s first attempt is usually a old Cooey that has been in the gun safe for years and no one would ever miss. My best attempt was in 1993 with a Stainless Ruger 10/22 that i swapped over onto a Butler Creek folding stock.
While these rifles filled the need they were missing the lightness and pack-ability.
Fast forward to today.
I find myself living in remote Northern Alberta. My down time from work I fill with a mixture of taking either my Inflatable boat out onto remote no road access lakes or my power boat up and down the local rivers or hiking and camping trips hundreds of miles away from the next human being with either my wife and kids or with co-workers and friends. I do these fun trips almost every weekend and I find myself needing a better pack rifle. I go out with the Canadian Rangers and we carry (currently) the old Lee Enfield 303 and while that is a perfect gun for bear defense and predator defense it is not a fun gun to pack through the woods and you defiantly could not use it to take down a brace of coneys or a couple Hungarian partridge for a nice campfire meal. There is a need in my life for a survival rifle and a pack rifle.
I have even been able to talk my wife into my need for one of these rifles. All it takes is wondering into a Black Bear a couple times while out on a hike or having the motor on the boat not catch when and you have to overnight in the true northern wilds to show a person the need for such a gun. Without being allowed to carry pistols for recreational use here in Canada we are left with 22LR pack rifles.
So here I sit. I go to the local gun store and they carry none of the ‘new and improved’ pack rifles. I look up reviews of these guns and you can only see so much on your computer screen. You can't see if the gun is made of quality product, you can’t see the quality control of the manufacturing. You can't see if they are accurate and repeatable in that accuracy. You can't see if they are reliable and will function and fit the need of Northern Canada, or on the river, or in the bush. I finally came to the conclusion that I was going to have to pick up a couple of these guns and test them. Originally my plan was to pick up 3 or 4 of them and find out which one I liked the best than sell off the others. We are friends or so I’d like to think, so I’ll tell you a secret that my wife likes to holds over my head......I can’t sell guns. I don’t know if it’s a hoarder gene passed down from generations of Scottish blood that won’t let me sell guns i don’t want or use or just a really deep seated fear that one day the banks and governments will fail and rule of law will leave us. I don’t know what it is but I can’t sell guns. So I knew even before i started this experiment that I would be keeping all these guns but now I needed to find what niche was best filled by each one of them. Which one will live in my Quad, which one my holiday trailer, which one in my boat? And so begun the test.
Question 1) Which guns and 2) at what price.
One good thing about living in the remote Northern Alberta – the pay is good and there is no place to spend your hard earned money so you get lots of time to stockpile money and buy toys! But I did not want a dozen pack rifles I wanted a couple or at least enough I that I could test them and compare them without catching a tongue lashing from the wife over the VISA bill.
I decided there were 4 rifles i wanted to test – I would say these are the 4 most readily available ones on the market right now and i feel they are the ones that the manufactures are pushing on us to fill this niche.
The first one being the Chiappa Little Badger, the second being the Ruger 10/22 Take Down, the third being the Marlin Papoose 70PSS and the last being the Henry US Survival Rifle.
Ideally I wanted to spend around $250-$400 on each gun and be into this experiment for about $1000-$1200 not counting ammo and optics. So I sat back starting in the fall of 2016 and I started to stalk these guns online watching for sales and waiting.
I was lucky going into the purchasing part of this test because I had already picked up a Chiappa Little Badger the year before and it was already sitting in my gun safe – so that took a nice bite out of this initial lay out of money. I picked up the Little Badger for $225.70 and I verified that the price is still the same today and if anything you can pick them up for a little less than that.
My next break came the week before Christmas. One of the larger gun stores had a nice early Boxing Day sale the week before Christmas and I was able to pick up a Henry US Survival Rifle for $291.36 down from the regular price of $370. As luck would have it the next day the same sale saw the Ruger 10/22 Take Down on sale and I struck again and picked one up for $446.27 down from its regular price of $525. My luck would hold out and on Christmas Eve day I received a flyer for the same company and the Ruger 10/22 Take Down was going on sale for ever CHEAPER on Boxing Day. I called and voiced a complaint and was given the super sale price of $367.49.
Everything was looking good, I was 3 guns into the test and waiting on the Marlin Papoose to come on sale. Now is when my luck did change. I waited and waited and I even called and begged.... I tried to use my 20 years as a Paramedic and my 20 years as a Volunteer Firefighter and my current status as a Reservist with the military and I could not shake loose a sale price on the Papoose. I set an end date of the end of January – if no sale I would buy at full price – my Scottish blood be damned! The end of January came and I called my father down in Calgary. I gave him marching orders. Go to the LGS and pick up the Papoose and send it up. As luck would have it my dad had a $20 off coupon and I had sent him a Gift Card I had for $75 for the same store so I did get $95 off the gun – total price before that was $440.90.
So I down had all 4 guns and was into them all for $1325.45.
Now the testing began.
I had put pen to paper and came up with a couple questions I wanted answered about these guns than I asked on Canadian Gun Nutz if anyone had anything they wanted answered about these guns and modified my testing criteria to add some of their questions. In the end I have what I think is a very good comprehensive list of what I want this experiment to answer. So with the boring preamble out of the way let’s go into the testing!
the guns:
Chiappa Little Badger
Henry US Survival Rifle AR7
Ruger 10/22 Take Down
Marlin 70PSS Papoose
VIDEO!

Most people are intrigued by the theory behind the Survival Rifle, even more so when you start talking about a pack rifle or hiking rifle. We have seen an upsurge in different 22LR rifles over the last couple years that are vying to claim a stake in this unique market. I myself will admit that I am just as guilty about wanting a nice survival rifle – and who wouldn’t! With all the TV shows about prepping and ‘end of days’ not to mention the political turmoil around the world - it’s a very appealing market place because everyone’s mind goes to these bad situations when they lay in bed and sleep does not come for them.
Over the years I have tried to make my own pack rifle with some pretty good but limited success. Taking a 22LR rifle I own and swapping out the stock for as short and light of one as you can find and trying to shave weight where you can to make the rifle as portable and packable as you can. Everyone’s first attempt is usually a old Cooey that has been in the gun safe for years and no one would ever miss. My best attempt was in 1993 with a Stainless Ruger 10/22 that i swapped over onto a Butler Creek folding stock.

While these rifles filled the need they were missing the lightness and pack-ability.
Fast forward to today.
I find myself living in remote Northern Alberta. My down time from work I fill with a mixture of taking either my Inflatable boat out onto remote no road access lakes or my power boat up and down the local rivers or hiking and camping trips hundreds of miles away from the next human being with either my wife and kids or with co-workers and friends. I do these fun trips almost every weekend and I find myself needing a better pack rifle. I go out with the Canadian Rangers and we carry (currently) the old Lee Enfield 303 and while that is a perfect gun for bear defense and predator defense it is not a fun gun to pack through the woods and you defiantly could not use it to take down a brace of coneys or a couple Hungarian partridge for a nice campfire meal. There is a need in my life for a survival rifle and a pack rifle.
I have even been able to talk my wife into my need for one of these rifles. All it takes is wondering into a Black Bear a couple times while out on a hike or having the motor on the boat not catch when and you have to overnight in the true northern wilds to show a person the need for such a gun. Without being allowed to carry pistols for recreational use here in Canada we are left with 22LR pack rifles.
So here I sit. I go to the local gun store and they carry none of the ‘new and improved’ pack rifles. I look up reviews of these guns and you can only see so much on your computer screen. You can't see if the gun is made of quality product, you can’t see the quality control of the manufacturing. You can't see if they are accurate and repeatable in that accuracy. You can't see if they are reliable and will function and fit the need of Northern Canada, or on the river, or in the bush. I finally came to the conclusion that I was going to have to pick up a couple of these guns and test them. Originally my plan was to pick up 3 or 4 of them and find out which one I liked the best than sell off the others. We are friends or so I’d like to think, so I’ll tell you a secret that my wife likes to holds over my head......I can’t sell guns. I don’t know if it’s a hoarder gene passed down from generations of Scottish blood that won’t let me sell guns i don’t want or use or just a really deep seated fear that one day the banks and governments will fail and rule of law will leave us. I don’t know what it is but I can’t sell guns. So I knew even before i started this experiment that I would be keeping all these guns but now I needed to find what niche was best filled by each one of them. Which one will live in my Quad, which one my holiday trailer, which one in my boat? And so begun the test.
Question 1) Which guns and 2) at what price.
One good thing about living in the remote Northern Alberta – the pay is good and there is no place to spend your hard earned money so you get lots of time to stockpile money and buy toys! But I did not want a dozen pack rifles I wanted a couple or at least enough I that I could test them and compare them without catching a tongue lashing from the wife over the VISA bill.
I decided there were 4 rifles i wanted to test – I would say these are the 4 most readily available ones on the market right now and i feel they are the ones that the manufactures are pushing on us to fill this niche.
The first one being the Chiappa Little Badger, the second being the Ruger 10/22 Take Down, the third being the Marlin Papoose 70PSS and the last being the Henry US Survival Rifle.
Ideally I wanted to spend around $250-$400 on each gun and be into this experiment for about $1000-$1200 not counting ammo and optics. So I sat back starting in the fall of 2016 and I started to stalk these guns online watching for sales and waiting.
I was lucky going into the purchasing part of this test because I had already picked up a Chiappa Little Badger the year before and it was already sitting in my gun safe – so that took a nice bite out of this initial lay out of money. I picked up the Little Badger for $225.70 and I verified that the price is still the same today and if anything you can pick them up for a little less than that.
My next break came the week before Christmas. One of the larger gun stores had a nice early Boxing Day sale the week before Christmas and I was able to pick up a Henry US Survival Rifle for $291.36 down from the regular price of $370. As luck would have it the next day the same sale saw the Ruger 10/22 Take Down on sale and I struck again and picked one up for $446.27 down from its regular price of $525. My luck would hold out and on Christmas Eve day I received a flyer for the same company and the Ruger 10/22 Take Down was going on sale for ever CHEAPER on Boxing Day. I called and voiced a complaint and was given the super sale price of $367.49.
Everything was looking good, I was 3 guns into the test and waiting on the Marlin Papoose to come on sale. Now is when my luck did change. I waited and waited and I even called and begged.... I tried to use my 20 years as a Paramedic and my 20 years as a Volunteer Firefighter and my current status as a Reservist with the military and I could not shake loose a sale price on the Papoose. I set an end date of the end of January – if no sale I would buy at full price – my Scottish blood be damned! The end of January came and I called my father down in Calgary. I gave him marching orders. Go to the LGS and pick up the Papoose and send it up. As luck would have it my dad had a $20 off coupon and I had sent him a Gift Card I had for $75 for the same store so I did get $95 off the gun – total price before that was $440.90.
So I down had all 4 guns and was into them all for $1325.45.
Now the testing began.
I had put pen to paper and came up with a couple questions I wanted answered about these guns than I asked on Canadian Gun Nutz if anyone had anything they wanted answered about these guns and modified my testing criteria to add some of their questions. In the end I have what I think is a very good comprehensive list of what I want this experiment to answer. So with the boring preamble out of the way let’s go into the testing!
the guns:
Chiappa Little Badger


Henry US Survival Rifle AR7


Ruger 10/22 Take Down


Marlin 70PSS Papoose



VIDEO!
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