I decided to get a forever shotgun for one of my kids. I agreed in my mind that my target price was $1500, the going rate for an unremarkable but functional beretta white wing or browning citori. I decided to see what I could do for similar costs if I looked for a high quality London side by side gun short of a “best gun” if I was willing to accept its flaws to collectibility or high demand.
What I did:
I created a short list of features I wanted that I believed would be detrimental to collector value while having no safety or quality detractions. I started looking for guns with short stocks, long stocks with ugly stock extensions, guns cast-on for lefties, guns with short barrels, guns with short chambers, and certainly guns that are 12 bore because they are less desirable.
Where I landed:
I found a beautiful custom 7x57 Mannlicher Schoenauer rifle at auction some time ago. I got it for a bargain and it was fantastic, but it wasn’t a critical gun for my kids. I then searched stale shotgun listings that languished with dealers and offered up a trade. I traded the MS for a EJ Churchill XXV 12 bore with a hideous stock extension, too much cast, a second set of barrels, short chambered (but in proof), with a very nice single trigger added (not good for collectors). I made the even trade with the dealer and he immediately sold the rifle while getting rid of a stale gun in inventory.
Next moves:
Six months ago I took my son and got him fitted for the gun. I brought it to a competent best-gun smith that removed the stock extension, recheckered the gun, created a checkered butt of proper length, opened up the forcing cones on the spare barrels for 2-3/4” shells and opened the chokes on that set, and changed the cast and pitch of the gun. We picked it up this week.
Final Tally:
It took me a year to find the rifle I bartered, six months to find an ideal gun to trade for, and six months to get the gunsmithing completed. For the price of a citori, my kid has a forever shotgun, a 1930s EJ Churchill with its original barrels as made and a spare set of barrels he can beat the hell out of with modern loads. In 3 years we’ll chop the checkered butt and add a 1” pad and adjust cast again. In 10 years he can have it restocked to his adult dimensions on his dime or just keep it as a grouse gun a bit short of his likely adult length of pull.
Next Steps:
we are going to rebuild a vintage English case to fit the gun over the next year so he has his go-to kit ready for travel.
Conclusion:
long term strategies and willingness to accept collectibility flaws can allow anyone of reasonable means to get a decent gun if that’s your aim. Best of all, it’s a stable asset rather than a depreciating one for his future.
wish us luck, we attempt to get him a turkey with it this week!
What I did:
I created a short list of features I wanted that I believed would be detrimental to collector value while having no safety or quality detractions. I started looking for guns with short stocks, long stocks with ugly stock extensions, guns cast-on for lefties, guns with short barrels, guns with short chambers, and certainly guns that are 12 bore because they are less desirable.
Where I landed:
I found a beautiful custom 7x57 Mannlicher Schoenauer rifle at auction some time ago. I got it for a bargain and it was fantastic, but it wasn’t a critical gun for my kids. I then searched stale shotgun listings that languished with dealers and offered up a trade. I traded the MS for a EJ Churchill XXV 12 bore with a hideous stock extension, too much cast, a second set of barrels, short chambered (but in proof), with a very nice single trigger added (not good for collectors). I made the even trade with the dealer and he immediately sold the rifle while getting rid of a stale gun in inventory.
Next moves:
Six months ago I took my son and got him fitted for the gun. I brought it to a competent best-gun smith that removed the stock extension, recheckered the gun, created a checkered butt of proper length, opened up the forcing cones on the spare barrels for 2-3/4” shells and opened the chokes on that set, and changed the cast and pitch of the gun. We picked it up this week.
Final Tally:
It took me a year to find the rifle I bartered, six months to find an ideal gun to trade for, and six months to get the gunsmithing completed. For the price of a citori, my kid has a forever shotgun, a 1930s EJ Churchill with its original barrels as made and a spare set of barrels he can beat the hell out of with modern loads. In 3 years we’ll chop the checkered butt and add a 1” pad and adjust cast again. In 10 years he can have it restocked to his adult dimensions on his dime or just keep it as a grouse gun a bit short of his likely adult length of pull.
Next Steps:
we are going to rebuild a vintage English case to fit the gun over the next year so he has his go-to kit ready for travel.
Conclusion:
long term strategies and willingness to accept collectibility flaws can allow anyone of reasonable means to get a decent gun if that’s your aim. Best of all, it’s a stable asset rather than a depreciating one for his future.
wish us luck, we attempt to get him a turkey with it this week!