This afternoon with a temperature right at zero, I stepped out on the deck with my favorite daily plinker and went to work. Given the temp, my 1953 vintage Marlin was just the ticket for cycling the action fast with CCI Quiets. In no time at all, I had the Marlin 39 emptied before my fingers got cold. Only missed once, shooting the 2" steel swingers at 25 yards.

Today, I also finished working on my S&W Model 63 22 LR that had been showing some sticky extraction when emptying the cylinder on my first range trip last month. Polished up those chambers till they shined and then did some test firing. It empties as sweet as can be, now. Can't wait to get out and shoot this little jewel, again.
Next project was restoring one of our vintage 10/22s with a better stock. When I bought this 1968 10/22 earlier this year, a previous owner had added sling studs front and back.

While not a big deal for shooting, it does reduce the value and collectibility because up until 1971, all Ruger 10/22 stocks were made for Ruger by Overton. This means that if you want to replace the stock and maintain authenticity, you can't just add any old 10/22 stock. It has to be an Overton. Finally found another Overton and now my '68 Carbine is wearing this one, just like the stock came when new. Much nicer.

More projects to go, but I'll have plenty of time over our long north woods winter to get it all done with plenty of time to do some more daily plinking, too.



