First Love

EastCOYotes

Sergeant of the Hide
Full Member
Minuteman
Feb 10, 2019
446
176
Idalia Colorado
What’s your “first love” rifle? Mine is my first centerfire I got about 15 years ago from my parents as a gift. A savage in .243 Winchester, have loved savages and the .243 cartridge ever since. It’s nothing fancy (maybe they paid $300 for the rifle scope combo?) but I’ve still got the same Simmons scope on it and it’s never lost zero. Still shoots 3/4 or better groups ever time, and has killed lots of coyotes.
 

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First true love was the 60. She was a pig but she was fun and she worked. Didn't have her for too long. The Saw replaced her pretty quick. Second love was the M4, I think we were the second unit to replace the 16s with them.
 
Mine would have to be my brother's 22LR Marlin bolt action. He was killed 2 years before it was given to me and I was 14. Many squirrels have fallen to it.

Since some guys rather hi-JACK things, I'll also expand this to include all time favorites.

That would be my grandfather's Marlin lever action deer rifle in .35 Reminton. He passed away when I was 10 and I thought his guns went to the 4 winds. About 6-8 years ago, a cousin had this one and gave it to me.
 
Ted Williams aka Winchester 1200 , 28 inch , vent rib , with a com0ensated choke that looks like a MA Deuce shroud . I was stoked to find I could buy a case of shells ..
 
Like all first love’s,some may be life changer’s others may go against the grain.
We had SlR’s & M16’s,I shot well with the SlR & disliked it intensely,I shot well with the M16 & preferred it,but when we got the Steyr’s I creamed my jeans & never looked back at my old bush pigs.
 
Dad and I used to go into First Stop Guns 3-4 times per week. This was long before the fire while they were still in the little pawn shop.

The only rifle I owned at the time was a Marlin 60. I did have a TC Contender in 30 Herrett though.

Whenever we were there, I would pick up this Savage 110 in 7mm-08. It was on the shelf for like 6 or 8 months.

On this day, we had gone to another store that sold furniture, appliances and sporting goods. While we were there, dad bought me a Tasco World Class 3-9x scope. I had no idea why, but I'm not one to turn down a nice gift.
We got to First Stop a little later and were looking at all the rifles and pistols. After looking and feeling my way through the racks, I picked up that Savage again.
As I'm fondling it, dad asked if I liked it and of course I said yes. He then asked if I wanted it and my response was that I couldn't afford it. Dad said "I didn't ask if you could afford it, I asked if you wanted it".
Once I understood what he was saying, I was stunned. I told him hell yes. He sent me out to the truck to retrieve the Tasco and that's when I realized he had planned this.

We got the scope mounted, bought two boxes of ammo and went back to the house to grab our shooting stuff.
The rifle shot amazingly well and got even better with a handload of IMR 3031 and a 140 ballistic tip.

Over the last 32 years, that rifle has taken dozens of game animals, countless numbers of prairie dogs, coyotes, rock chucks, foxes, jack rabbits and even a few badgers.
It will always have a spot in my safe.
 
Dad and I used to go into First Stop Guns 3-4 times per week. This was long before the fire while they were still in the little pawn shop.

The only rifle I owned at the time was a Marlin 60. I did have a TC Contender in 30 Herrett though.

Whenever we were there, I would pick up this Savage 110 in 7mm-08. It was on the shelf for like 6 or 8 months.

On this day, we had gone to another store that sold furniture, appliances and sporting goods. While we were there, dad bought me a Tasco World Class 3-9x scope. I had no idea why, but I'm not one to turn down a nice gift.
We got to First Stop a little later and were looking at all the rifles and pistols. After looking and feeling my way through the racks, I picked up that Savage again.
As I'm fondling it, dad asked if I liked it and of course I said yes. He then asked if I wanted it and my response was that I couldn't afford it. Dad said "I didn't ask if you could afford it, I asked if you wanted it".
Once I understood what he was saying, I was stunned. I told him hell yes. He sent me out to the truck to retrieve the Tasco and that's when I realized he had planned this.

We got the scope mounted, bought two boxes of ammo and went back to the house to grab our shooting stuff.
The rifle shot amazingly well and got even better with a handload of IMR 3031 and a 140 ballistic tip.

Over the last 32 years, that rifle has taken dozens of game animals, countless numbers of prairie dogs, coyotes, rock chucks, foxes, jack rabbits and even a few badgers.
It will always have a spot in my safe.
Nice story.
 
still have it, although havnt shot it in 30+ years:

Chipmunk 22lr peep sight
single shot
when i first got it my father had to help me pull the firing pin back
i could only do it 8-10 times before my thumb gave out

its so light i think i have scopes that weigh more now

7072870
 
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Mine would have to be an old browning leaver action 22lr my father found in the dump. We had gone to the dump shooting (one of my favorite spots to go shooting at ~6 years old) and he spotted it in the ditch among other trash. The gun was jammed up something fierce and my farther spent several days repairing it. After it was repaired that gun became my fathers "truck gun."

It was that rifle that i truly learned what fun it is to shoot an accurate firearm.
 
Both of these my Father gave to me.
Marlin 39M lever action.
Still get it out and is more accurate than I am with irons.
Mossberg 500A pump.
Was a beater bought at Ace Hardware.
He knew I'd be hard on it so it fit the bill.
Ran every half assed donkey dick reload we ever screwed up.
Many feathers and fur fell to that shotty.

R
 
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Remington 788 LH in .308 that I bought more than 40 years ago. Dead accurate and has taken so many whitetails that I lost count years ago. A while back I thought to replace the Scope Chief VI 3 - 9x40 w/BDC that's been on it since new. Nothing I put on it looked right, so I reinstalled it with original rings and the world was right again. I should probably be buried with it.
 
A K-Mart Marlin 60 that was on sale for less than $60. It was MY .22. I shot well with it but I moved on fast. I had this old 12ga. single shot Winchester, an "upland" duck gun with massive recoil. Nothing special, but it was MINE. At 8yo, that's a BIG deal!

But I truly fell in love back in 1990 or so when Eugene Stoner created the SR25. I wanted one of those goddamn things ever since and finally got one a few years back and I swear, I still grin like it's new when I see it. And it shoots better than I even though it would. Not a big fan of 7.62 in general but I love that rifle (I'd love it even more in 6.5C!).

And the M2HB, yeah, I fell in love with it day one. Still grin like a kid when it goes "CHUNK-CHUNK-CHUNK!!!" After the army, I knew I couldn't live life without one, so...

I guess I should count myself lucky for not developing a crush on a dual feed 30mm Bushmaster!
 
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My very first rifle was a Cooey model 600. Bolt action .22 repeater with a tubular mag. Folks gave it to me for Christmas in '80. Shot many a round through that rifle, and one time I was shooting a quarter set into the cracks of a stump. Hit that quarter, it flipped over and embedded itself into the stump. I dug it out of there, and the bullet came out with it. I still have the quarter and bullet, and had wanted to make a "Lucite" paperweight out of it/them for some decades now.

Unfortunately, I didn't know about an ammo recall, and that old .22 of mine explodicated on me back in '94. If I wasn't there to see it with my own eyes, I'd never guess that a .22 lr could split the chamber into 5 fingers. That's Bugs-Bunny level, right there. Split that maple stock all-to-hell as well. Only thing not broken were the sights and the buttplate.

Ammo company done me right with new rifle, ammo, and sunglasses. Still miss that rifle though. It actually IS valid to pay attention to the media once in a while. Ads on the tv, in the papers, and on the radio. I missed them all.
 
You guys first guns are in very good shape. I wore mine out, re barreled them. Wore them out again, gave them away. I am more interested in what I could have done with the rifles and scopes I have today if I had them back then.
 
My first love was a 1906 Winchester 22 slide/pump action Bought when I was about 7 or 8 at Harris used furniture/pawn shop for $7.50 . and I had to sweep out the store in order to pay for it as well as being sent over to other stores when Glen didn't need me, to learn other things. I got to go over by the train tracks and test drive her once in a while but I swept for a year to pay for it with little tips for pay but it doesn't go on the rifle, "You got to work that out." Rip Glen Harris.

Carried it all the time and nobody thought anything about it. Bicycle, motorsicle,, on foot, in a farm truck------Whatever.

I still have it. however there is a Story on that one. Sold it when hurtin for $75 then bought it back 10 years later later but it was reblued and the barrel relined. Cost $75 bucks. RIp Jerry You were sure good to me.

Regards, FM E. co 5/7 Cav. 69/70
 
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Maybe I'm in the vast minority, but to me they're tools, and I even have an extensive Colt and Winchester collection from five generations of my family, but they're still tools.

The first rifle that was "mine" was a blue, M64, Marlin, single-shot, .22. The scope has ZERO markings on it at all, so it was probably purchased on the rifle. Prior to that I had the use of a pump Winchester 1906, but it didn't have the scope. The scope, the scope, must have the scope!