When I found this vintage Colt Woodsman at our LGS, then, I could not walk away.

It's one of the last of the Colt Woodsman semi autos. This is a third series Woodsman Target (6" barrel) made in 1976. Colt discontinued the Woodsman in 1977 due to manufacturing expense. The Woodsman was actually a John Browning design, later modified by Colt, back when Colt began producing it in 1915. No coincidence, then, that the Woodsman and the old Browning steel 22 autos are similar.

Yeah, the Woodsman is as old school machined steel gun as it gets. You can feel it just by picking it up and holding the Woodsman in your hand. Although this one is the Target model, it has the feel and balance that just begs to be carried in a holster for small game hunting. Not at all muzzle heavy, slim and elegant as a 22 pistol can be.

And, of course, it shoots. This one did not care for CCI SV. Didn't always cycle, correctly, though. I switched to Mini mags and different story. Perfect cycling. The Woodsman loved 'em. After several shots at the 18 yards I was shooting, I had to drop the elevation a few clicks, but after that, shooting one hand or two, it was hard to miss the 3" bull. Felt like the Woodsman was glued to the target and practically shooting on its own.

A Woodsman and a Colt Officer Model Target make a nice pair of vintage Colt 22s. Doesn't get any better in vintage 22 handguns.
