The end of a great afternoon
Nobody will argue that the 12
gauge is the queen of all shotguns. It is the most available, the most used,
the most flexible, and would be my recommendation to almost anyone that is
getting start in shotguns, provided they have the size and muscles to handle
the weight of the gun (recoil is no longer a problem with the advent of “featherweight”
and low pressure target rounds that will shoot ¾ to 7/8 ounces).
But, with all its qualities
the 12 may be just too much gun, and if it is the queen, then, in my opinion
the 28 gauge is the princess of shotguns. I know that a lot of people will make
their cases for the 16 and 20 gauges and a few may even put a word or two for
the 410 bore. And the 24 and 32 gauges are all but forgotten.
Anyway, my vote and my case
are for the 28 gauge and the light and in the majority of cases well-balanced
guns that shoot it. And the last point is very important, if you are going to
use a 28, make sure to select a gun that is made in a properly sized frame, and
not some misconceived and ungainly aberration that just happen to haven smaller
holes drilled in barrels that would handle a 20 gauge shell easily.
If you read other posts in
this blog you will already know that our household guns when I grew up were 28
gauges, and that they were big enough to handle all the hunting that we had
around.
At that time in Brazil the
standard 28 gauge shells were waxed paper 2 ½ inches (65 mm) loaded with 5/8
ounces (15,5 grams) of shot. The available shot sizes were T (an uncommon size
in the US, it is slightly larger than BB), 3, 5 and 7.
T shot is recommended for
animal up to the size of a paca or agouti (Cuniculus
paca), which is probably the best tasting meat we will ever have the
pleasure of eating, and my father used it very successfully for that. For all
feathered game, including waterfowl (the most prevalent around our farm were
paturis (Netta erythrophtalma) which
are similar to teals) and upland birds we used shot No. 5.
For larger game like capivara
(Hydrochoerus hydrochaeris) we relied
on IDEAL slugs. The IDEAL is an European design that never caught up in the US,
and is basically a pure lead cylinder that has three rings around it in the
outside (this allows the slug to be stable while moving through the barrel and
the external rings can deform when passing through the choke) and spiral groves
inside that look like an helix or a propeller, therefore the popular name Helix
Bullet. The internal groves are supposed to make the projectile spin during
flight and provide enhanced stability and precision. To prove this we would put
one slug inside the gun barrel and blow air from the shop compressor and the
slug would really spin. If that really happened on flight I don’t know.
Later when I started having
to hand load my own brass shot shells for capivara I replaced the more
expensive IDEAL slugs by fishing sinkers of more or less the appropriate size,
and used them quite effectively on an old Rossi Overland, side-by-side exposed
hammer shotgun. I had a lot of fun with this gun and still have it stored in
Brazil. It is completely out of face, one of the barrels has a bulge and the
lower rib is coming apart, and it has not fired a shot in twenty years, but I
could not part away from the little rack.
If you fast forward from my
childhood to the last ten years, I have had many different 28 gauge shotguns
here in the US and used them quite extensively, but solely for clay shooting
and upland birds.
I had a very nice Beretta 686
that I could shoot quite well, but traded for a Browning 20 gauge side-by-side
if for no other reason than I am really infatuated with side-by-side guns. This
gun saw quite a bit of use on pheasants in many preserves in Michigan and on
mourning doves in some farms in Indiana, since Michigan laws prevents us from
shooting our birds before they migrate to Indiana where we must pay a lot more
to shoot them. The only exception was the fall of 2004 when we had the only
experimental dove season in Michigan (see blog “The Missed Doves of Michigan, September
2011).
Then I had a really charming
Remington 1100 Sporting that I used as part of the trade for another
side-by-side, this time an AyA 16 gauge, if for no other reason that I was
tired of looking for ejected shells all over the local skeet fields and just
could not use it if there was snow on the ground as 28 gauge shells are too
expensive not to be reloaded.
Eventually I was able to
overcome all the infamous Brazilian red tape and bring my dad’s Beretta 28
side-by-side Model 409 to the US and I already commented about this fantastic
little gun on other posts. Initially I shot it very little as it was chambered
for 2 ½ inch shells, but that is now solved as this gun was fully restored by
Del Whitman.
Recently Brenneke started
offering 28 gauge 5/8 ounce slugs, but I have no experience with them. Before
that I created my own big game ammo by loading two 50 caliber musket balls
inside a standard wad. Unhappily I never did any comprehensive tests to
evaluate their performance, but I have little doubt that they would be as
deadly as any muzzleloader shooting similar projectiles.
The last 28 gauge that I
bought is a Browning Model 12 grade I. This gun fits me particularly well and
outshoots almost any other gun that I have. My highest score at trap was shot
with it, using ¾ ounces low speed reloads with No. 8 shot.
However during all these
years and having shot all these fine guns I had one frustration. I had never
used a 28 gauge to hunt codorna or perdiz (Nothura
maculosa), the princess of upland birds that my father used to hunt. Before
you ask, the queen of upland birds is the perdigão or martineta (Rhynchotus rufescens), but that is another story.
Finally in last July during my latest trip to
Uruguay I was able to finally have the princess of shotguns and the princess of
upland birds on the same date. I used a Stoeger/Boito/ERA 28 gauge
side-by-side, and shot Spanish made ¾ ounces 7 ½ shells to shoot a 10 bird
limit on perdiz every afternoon that I went out, and for an inexpensive
Brazilian made shotgun, it performed amazingly well. All birds that I hit fell
hard, and the many that I missed were entirely my fault.
On the mornings we shot doves and the odd
pigeons, and I noticed no difference on my hit ratio compared to the 16’s and
20’s that I used on previous years and there was the added benefit of not
having a sore shoulder once the morning was over.
On the last evening we
performed a service to a local farming by thinning out the caturrita or cotorro
(Myiopsitta monachus), a highly
destructive vermin in the form of colorful parrot. Their nests were located in
a eucalyptus grove and since we were not there for sport anything was fair game
and we wanted to get the most of the shells that we had. I remember bringing
seven birds down with a single shot, and at the end of the culling we shot about
seventy five birds with less than forty shells.
Life is too short to do
things that we don’t enjoy, so I am quite happy to be living with the 28 gauge
for over four decades, since the days that I used to follow my father’s
steps while hunting perdiz over our
English pointer Diana in our farm in Brazil, and retrieving the spent 28 gauge
paper hulls just to smell their inebriant essence, until some weeks ago when I
first had the opportunity to smell a Michigan woodcock shot by the same Beretta
shotgun.
And
I hope that I will be able to continue to enjoy many other “adventures”.