Christmas time (or Hanukkah) is a time people when people may have received their first firearm if they were lucky as a teenager.
I would be interested in hearing about your first guns, what they were, and why you chose them if you were the one to indeed choose them.
Your choice and reasoning certainly doesn’t have to be correct by the standards of what you know now, or the standards of this messageboard, since you were a beginner at the time and didn’t have the knowledge, experience, or likely the financial resources that you have now. You may not have even had the choice, since the gun was chosen for you.
My first guns were bought for me for my birthday and christmas when I was 14 or 15. I won’t say how long ago that was, but at that time Guns & Ammo magazine was the height of all firearms knowledge for me and many other people.
The family had a good financial year, so I got to reap the benefits benifit. I got a Marlin 336C levergun in .35 Remington for my Birthday and a Marlin bolt action .22 rifle with a 7 roundt magazine for Christmas.
A .22 rifle is an obvious choice–a gun that you can practice with inexpensively and maybe hunt small game. For whatever reason, I wanted a bolt action .22, so I got the Marlin that came with a scope. I think the whole package cost about $40 or $50.
The lveraction Marlin 336C was an interesting choice. It was a much bigger deal to me than the .22. I wanted some type of big game gun by NY state standards, and a family friend who was a cop told me how a .35 Remington would shoot straight through a tree that stood in its way, while a 30-06 would veer left or right. And the .35 Remington would do a much better job busting through brush (which I later learned to be a dubious proposition at best–I’m not sure that the 200 grain .35 Remington round wound penetrate cover better than the heavier 30-06 rounds; and besides, you should not be shooting at anything behind cover that you can’t positively identify).
The .35 Remington had less recoil than the 30-06, and the gun was less money–I think it cost about $120 on sale at Morsan’s sporting goods store in Oceanside, NY where we bought it. Plus, my thinking was that it was a lever action which could be fired quicker than a bolt, and it would make a good home defense gun. It would certainly fall short by today’s standards with AR’s with electronic red dot sights or even a decent pump action shotgun, but at the time I thought I was ready for Night of The Living Dead, or any burglars that might threaten the peace of my home.
At the time my exposure was to a total of one gunstore and the sporting goods store where my family bought the gun. Everything you saw at Morsans was sport oriented. No shotguns had extended magazines, and I was too small to handle a 12 gauge anyway. Morsans did have a single commercial clone of an M1 carbine, but for whatever reason that didn’t interest me.
The other place where I saw guns, an honest to God gunstore, was pretty much the same, but it did have a Colt AR-15 with a 20" barrel and a triangular handguard just like I had seen in the movies and newsreals of the Army. But it was out of my gift price range at around $300 and I’m not sure my family would have bought it even if I wanted it, and I wanted the .35 Remington since it was more powerful and you could hunt deer with it. At the time I actually thought a lever action .35 Remington that held 6 shots in the magazine and fired a bigger, more powerful round was a better defense choice than the AR. Not that I seriously considered the AR–it was an interesting gun that was out of my price range that my family probably would not buy if they were willing to
spend the money.
But whatever new gun I might buy these days it’s impossible to recapture the excitement of those first two guns, especially the Marlin 35 Remington, which made me feel like I was ready to face any threat or hunt any animal I might face in NY State.
Later on I ran into another boy with a yellow visor named Rob something or other who explained to me that the Mossberg did not meet the correct technical data something or other. At the time I was upset at him, but I later appreciated the info he provided me.
