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  • Wednesday Afternoon Hero Links

    Today is the 30th anniversary of one of the most incredible acts of personal bravery the world has ever witnessed. One man stood in front of a line of tanks sent in to intimidate a group of peaceful citizens protesting for change from their government. He is a personal hero of mine.

    Army veteran arrested for trying to bomb Florida VA hospital. I can’t wait until all healthcare runs on the VA model.

    I think I’d stay away from cheap vacations in the Domincan Republic this year.

    That will teach people not to piss in the swimming pool.

    This is such a bullshit study. Something like 80 teens a year visit the ER due to wrong supplement (including vitamin) use. Definitely a HEALTH CRISIS!!1!

     

    For Her Majesty

  • The Hat and The Hair: Episode 122

    In UK trip, Trump’s not-so-special relationship with Theresa May is on display

     

    “After the public meeting is when the real work gets done,” the hat said from Donald’s suit pocket as the three of them followed Terri into the small meeting room.

    “I know that,” the hair snapped.

    “Whoa, dude,” the hat said. “What’s the matter with you?”

    “I hate this country,” the hair said. “I’m hungry and itchy all over and I can barely concentrate enough to keep myself on his head.”

    “I get it. I hate this place too,” the hat said. “The stain left behind by a dead empire allowing itself to be taken over by all its former enemies. It’s pathetic.”

    “Do they even have hair-loss meds in this fourth-world turd palace?” the hair asked. “I’m starving. I’m starving, I tell you. I’m down to eating Donald’s dandruff and some towel lint I found in his ear.”

    “Gross,” the hat said.

    “I’m going to tap a vein if I don’t get some Minoxidil soon.”

    “Don’t do that, Donald needs all his blood,” the hat said.

    “He also needs to not look like a bald motherfucker,” the hair said in a savage tone.

    “Have you ever had a Big Mac?” Donald asked Terri. “Like with extra special sauce and Quarter-Pounder patties? Just tremendous. So good. Delicious, even. You really need to try it. Come to America. I’ll feed you McDonald’s from every state!”

    “What the fuck is he talking about?” the hat asked the hair.

    “Fuck if I know,” the hair replied.

    “This is a state visit,” the hat growled. “You are supposed to be riding a tight herd on him.”

    “I’m too hungry,” the hair moaned. “I can’t concentrate.”

    “The EU is is just too bigly,” Donald told the small woman, shrinking even faster since stepping down, drawing into herself like a withering flower. “It’s good to be out of it. Brexit, right? That’s you guys are calling? Just amazing. Crowns, pounds and guineas and all that. A farthing and such. Polish plumbers and Italian civil engineers and Mexicans pouring through your southern border.”

    “Excuse me?” Terri asked, alarmed. She touched her hair self-consciously. Her shoulder pads made it seem like her floral suit jacket was slowly consuming her.

    “Mexicans. They are everywhere,” Donald said, sidling close to her on the couch. “One out of five countries are Mexico now.”

    “Oh, God. I can smell her hairspray!” the hair said, choking.

    “Calm down,” the hat said urgently.

    “IT SMELLS DELICIOUS!” the hair screeched.

    Donald leaned in close to Terri. “My hair thinks you smell great.”

    “Excuse me?” she said. “Excuse me? Excuse me?” She began to blink rapidly and stammer.

    “I WANT TO EAT HER HAIR!” the hair screamed.

    “Donald! Grab him, dammit!” the hat ordered.

    Donald clamped his hand on his head and got up from the couch.

    “Mousse,” his hair said weakly. “Styling gel. Anything. Just feed me.”

    “We’ve got to get the fuck out of this two-bit country,” the hat said.

    “I want bangers and mash,” Donald said petulantly.

    “Excuse me? Excuse me?” Terri continued to repeat.

    “You broke her,” the hat said to the hair.

    “Weak,” the hair said hoarsely. “They are are all so weak over here.”

    “What’s a banger?” Donald asked as he was escorted away from the former Prime Minister when she began to convulse.

     

  • Wednesday Morning Links

     

    Good morning my Glibs and Gliberinas!  And what a glorious morning it is for everyone especially this dude.

     

    Democrats privately admitted their subpoena requests were “overbroad”.

     

    Alabama passes bill requiring child sex offenders to undergo chemical castration before being released.

     

    LA homelessness surges to 59,000.  For some reason this reminds me of someone I know who started feeding stray cats a few years back and is now overrun with them.

     

    Youtube declines to deplatform conservative comedian Steven Crowder after massive push by the SJW mob for his mocking of some Vox queen.  Here’s Crowder’s apology video.

     

    Tracy Morgan crashed $2 million Bugatti minutes after buying it.

     

    DC restaurant industry rips Crazy Eyes after her push for $15 per hour minimum wage for all.

     

    Can we make this a trend for all overzealous prosecutors not just the ones targeted by the angry woke mob?

     

    So stunning.  So brave.

     

    That’s all I got for today.  I’ll leave you with a song and move along with my day.

     

  • Woke Charmed will not be seen tonight

    Mythical Libertarian Woman is taking a much need rest to recover from re-capping the episodes.

    She does want you to know that Season One of Woke Charmed is now available on Netflix for those brave enough to watch along.

    https://www.netflix.com/title/81013657

    Also, that this actress, playing a college student, is 35.

    But she identifies as 24.

     

  • Tuesday Afternoon Links

    Man am I tired. Have some links. I’ll try to remember to actually embed hotlinks in all of them today. No promises.

    Wow, they just arrested the Florida SRO who did nothing during the Stoneman-Douglas school shooting on “culpable negligence”.

    Qatar bans homosexuality. I think that worked in Cuba and North Korea, too. Duterte should try it in the Philippines.

    Bottom story of the day.

    Lol, greatest Grindr hookup story yet.

    400 men are murdered a year in Chicago and its just background. Fifty women get strangled the same way since 2001 and its news.

     

     

  • Spygate: A Summary of Events

     

     

    Spygate can make your head swim if you get too far into the weeds for those with an intense interest let alone a passing one.  Hopefully, providing a simple summary will help clarify the conspiracy especially with the pending declassification of many documents related to the Russian collusion hoax and the release of Inspector General Horowitz’s report on FISA abuse.

    Spygate has been covered by a few mainstream journalists such as John Solomon and Sara Carter, covered extensively by Dan Bongino (former secret service agent and current pundit and Fox News contributor) who has written a book on the subject with another follow-up book set to be released in October, and covered by various open source citizen journalists some of which are anonymous.  Although some of the conspiracy has been exposed by inside sources, what’s incredible is how much has been exposed by open source journalism.

     

    A summary of the theorized events:

    • The NSA database was searched for political purposes by private contractors (one of which is theorized to be Fusion GPS).  Mike Rogers (former director of the NSA) discovers the illegal use of the database and shuts it down.  Ten days after the election Rogers visits Trump and warns Trump of the spying, the next day Trump evacuates Trump Tower and calls come out for Rogers to be fired.
    • After getting shutdown, Obama’s admin switches over to other means of spying via the abuse of the FISA courts based off of a political opposition research dossier written by Christopher Steele (a former MI6 spy) which was funded by Fusion GPS (headed by Glenn Simpson) who was hired by the law firm Perkins Coie hired by Hillary Clinton’s campaign.  Remarkably, Steele’s Dossier has a hell of a lot of similarities to an article written by Glenn Simpson back in 2007.  Steele leaks his own dossier to the media, the media articles are then used by the FBI to corroborate the information in Steele’s dossier to obtain the FISA warrants on Carter Page (a former foreign-policy adviser to Trump who was never charged with a crime).  It is also believed that other FISA warrants existed targeting others including Paul Manafort, Michael Flynn, and George Papadopolous.
    • Speaking of George Papadopolous, the FBI’s official story is that Crossfire Hurricane (the official name of the FBI’s investigation into Trump’s campaign) was allegedly started when: Alexander Downer (a former Australian diplomat) claimed that George Papadopolous (a former foreign policy adviser for Trump’s 2016 campaign), while drunk at a bar, told him that Joseph Mifsud (a Maltese academic with allegedly high level connections to Russia) told Papadopolous Russia has dirt on Hillary in the form of thousands of her hacked emails.  Papadopolous claims he was not drunk and had one drink and he never mentioned anything about his meeting with Mifsud and the information given to him regarding Russia and Hillary’s emails.
    • Papadopolous was setup.  Mifsud worked for western intelligence, had no Russian connections, and the meetings with both him and Downer were orchestrated.  Mifsud had Papadopolous meet with a woman that he claimed was Putin’s niece.  Needless to say, she was not Putin’s niece.  While in Israel, Papadopolous is offered $10,000 in US cash by Charles Tawil (an Israeli American businessman).  He thought the incident was bizarre and proceeds to leave the $10,000 with his lawyer in Greece before returning back to the US.  On return, he was stopped at the airport and is detained and searched.  He is then arrested without a warrant, an indictment or criminal complaint.  Coincidentally, you are required by law to declare that you have more than $10,000 in cash on you when you enter the US.  Almost as if they searched him for the money, did not find it and then scrambled and arrested him and threw charges together after the fact.  Papadopolous was ultimately charged with a process crime for lying to the FBI and was sentenced to 14 days in jail.  He claims his charges are related to misremembering the date he spoke to Mifsud.
    • FBI director James Comey was fired by Trump after Trump’s frustration of being told privately by Comey that he was not under investigation and refusing to tell the public.  Which led to the hiring of former FBI director Bob Mueller by former deputy attorney general Rod Rosenstein as special counsel to investigate the matter.  Mueller proceeded to investigate Trump and Russian interference for two years knowing full well that Russian collusion was a hoax and did not inform the public until after the Midterm election when his investigation concluded.
    • The Mueller investigation was a cover-up, an attempt to find anything on Trump, coordinate leaks with the media to turn the public against him, pressure him to “obstruct justice” or claim he did with weak allegations in order to setup an impeachment all in order to cover-up the Obama Admin’s and intelligence community’s malfeasance and massive abuse of power.  His report is already being proven to have been written in a way that paints Trump in as negative light as possible.

     

    There is much I left out to try to simplify the events as best as I could.  If you are interested in more details here are two videos one by Dan Bongino from last November and one recently from Tracy Diaz who do a fantastic summary of events.

    Hold on to your seats.  The next few months are going to be completely insane if the full story comes to light.

  • Tuesday Morning Links

     

     

    Good morning my Glibs and Gliberinas!  And what a glorious morning it is for everyone not living in Silicon Valley.  Feeling left out of the fun, the moron brigade wants to join in too.

     

    Mueller’s key witness, George Nader, arrested for a second time for child pornography.

     

    In the Trump era, stories like these are not the massive bombshells like they use to be.

     

    Judge throws out House Democrats’ lawsuit against Trump for his reallocation of border wall funding as they lacked standing.

     

    My governor is better than yours, except for maybe those of you living in Arizona.  Texas and Arizona appear to be in the midst of a deregulation competition.

     

    CA State Bar moves to suspend Avenatti’s law license.

     

    Bernie pulling the Anti-semetic card after Politico runs an article critical of his finances.

     

    That’s all I got for today.  I’ll leave you with a song and move along with my day.

  • Recipe: SP’s Homemade Ricotta

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    SP’s Homemade Ricotta

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    Here is another super easy recipe that anyone can make at home. Except vegans. Sorry, WebDom!

    This ricotta can be used in any application in which you’d use commercial ricotta, but you might need to let it drain a bit longer, or even overnight, so it firms up more, depending on use. We tend to use it within an hour or so of finishing the process.

    Ricotta is a very forgiving product to make. You’ll definitely want to experiment and discover exactly which acids you like to use for curdling, and how much cream you want to add, if any. Go crazy and see what you come up with.    

    Yields approximately 1 pound of fresh ricotta.

     

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    Ingredients

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    • 2 quarts whole milk
    • 1/2 – 1 cup heavy cream
    • 4 tbsp lemon juice
    •  1/2 tsp salt

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    Procedure

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    1. Pour the milk and cream into a heavy saucepan. Heat slowly to 200 degrees F. If you don’t have a thermometer, heat until just below boiling.

      Mixture of whole milk and cream, simmering.
       
    2. Turn burner to low (or turn off for an electric stove). Stir in lemon juice and salt.

      You need both.

       

    3. Continuing stirring until curds begin to form, about a minute. Remove pan from heat and allow to sit uncovered for 15 or 20 minutes. The curds will continue to form and create a solid surface atop the whey.

    4. While the ricotta is forming, dampen a double layer of cheesecloth and line a mesh strainer completely. Set it over a large bowl.

       
    5. When the curds have had time to form, scoop them gently off the top of the whey and place in the cheesecloth. If you don’t have a skimmer, you can pour the entire contents of the saucepan into your lined strainer (as long as it will fit!). The whey will drain, leaving the ricotta in the cheesecloth.

      Curds set
       
    6. Allow the ricotta to drain until it has reached the desired consistency for your recipe. The ricotta will keep in the frig for about a week. But it never lasts that long at our place.

      Finished ricotta after draining.
       

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    Note: Don’t throw out the leftover whey! It’s a great addition to breads and other baked goods, mashed potatoes, oatmeal, or even added to soups. Store in the frig for up to a week and use a bit here and there. It can also be frozen in smaller quantities.

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  • Monday Afternoon Links of Meh

    Today has just been.. meh. Maybe it will pick up later this afternoon as I take my kids to their first BJJ lesson. I can tell you that the almost 4 year old has a pretty decent idea of how to execute a rear choke, even if his technique could use a little brushup. Hopefully, they won’t practice on each other too much. Or, whatever. I’ve got an heir and a spare. Which one is which they can fight it out over.

    Oh great, I was just at Quest for some bloodwork today. Glad I could also give the blackhats my credit card information as well. Also, I’m pretty sure I saw the tech type my CVV number into their payment system, which, I don’t believe the retailer is supposed to see, use, or maintain. So, I probably won’t even be able to dispute any charges. I didn’t say anything because she hadn’t stuck me yet. Be polite to the lady who is going to exanguinate you, right?

    Why I would never take up motorcycle riding around here. Vehicle-motorcycle homicides in the Tampa Bay area have to rival Chicago murders.

    No amount of coffee is bad for your heart.

    Maybe not bad for your heart, but…

    California Democrat Party boss rips off mask, pisses on it. “Coming out of the labor movement, I believe in the collective. I don’t believe in the individual[.]” Sorry, comrades, some of you will be eggs. Prepare to be broken for the greater good. H/T OMWC

     

    The boys from that little band rock some Germans today in music.

  • A History of Bolt Guns, Part Five

    The Rise of the Bolt-Action Sporter

    OK, enough war stuff.   Let’s have some fun.

    The Big Two – Remington and Winchester

    When it comes to 20th century bolt-action sporters in the American market, it’s fair to say that you can list them in three categories:  The Winchester Model 70, the Remington 700 and everything else.  There’s more to the shooting world than that, of course, so this time out we’ll look at those three and some non-U.S. models as well.

    Remember the Pattern 14 and 17 Enfield rifles, built by American manufacturers for the British and American armies?  It should come as no surprise that, having tooled up to build those Mauser-style actions, that the two major American rifle builders would use that action for their first round of bolt-action sporters.

    As we have previously noted, Remington was first with their Model 30 sporter, initially offered in .30-06 and later in other calibers.  What is less known is that Winchester dabbled in a sporter based on the Pattern 17 action as well.

    Oh, man, I want one of these.

    The Winchester Model 51 “Imperial” rifle was a hand-made, carriage trade piece.  Only twenty-four were made in 1919, in .30-06, .35 Whelen and “.27 caliber,” a forerunner of the .270 Winchester.  Four of these were hand-made pre-production prototypes, with the remaining twenty being hand-made Gunsmith Shop items.

    I’ve long lusted after one of these first Winchester bolt-action sporters, but I doubt one will ever appear at a price that I could manage without resulting in Mrs. Animal phoning a divorce lawyer.  The very first of these, Serial Number 1 (pictured) a take-down version in .27 caliber, just sold in November 2018 at auction for $24,675.  So, I doubt one of these twenty-four rifles will be gracing my gun rack any time soon, and that’s a pity.

    Here’s where it gets interesting.  One of Winchester’s VPs at the time was a fellow named Frank G. Drew, a staunch proponent of lever guns who considered the very idea of a bolt action sporter to be a trifle silly.  He had some influence on the Board of Directors, who cancelled the Model 51 project in 1920.

    The Winchester 54

    That didn’t last, obviously.  Drew became the President of Winchester Repeating Arms Company in 1924.  He was observing success competitor Remington was having with their bolt-action Model 30, and so caused the development of another Winchester bolt gun, also made with the leftover machines and tooling used in the Pattern 17 actions and the Model 51.  This new, more economic mass-produced repeater was the Model 54 Winchester, manufactured from 1925 to 1930, and offered in the .22 Hornet, .220 Swift, .250-3000 Savage, .257 Roberts, .270 Winchester, 30-30 Winchester, .30-06 Springfield, 7x57mm Mauser, 7.65x53mm Argentine, and 9x57mm Mauser.  The Model 54 retained the Pattern 17’s heavy two-stage trigger and had a factory bolt handle and safety that made scope mounting awkward.  Primary production on the Model 54 ended in 1930, although a few were assembled from 1930 to 1935.

    Happily, in 1936, Winchester improved on the Model 54 when they brought out their immortal Model 70 in 1936, based on a cock-on-open, Mauser 98-type action.  Aptly known as the Rifleman’s Rifle, everything a sportsman could want in a bolt-action rifle can be summed up in these words: “Pre-64 Model 70.”  Chamberings from 1936 to date have included the .22 Hornet, .222 Remington, .223 Remington, .22-250 Remington, .223 WSSM, .225 Winchester, .220 Swift, .243 Winchester, .243 WSSM, .250-3000 Savage, .257 Roberts, .25-06 Remington, .25 WSSM, 6.5×55mm, .264 Winchester Magnum,6.5mm Creedmoor, .270 Winchester, .270 WSM, .270 Weatherby Magnum, .280 Remington, 7mm Mauser, 7mm-08, 7 mm Remington Magnum, 7mm WSM, 7mm STW, .300 Savage, .30-06 Springfield, .308 Winchester, .300 H&H Magnum, .300 Winchester Magnum, .300 WSM, .300 Weatherby Magnum, .300 RUM, .325 WSM, .338 Winchester Magnum, .35 Remington, .358 Winchester, .375 H&H Magnum, .416 Remington Magnum, .416 Rigby, .458 Winchester Magnum, and .470 Capstick.  A great variety of grades and finishes have been available; the U.S. Army and Marines have used Model 70s as sniper rifles (Gunnery Sergeant Carlos Hathcock used a Model 70 Winchester in .30-06 with an 8x Unertl scope in his famous exploits in SE Asia.)

    In 1964 Winchester’s cost-cutting measures affected the Model 70 as it did many other arms.  The big Mauser claw extractor was replaced with a hook extractor, along with other manufacturing and cosmetic changes including the adoption of a simple push-feed action over the old controlled-feed; note that Remington rifles had been using a push-feed design by decades by this point, but the various changes resulted in the Marines cancelling their contract for Model 70 sniper rifles, as the new Winchesters no longer met the Corps’ quality standards.  The “classic” Model 70 was reintroduced in 1999 with the controlled feed restored, but at least in the mind of this old gun crank, if you want a Model 70, look for a pre-64.

    The Model 70 still has turned in a long and impressive history.  Shooting Times magazine in 1999 named it the “Rifle of the Century,” and it’s hard to dispute that assessment.

    Remington, though, was likewise producing a classic.  Their Model 30 rifles were manufactured until 1940 (from 1926 to 1940 as the Model 30 Express, mounting a Lyman peep sight).  In 1940 Remington introduced the final version of a rifle on the Pattern 17 action, the Model 720, which changed to a cock-on-close operation.

    About 26,000 Model 20 and 30 Express rifles were built, but only about 2,500 Model 720s.  World War 2 interrupted Remington’s production, but in 1948 the Ilion gunmakers came out with two new rifles, really one design in short and long action versions; these were the Models 721 (short action) and 722 (long action.)

    Remington 721

    During the second World War, Remington’s experience with mass-producing weapons quickly and efficiency had taught their engineers some great lessons.  Two of these engineers were a pair of prescient fellows named Mike Walker and Homer Young, who took a look at the traditional Mauser-style action, machined from a forged billet, and came up with another idea:  A tubular receiver was easier and quicker to produce, while still allowing great strength and precision.  The 721 and 722 were the first products of this design, followed in 1958 by the Model 725.  All were push-feed guns with the usual fixed box magazine, small hook extractor and a spring-loaded plunger ejector.

    In 1961, Walker and Young’s basic design evolved into one of the best-selling sporting rifles in history, the Remington 700, still manufactured today in a wild variety of calibers and configuration.  The 700 has a great reputation for strength, accuracy and reliability, leading to its adoption by military and police forces all over the globe.  Loyal sidekick Rat carries one in the game fields, a pre-1993 DuPont Model 700 wearing a Six Enterprises fiberglass stock and a Redfield scope, and has had good success with it.

    While my personal preferences lean towards older Winchesters, a beginning, intermediate or experienced shooter or sportsman simply couldn’t go wrong with a Remington 700.  No matter your desires in caliber or trim, it’s probable even in the late 20th century, that Remington made a 700 that matched them.

    Remington then took a different tack in 1967, introducing the economical Model 788.  This was a nine-lug, rear-locking, short action bolt gun with a plain stock and a 3-round detachable box magazine, available in calibers from the .222 Remington to the .308 Winchester.  This rifle had a great reputation for accuracy, supposedly in part from the fact that the rear-locking bolt eliminated the locking lug raceways, making the action stiffer and stronger.

    Remington and Winchester dominated the 20th century bolt gun world, but they weren’t alone.  While the Model 70 and the various Remington models were being admired by the shooting press, some other American companies were learning the bolt gun angle as well.

    The Other Guys

    We have discussed Savage Arms before in the context of their excellent Model 99 lever gun, but Savage learned the art of building bolt guns in World War 2, when they built #4 MkI Lee-Enfield rifles for the British.  With this experience under their belt, Savage rather belatedly turned to the bolt gun market in 1950, with the economical Savage 340.  This rear-locking rifle had a plain hardwood stock and a detachable box magazine and was available only in lower-performance rounds like the .22 Hornet .222 and .223 Remington and the .30-30 Winchester.  The 340 was serviceable but nothing much to look at, but Savage had a more lasting impact on the bolt gun in 1958, when their engineer Nicholas Brewer devised and (posthumously) patented the rifle that became the first of the Savage 100 series.  While lacking some of the polish of Winchester’s and Remington’s offerings, Savage rifles proved solid and reliable, and because of that, when Winchester closed their New Haven plant in 2007 the Savage 110 surpassed the Winchester Model 70 as the oldest continuously manufactured bolt-action rifle on the American market.  Another fact of note; in 1959, the Savage 110 became the first American bolt-action rifle to be commercially produced in a left-handed version.

    About this same time, Ogden gunmaker of note Browning entered the commercial bolt gun market with the High-Power series of rifles.  The story of the Browning High-Power bolt guns is a complicated one, with the larger calibers (up to the .458 Winchester) on FN 98 Mauser actions, while the smaller rounds like the .222 were set up on the Finnish SAKO action.

    The Browning High Power.

    The High-Power Brownings were beautiful pieces.  The FN Mauser and the SAKO actions were finely made, the bluing was high polish, stocks were fine European or American Claro walnut.  Three grades were available, Safari, Medallion and Olympian, featuring progressively nicer finishes and fancier wood.

    But the High-Power, beautiful as it was, suffered from two flaws: A cheap plastic buttplate and too much drop at the heel of the stock, which made recoil unpleasant, and thin barrels that heated quickly and resulted in less than optimal accuracy.  The High-Power was replaced in 1978 or so by the Japanese-made push-feed Browning BBR, which yielded only mediocre sales.  But then, in 1984, Browning introduced the A-bolt, with three locking lugs and a short sixty-degree bolt throw.  This was at last a bolt gun fully worthy of the Browning name, fast in action, reliable and accurate.  The A-Bolt has been made in calibers from .223 Remington to .458 Winchester and is still being made as the AB3 today.

    Colt may be best known for handguns and the AR-pattern rifles, but in 1973 Colt struck an agreement with the famous Austrian manufacturer, and the Colt/Sauer rifle was introduced to the American market.  This was the Sauer Model 80 on the European market and Colt merely imported it, but the Colt Sauer rifle was unique in one respect:  It had a non-rotating bolt with retracting locking lugs, which removed the necessity of locking lug traces in the receiver.  This not only made for a strong receiver but also for a very smooth action.  Even so, the Colt/Sauer rifle never really caught on competing against the Remington 700 and (even the post-64) Winchester 70; in the end only about 27,000 were imported.

    A Ruger M77 in .416 Rigby.

    One cannot talk about the twentieth century sporting gun market without mentioning Ruger, and the bolt gun market is no exception.  In 1968, Bill Ruger had a designer working for him that took the Model 98 Mauser action, replaced the forged receiver with an investment casting, replaced the bolt block safety with a tang safety and replaced the blade ejector with a plunger ejector.  Sullivan also redesigned the trigger and used a rater novel angled front action screw that, in recoil, served to seat the action more solidly into the stock.  Bill Ruger approved of the design, and the original M77 Ruger was born.

    But Ruger wasn’t done.  In 1991 the company almost completely redesigned the M77 as the Mark II, retaining the Mauser-style claw extractor but reverting to a Mauser blade-type ejector, converting to controlled-feed rather than push-feed and changing to a Winchester 70-style fore-and-aft safety that allowed for loading and unloading the rifle with the safety engaged.

    I have never owned an original M77 but I have a Mark II in the “T” configuration, with a heavy laminated target stock and a 26” heavy sporter barrel, firing the .243 Winchester; this is a rifle that will send a 6mm pill 400 yards on time and on target.  Mrs. Animal has a Mark II Compact in the .260 Remington, a fine, lightweight, light-recoiling little rifle.

    These were and are the major players; but there are few American companies that didn’t take a swing at the bolt gun market.  Mossberg has produced a few; Smith and Wesson imported some Howa rifles from Japan and slapped the S&W name on them.  Even lever-gun maker Marlin has produced a bolt gun.  The bandwidth allowed to me here simply won’t allow me to list them all, so I’ve tried to name the major players in the American centerfire bolt gun market.

    Before anyone mentions my omission of Roy Weatherby, fear not, I have an article dedicated just to him in the works.

    The Europeans

    Continental European sporting bolt guns in the 20th century can, in large part, be summed up, like a popular candy, by saying simply “M&M.”  Mauser and Mannlicher.  Some Finnish upstarts got into the mix, and an Austrian company also got involved.  But across the Channel, the Brits were turning out some real masterpieces.

    Mauser 66.

    Mauser suffered badly at the end of World War II, for reasons which should be apparent.  But in the early 1950s they managed to reform, and one of their first offerings was a design by a fellow named Walter Gehmann, which became the Mauser 66.  The 66 couldn’t have departed much further from its Model 98 predecessor; it had an odd telescoping bolt, a set trigger and came as a take-down rifle for easy transport.  To my thinking it wasn’t an attractive rifle, but folks who have handled them (I’ve not had the chance) say they have a butter-smooth action and bench-rest accuracy.

    Mauser followed up with the Model 77, a more conventional looking bolt gun with three rear locking lugs and a detachable magazine, and then several commercial and military variations on the 66 and the 77.  Then, in 1996, they brought out the M1996 straight-pull bolt gun, using a forward-mounted bolt handle at the front of the ejection port to operate its action.  The M1996 was an awkward looking thing and didn’t exactly take the market by storm.

    But in Austria, another company also rebounded after the war.

    Prior to World War II, the Mannlicher-Schoenauer rifles had a strong following all over the world.  In fact, if one wishes to read of one used in an unorthodox fashion, read the Ernest Hemingway short story The Short, Happy Life of Francis Macomber.

    The M-S rifle’s full-length stock became so iconic, in fact, that the design became known on all makes and models as a “Mannlicher stock.”  The combination of the very first Mannlicher-Schoenauer rifle and its 6.5x54mm cartridge became something of a European equivalent of the Winchester 94 and the .30WCF round, an ideal combination of rifle and cartridge such that one can scarcely think of one without the other.

    Steyr Mannlicher Luxus

    Following the war, Mannlicher re-established themselves as a sporting gun manufacturer.  Stoeger imported their rifles into the United States, said imports including the Models 1950, 1952, 1956 and 1961; but it was hard to top that original, the pre-war Mannlicher-Schoenauer.

    Up in Finland, the Suojeluskuntain Ase- ja Konepaja Oy (Civil Guard Gun and Machining Works) or SAKO, spent the post-war years marketing the excellent Vixen (short action) and Finnbear (long action) bolt guns.  Interestingly, and a bit off topic, SAKO in 1961 introduced the only European-made lever gun I’m aware of, the foll-stocked Finnwolf.  In 1992 SAKO intriduced the first of their renovated line with the 591 and finally, in 1997, they brought out the 75, followed in 2006 by the improved M85, which is still made today.

    Across the Channel, the Brits were indulging in something they are very good at – producing works of art in walnut and blued steel.  In olden times, the Brits had a great tradition of gun making, and two of their finest companies have a considerable history.  But the first company we see across the Channel started in Ireland.

    We can first cast ourselves back to 1775, when a chap named John Rigby went into business as a gunsmith in Dublin.  I won’t go into all of Rigby’s history – that would take an article unto itself – but I will talk about their bolt guns.  Rigby bolt guns were and are made on 98 Mauser actions, mostly big, beefy square bridge magnum actions, with walnut stocks you could fall in love with.  Calibers are offered up to and including the .416 and .450 Rigby, so if you want to hunt Cape Buffalo or, maybe, a mid-size tyrannosaur, Rigby can set you up.

    A lovely Holland & Holland bolt gun.

    Over in London is a company bearing a name we must speak in an awed whisper:  Holland & Holland.  Founded by Harris Holland in 1835, Holland & Holland are the standard by which fine guns everywhere are measured.  Their bolt guns, post-World War II, like Rigby use a modified Mauser action, but each rifle is assembled and tuned by hand, by some of the best gunsmiths in the world.  Calibers up to the .500 Nitro Express are available, and if you are willing to spend an amount of money that would otherwise buy you a pretty substantial house, you won’t find a more beautiful work of art in a rifle.

    There are many more.  In Serbia, the Zastava works turns out a pretty fair 98 Mauser action.  These have been imported into the US in a variety of names, including the Herter’s J9 and the Interarms Mk X.  I have one of the latter rifles, in .30-06, and it’s a solid rifle.  Herter’s also imported a BSA bolt gun as the U9, and those rifles also enjoy a good reputation, as evidenced by how few are available on the various auction sites; people who have them are keeping them.

    And Then This Happened

    The modern era with its attention to all things tactical hasn’t excluded the bolt gun market.  Indeed, some of the things that make a good tactical rifle also make a good hunting rifle, especially synthetic stocks, which may be ugly but are also tough and impervious to moisture and dirt.  So, while the Tacticool craze encompassed bolt action rifles as well as other weapons, in the case of bolt guns that wasn’t all to the bad.  We’ll examine that and other modern trends and the current state of the bolt gun world in general in the ultimate part of this series, coming up next.

    I probably haven’t covered half of the notable bolt guns made for the sporting market in the 20th century.  From the Great War onward, bolt guns have simply dominated the game fields world over; they are cheaper and easier to make well than doubles, stronger and easier to adapt to heavy cartridges than lever guns, and acceptable in jurisdictions that disapprove of semi-autos.  Doing justice to the history of the bolt gun and the state of the market today would require a book rather than a series of articles.  In fact, if that’s what one was looking for, one could do a lot worse than to pick up a copy of Wayne Zwoll’s Bolt Action Rifles.  Or maybe I’ll write one myself.

    I also have not covered .22 rimfire bolt guns at all.  That may be an omission, but I can always do an article or two on rimfire rifles alone, and the more I think on it, that may be worth doing.

    Meanwhile – stay tuned!  We have one more segment in this history to go.