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By Gene Hill, 1928--1997

Reprinted from "Sporting Classics Daily"



My dear grandchildren,

Today is the day they come to take my guns. I thought I’d write something about the way I feel about it, because, being my grandchildren, you might otherwise never get a chance to know how much so many of us cared about our guns and how deeply they represented a precious part of our lives.

Of course, the hunting has long since disappeared. It wasn’t too long after the so-called “humane societies” had seen to the end of gunning seasons that there were no more birds or animals to speak of. The white-tailed deer were about the first to almost disappear from a combination of overcrowding, disease and starvation. After Ducks Unlimited was forced to close down, the breeding grounds were no longer cared for, and except for a few mallard crossbreeds and the odd farm-raised Canada goose, the skies were empty.

It seemed that once they got the hunting stopped that was all they cared about, and when the money that the hunters had contributed every year dried up so did the animals, and that was virtually the end of it. A lot of us had predicted what would happen—but we were voted out, and that was that. It was like the end of a crusade. Once the thing was over the people who felt they were righteous all forgot what the point of it was.

It seemed, as so many of us tried to say to the politicians, that the Brothers of Bambi and all the rest didn’t really care about the animals themselves; all they wanted was the end of what they thought was cruel. Now they know what cruel is—or should.

Some of the gun clubs continued for a while, and a few of us stayed on to shoot a little trap and skeet, but somehow it wasn’t the same. Crowds would come around and wave signs and carry on against us, and the simple pleasure of smelling a little powder and breaking a few clay targets was nationally shouted down as something akin to criminal.

Looking back on it, I can see how it all happened—I think. A lot still believe it was the growing criminal lobby that was at the bottom of it. And it turned out that it would be easier to stop the hunting seasons first and then make a play for the guns than the other way around—which they had tried first.

There was even a time, long before they closed down the hunting, that we used to hang our guns on the wall the way you would a painting.

I know you’ll read about it in school, but I wanted you to hear the other side of it at least one time. You might get some idea when you see the pictures of me and your grandmother and friends with our bird dogs and retrievers.

We had some marvelous times together, especially down along the Eastern Shore. Back in the 1970s there were nearly a million geese there, and early in the season, fine flights of pintails, which were our favorites. (You ought to look up the pintail in one of your books to see what a beautiful bird it was.) And there were always the old standbys—the green-headed mallard.

Somewhere in my stuff you’ll find a couple of duck calls—you ought to save them. I suspect they’ll be collectors’ items before too long. The one that makes sort of a quack is the mallard call, which we used most—the others are goose calls, and I think I saved a couple of pintail whistles.

I don't suppose you can imagine a day with the dawn storming out of the northeast and all of us dressed in six layers of old clothes, the retrievers whining softly with excitement and us crouched down in the blind making soft clucks on the calls whenever a flock of birds seemed interested in our decoys.

We’d play a little game a lot—we’d talk about having roast duck or goose for supper, and we’d take turns picking something to go along with it. Your grandmother liked things like turnips and squash—she was a Yankee—and I liked things like greens and collards (you might have to look those up!). I guess that maybe all the fooling with guns and dogs and calls and decoys and the silly arguments over how to cook a duck or goose and was beach-plum jelly as good as cranberry don’t amount to much—but things were simpler then, and we and our friends looked forward to those days as much as anything I can remember.

Well, I started to tell you about the guns. Mostly I had shotguns. But I had a few rifles that I loved and had carried many a mile from Alaska to Africa—and over quite a little country in between.

Some of my shotguns I thought were lovely—to me they were a form of art, and I liked to look at them almost as much as I liked to use them. Some were Italian, some English, some German, but most were made right here in the United States. Back when I did most of my bird hunting, we had any number of ducks and geese, as I said before, but also, right here in the East, if you can imagine it, we would go out after ruffed grouse and woodcock, English pheasant and quail.


Most of the best quail hunting was down South, and we’d go there whenever we had a chance, and we always hoped to spend some time gunning doves. We’d argue about how to cook doves and quail, too, but no need to go into all that since I don’t think you’d really understand how deeply this was a part of our lives.

Our bird dogs were named Jag and Little Ben and Tippy and Judy Pup and Daisy and even one called George, because he looked like a friend who gave him to us. I know that doesn’t mean much now either, but I just wanted you to know—for no particular reason except it’s kind of important to me just to put their names on paper.

All the songs and stories I like to remember best have come from the times spent with my friends in some gun club or hunting camp.

They used to tease me a lot about how much I loved the shotguns. I guess I had more than enough, since I had one (some said two) for about every kind of hunting. You didn’t really need them all—but as I said, I liked them for a lot of reasons. There was even a time, long before they closed down the hunting, that we used to hang them on the wall the way you would a painting.

I guess there’s no great sense of going into all that now since it doesn’t mean much—just an old man meandering about something that he once loved very much, and that a part of his life went along with them on the day they took them away. I guess, to be honest, that all the songs and stories I like to remember best have come from the times spent with my friends in some gun club or hunting camp. But even to me all that is beginning to seem so very long ago.

The police are the ones that are coming to get the guns. I know they don’t like that job much either, but since there are so many funny laws now, I guess they just have to go ahead and do what they have to do.

I must let you in on a secret, unlawful thing I did. I took the guns I liked best and buried them in the field behind the barn where I used to run the dogs on quail and woodcock and pheasant every now and then. I just couldn’t stand the thought of having them melted down or thrown off a boat into the ocean. I saved a few to turn in, and I hope that does the trick. It seems that you can get away with a lot of pretty bad crimes, but if they catch an honest man with a gun that he hid away, out of sentiment, it goes pretty hard with him.

Well, they’re all gone now. The young fellow that came for them was a state trooper I used to shoot trap with every now and then. He looked through the stuff I handed over and didn’t see my old favorite trap gun. It wasn’t much to look at anyway—the checkering was smooth and the bluing pretty much worn away. And I think he took note that a few others weren’t there either, but he didn’t say a word. He’s a nice young man, and as I say, just doing his duty. I suspect he saw the fresh dirt on my boots, and I suspect I saw a small tear or two when he put my little collection in his car. I’m not sure I did, but I hope so.

With all my wishes that things may someday change,

Your loving grandfather,

Gene


Don't blame me. I voted for Trump.

Democrats would burn this country to the ground, if they could rule over the ashes.
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A preview of coming attractions.

Except it won't be "nice young troopers with a tear or two in their eyes," it'll be geared up thugs from the GESTAPO. (Gun Elimination Service To Assure Perpetual Order.)

L.W.


"Always go straight forward, and if you meet the devil, cut him in two and go between the pieces." (William Sturgis, clipper ship captain, 1830s.)
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Tag for later


Mercy ceases to be a virtue when it enables further injustice. -Brent Weeks

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This is becoming all to real.

" It seems that you can get away with a lot of pretty bad crimes, but if they catch an honest man with a gun that he hid away, out of sentiment, it goes pretty hard with him."


Hunt with Class and Classics

Religion: A founder of The Church of Spray and Pray

Acquit v. t. To render a judgment in a murder case in San Francisco... EQUAL, adj. As bad as something else. Ambrose Bierce “The Devil's Dictionary”







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"When guns are outlawed, only outlaws will have guns".

Bumper sticker Dad had on his pick-up, mid "70's.

I will be an outlaw.

Last edited by prplbkrr; 02/28/21.

prplbkrr = Purple Biker

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My Father, a WW2 survivor from the German side, once told me "When they come for the guns, its all ready too late"....as though he knew what was going to happen next.
I cant tell you how often I hear those words ringing in my ears lately.


.... like tears in the rain
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It's a sad day in America when we are even having this conversation 😠


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I'll bash them over the well lid out back and burn them in a pulled before I give them away.


TRUMP- GABBARD 2024
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"I'll bash them over the well lid out back and burn them...."

Might I suggest you reserve that treatment for the people that try to take them?


"I'm from the government, and I'm here to help"
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Originally Posted by AKA_Spook
My Father, a WW2 survivor from the German side, once told me "When they come for the guns, its all ready too late"....as though he knew what was going to happen next.
I cant tell you how often I hear those words ringing in my ears lately.


Your dad fought for Germany in the war? That is fascinating. I would love to talk to you about that.
Germans are portrayed as monsters but, in 1942 an 18 year old German kid was just like an 18 year old kid from Ohio.
His government was at war, they told him to go into the army, and he went into the army.

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I'm sure they will get mine but they will be battle field pick ups.


NOVIT EMIM DOMINUS QUI SUNT EUIS {Arnauld Amalric} "Kill them all,God will know His." Never trust Horses ,Women and very few Mules.A good rifle will let in lots of AIR AND LIGHT.
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Originally Posted by catosilvaje
I'm sure they will get mine but they will be battle field pick ups.


[Linked Image from sadanduseless.com]

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Yep. If you’re still around to write letters after the confiscation, you didn’t fight enough.
7mm


"Preserving the Constitution, fighting off the nibblers and chippers, even nibblers and chippers with good intentions, was once regarded by conservatives as the first duty of the citizen. It still is." � Wesley Pruden


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Originally Posted by 7mmbuster
Yep. If you’re still around to write letters after the confiscation, you didn’t fight enough.
7mm






You are the only one with balls so far.








Take care, Willie


Cry to the heavens and let slip the dogs of war. For they must feed on the bones of tyranny. In order for men to have freedom and liberty.
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Tag for my liberal bird hunters.

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The 2nd amendment doesn’t have anything to do with ducks or fugking quail.


Originally Posted by Geno67
Trump being classless,tasteless and clueless as usual.
Originally Posted by Judman
Sorry, trump is a no tax payin pile of shiit.
Originally Posted by KSMITH
My young wife decided to play the field and had moved several dudes into my house
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Originally Posted by MPat70
It's a sad day in America when we are even having this conversation 😠

We ain't having this conversation... At least I ain't...Come and get it.


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The writer had no idea about cancel culture, but think about it....PETA is doing great, Earth First has won people over with "conservation biology" psuedoscience....the grown ups need to step up.


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tag


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Originally Posted by deflave
The 2nd amendment doesn’t have anything to do with ducks or fugking quail.




Consider who posted it.

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