Reviving an Old Friend
FUR-FISH-GAME|August 2023
This story goes back to the spring of 1964, when I was 13-years old, and the spring muskrat and mink season had just closed. My muskrats and one mink were dry and ready to come off the stretchers.
Robert E. Sellers
Reviving an Old Friend

That Saturday, a neighbor, who was 16 and could drive, took me to Stanley Hawbaker’s fur shop to sell my catch. Going to Hawbaker’s was something I looked forward to, it was like stepping back in time. I’ve always felt I was born in the wrong time. I’m most comfortable outside, on the Earth, doing hobbies from a distant era.

That spring, I had a specific plan. I’d sell my furs to get the last dollars needed to buy a .22 rifle at Gale Diehl’s Sporting Goods in Chambersburg, Pennsylvania.

I’d hunted with my dad’s old Mossberg single shot .22 since I was 8, but felt I needed my own rifle. I wanted a Remington 511X Scoremaster bolt action .22 with a six-shot clip. From 1964 -1966, the 511x had a rear sight was adjustable for windage and elevation.

Where I grew up, having your own .22 rifle was almost as important as owning a flintlock rifle 200 years earlier. For a teenager who spent all his spare time hunting and trapping, this was my goal.

That spring, the $45 price was finally within reach due to my careful saving the previous summer. I never considered asking my parents to buy me a rifle. I wanted the satisfaction of using my own money.

To reach my goal, I worked summers and diligently saved my earnings. I worked on local farms stacking small square hay bales as they shot out of the baler, an achievement for a skinny 12-year-old.

This story is from the August 2023 edition of FUR-FISH-GAME.

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This story is from the August 2023 edition of FUR-FISH-GAME.

Start your 7-day Magzter GOLD free trial to access thousands of curated premium stories, and 9,000+ magazines and newspapers.