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-   -   Big aszed shotgun (http://www.saltycajun.com/forum/showthread.php?t=26940)

Ray 01-10-2012 09:50 PM

Big aszed shotgun
 

longcast 01-10-2012 10:21 PM

Wow. That was awesome.

Matt G 01-10-2012 10:39 PM

Damn...... I should have asked the wife for that for Christmas!!

MattW 01-10-2012 10:55 PM

They used to have one in the Cabildo in New Orleans almost like that. They used to mount it on the front of a skiff and kill ducks 200 at a shot. Pretty impressive on the clay targets.

mcjaredsandwich 01-10-2012 11:15 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by MattW (Post 374969)
They used to have one in the Cabildo in New Orleans almost like that. They used to mount it on the front of a skiff and kill ducks 200 at a shot. Pretty impressive on the clay targets.

Yep. Not trying to be like iron man here with a story, but thats why the passenger pigeon went extinct...they would shoot hundreds at a time. Flocks flying over could number a couple million at a time. Punt guns were loaded with pretty much anything that would fit!

Will"E"Fish 01-11-2012 07:43 AM

Imagine dcbs that gun would make when fired. Diffently deafening I'm sure.

DUCKGOGETTER 01-11-2012 08:08 AM

WOW!!!

CajunRebel 01-12-2012 07:33 PM

It's called a "punt" gun. Used for commercial duck hunting back at the "turn of the century," when it was legal. Even had a boat call a punt boat and a special oar with the end looking like two opposing duck bills. You "rowed" in a pumping motion. There's a picture of a boat with seven of them mounted (obviously owned by a Cajun).

A punt gun is a type of extremely large shotgun used in the 19th and early 20th centuries for shooting large numbers of waterfowl for commercial harvesting operations and private sport. Punt guns were usually custom-designed and so varied widely, but could have bore diameters exceeding 2 inches (51 mm) and fire over a pound (≈ 0.45 kg) of shot at a time.[1] A single shot could kill over 50 waterfowl resting on the water's surface. They were too big to hold and the recoil so large that they were mounted directly on the punts used for hunting, hence their name. Hunters would maneuver their punts quietly into line and range of the flock using poles or oars to avoid startling them. Generally the gun was fixed to the punt; thus the hunter would maneuver the entire boat in order to aim the gun. The guns were sufficiently powerful, and the punts themselves sufficiently small, that firing the gun often propelled the punt backwards several inches or more. To improve efficiency, hunters could work in fleets of up to around ten punts.
In the United States, this practice depleted stocks of wild waterfowl and by the 1860s most states had banned the practice. The Lacey Act of 1900 banned the transport of wild game across state lines, and the practice of market hunting was outlawed by a series of federal laws in 1918. In the United Kingdom, a 1995 survey showed fewer than 50 active punt guns still in use. UK law limits punt guns to a bore diameter of 1.75 inches (44 mm) (1 1/8 pounder).

SaltERedneck 01-12-2012 08:46 PM

good lord... friggin cannon


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