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Lever Actions for Hunting
by: Ian
Nance
http://thewildlife.polkvoice.com
Hunters are no more immune from
stereotyping than any other group of humans. Say a newcomer strolls into
camp toting some AR-Style firearm. What do a lot of hunters think?

“Here’s
Rambo!”
Switch that rig out with the newest,
fastest magnum chambering?
“Show-off,
blowhard.”
And a lever action of any kind?
“Rookie,
public land hunter, rube!”
Now, I may join in and hate hoot the first
two groups - though I hunt with each style of weapon regularly - but
I’ll take umbrage with those who consider the lever actions to be any
sort of novice toy.
My first run-in with
a lever action was way back in the ancient days of the ‘90’s. My
longtime buddy, Dirty J, was carrying his father’s Marlin 336 .35
Remington down a limestone road in
Manatee
County when an
old sow came be-bopping across the trail. Dirty tossed up the .35 and
rolled the hog in an instant.
Several years later, and more firearm
competent, I stood over a 170 lb mottled boar I popped with a Winchester 94 in the classic .30-30. As Dad
and I re-lived the details of the stalk and shot, a black 120-pound boar
crept out of a palmetto head. I deftly raised the rifle and lowered the
boom, astonished this hog would stick his snout out in the commotion,
yet proud as can be that Pops was there to witness it.
Since then, Dad bought a Marlin 1894 .44
Mag. which he’s enjoyed. A few years back I answered a classified ad in
the paper and, more or less, stole a Marlin Guide Gun in .45-70 topped
with a 1.5-4.5X Nikon Monarch, the cat’s meow in lever actions in my
humble opinion.
(Note that I’m leaving out, solely for the
purpose of this discussion, such fine lever actions such as the Ruger
96/44, Browning BLR, Savage Model 99, amongst a few others. What I’m
really talking about are your cowboy guns. My reasons? I simply, sadly,
have no experience with these. I do hope to change this.)
When I show up to camp with these guns, I
am often met with the mocking statements I mentioned above, especially
when those in the know realize I have much more capable and fashionable
firearms in the locker. And it’s here where I’m lost trying to decide
whether I’m defending these lever actions or campaigning for them.
Mostly, I enjoy a little variety and debate.
Let’s start with what these guns are not.
Plainly, the range limitation of the common lever action is a buzz kill.
Even with a scope, you furthest responsible shot shouldn’t be much
beyond 130, 140 yards. For some hunters, such a compromise in reach is
unacceptable. And in truth, depending on where you hunt, this is a real
consideration. Florida
and much of the South is land of mixed terrain. Yes, we have the thick
swamps and scrubs, but there are plenty of acres of broken pasture,
prairie, and crop fields in which game is known to thrive and a lever
action is out of its element.
Next, lever actions aren’t the most
accurate. Start with the blunt-nosed, lead exposed bullets - they don’t
scream, “high ballistic co-efficiency”, like Ballistic Tips and other
spire points. Though they now have soft polymer tips for use in tubular
magazines, the anatomy of the rifle is still not designed for MOA
groups. These guns are made for portability, like the shorter barrels,
for instance. You simply won’t harness the ballistic potential of any
round fired out of an 18-inch tube. Couple these stumpy guns with iron
sights, and precision is sacrificed. Scopes help, but even Swarovski
glass is not going to improve the natural flaws of design.
As a result, there’s a stigma on how this
accuracy prints on paper. Hunters equipped with a bolt action of some
variety will dismissingly scoff at 3 ½ inch groups, though few really
understand how accurate their own rifle and load may or may not be. A
great many campfire storyteller would be humbled if their alleged
sub-MOA rifles were truly put to the test. With an audience, wind, bad
rests, drops in atmospheric pressure, and solar flares have all been
blamed to explain why today their pet is punching 2-inch groups when
just a few weeks ago a quarter covered three shots. Personal mythology
aside, accuracy, as it is applied in the field and into the shoulder of
a deer, is terribly over-rated.
But if we really want to talk about
mythology and being over-rated, let’s discuss the lever action’s moniker
of being a “brush gun”. I listened patiently to a guy in camp a few
years back bragging on how his .444 Marlin would freight train through
any tangle. Finally I asked him how many deer or hogs he’d shot in such
conditions. He claimed none. His argument became even less persuasive
after watching him miss a doe at 30 yards standing in the wide-open. The
point is, a .444 will foul off a twig or anything else. Too many tests
have been done to argue otherwise, but this has always been a fun source
of pride and folklore for plenty of lever action enthusiasts.
The brush gun title really comes in the
design of the firearm itself. These guns shine like diamonds those dark
swamps and scrubs. They are handy to carry and handle through the vines
and overhanging branches. Those short barrels with open sights or
low-power scopes pick up the target in a hurry. Lug a lever action with
you once, and you’ll quickly discover the advantages both in portability
and ease of operation.
And when you fair-punch your game,
woooo-weeee, does that bullet deliver a smack-down. That slow, chugging
bullet hits like a ton of bricks. I’m not a big fan of how kinetic
energy performs on any level other than marketing new cartridges, but
the energy transfer from those blunt-nosed projectiles seems very real.
Not a whole lot is left to scream across the countryside after passing
through the off-shoulder which can be the case with the magnums. To
date, I’ve never seen a hog or deer get his or her feet back under them
after a clean shot with one of these rounds. I can’t say the same about
my .300
Winchester
Magnum.
So, what do we have in these lever
actions? A novelty? A specialty tool?
Some of both. In swamps, oak hammocks,
pine stands and other areas where you don’t have a shot much farther
than 100 yards, lever actions should be in your wheelhouse, particularly
if you still hunt. Looking for something to impress your campmates with,
yeah, it’s great for that too.
Case in point, I went on a hog hunt in Sarasota a few weeks back. Upon seeing my Winchester 94, Travis
banished me, with no lack of derisive commentary, to the backseat of the
truck, purgatory on this spot-and-stalk hunt. I promised I knew what I
was doing; if we wandered up to a herd of hogs, he’d see brass flying
from the top of that receiver like nothing he’d ever witnessed.
It never came to that. As night began
seizing the day, Travis spied a boar rooting under a palmetto on the
side of a trail between two ditch bottoms. Unable to find the swine in
his scoped .270, the pig spooked down one ditch and back across the road
where my Winchester 94 caught up with him at 15 yards,
rolling him down into the opposite ditch. Couldn’t wipe that smile of
redemption off my face.
Lever actions may not be ideal for your
style of hunting. Still, it’s never a bad idea to keep one handy. They
are slick handling, fast on the target, and all around fun to shoot. And
you may think about holding your tongue next time someone rolls into
camp with such a rifle.
They just may know how to use it.
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