Al Goerg book
JFS
[subject]
Friday, November 29, 2024, 11:58 (5 days ago)
I saw that, did his son loose the rights to that book?
WB
[subject]
Friday, November 29, 2024, 12:07 (5 days ago) @ JFS
I have seen new re-prints of the Pacific Hunting editions. He was more into fishing. The little book is inexpensive and worth getting as well.
The family just didn't feel that there was enough
Gary Reeder
[subject]
Friday, November 29, 2024, 13:44 (5 days ago) @ WB
demand for the book. If you remember Goerg's son Jim visited with us in early 2006. He told us quite a bit about Goerg and his book and the plane crash that killed him and the pilot. The wreckage wasn't found until a year after the crash. Some of the guns were found but several were picked up by some scavengers. One wonders what happened to the 2 S&W model 29s in 44 Magnum and his single shot rolling block that weren't found.
Jim, Goerg's son was in his 40s when he visited with us in 2006. He brought me several little things that Goerg had designed as a thank you for making Goerg a well known name again.
Here is one of Goerg's guns that was found after the crash, one of the first custom XP-100s.Badly damaged but not as bad as one would think. They also found a large number of rolls of film of hunts he was on just before the flight that killed him.
By the time the crash was found Goerg's wife had gone on with her life and eventually re-married and the thoughts of doing a second printing just wasn't their main object at that time of their lives. One son was big into fishing supplies and the other had moved to Canada and was busy with his own life.
He is long gone but for those us that had read and re-read the book so many times that we wore the book out, his hunts and adventures are still alive.
The 2006 HHC was one I wish I attended...
JFS
[subject]
Friday, November 29, 2024, 20:15 (5 days ago) @ Gary Reeder
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That had to be fantastic talking with his son..
JFS
[subject]
Friday, November 29, 2024, 20:17 (5 days ago) @ JFS
One of these day`s you have to sit me down and tell me everything learned and talked about
I only talked to one son, Jim. He in reality was not like
Gary Reeder
[subject]
Saturday, November 30, 2024, 12:36 (4 days ago) @ JFS
his father in that he wasn't an avid hunter or handgunner. The main treason for that was he was very young when his father died and Al Goerg's love of handgun hunting didn't exist in his upbringing. He is a great person but admits to not being a handgun hunter like his father.
The younger Goerg gave the Misfits credit for bringing
Gary Reeder
[subject]
Saturday, November 30, 2024, 13:10 (4 days ago) @ Gary Reeder
his Father's popularity back alive. Our constant talking about Goerg and his hunts plus showing the pictures of how he hunted with very minimal equipment but always his S&W 44 Magnums influenced others that had never heard of Al Goerg.
I talked to quite a few younger handgun hunters and those that wanted to be a handgun hunter and showed them the pictures of how Goerg hunted in the snowy north, with nothing but a 9X9 tarp and a mummy sleeping bag plus a few cooking utensils. Hunters these days would laugh if they walked up on a camp set up like Goerg used.
Goerg mentioned that on many of his hunts he relied on his shooting to get him the meat for his hunt camps. Even a few misses could make for a meatless camp. He shows a Ptarmigan in one pic and he mentioned steaks from the Mountain Goat.
Goerg's standard camp is shown below.
Goerg was a handgun hunter pure and simple. He had 2 S&W model 29s, in 44 Magnum, one standard sights and the other with a 1X scope on it. He also used a Ruger single shot Hawkeye in 256 Winchester along with the custom XP-100 in 6mm that I showed in the picture of the damaged gun from the plane crash. He also had a modified rolling block from a converted rifle into a single shot pistol that he used on several bears. He never wore camo as that wasn't the "in thing" back in the early '60s. He never took those 300 to 400 long shots like the young handgun hunters these days think is necessary, He depended upon his skill at crawling up close enough to make the shot.These were his guns and his game.
His main love was bear hunting and he took several. He took 2 of them with a modified 22 Hornet single shot pistol.
To say Goerg was my hero growing up would be an under statement. I wore out his book and it took me over 20 years to find another. I memorized everything he wrote hoping to be a handgun hunter of his equal one day. Unfortunately I never made it that far but I sure tried.
If you don't have Goerg's book Pioneering Handgun Hunting grab one when you see it. You won't regret it. If you don't think it is worth the money you spent I will buy it back from you.
By the way Goerg's book is full of hunt and gun pics.
Gary Reeder
[subject]
Saturday, November 30, 2024, 13:46 (4 days ago) @ Gary Reeder
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Thanks Gary
JFS
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Sunday, December 01, 2024, 12:35 (3 days ago) @ Gary Reeder
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You're welcome, whatever I did
Gary Reeder
[subject]
Monday, December 02, 2024, 12:41 (1 day, 20 hours, 51 min. ago) @ JFS
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I was telling John Taffin that I had been thinking
Gary Reeder
[subject]
Saturday, November 30, 2024, 15:19 (4 days ago) @ Gary Reeder
about taking one of my S&W model 29s and convert it to a copy of Goerg's 44. I have one of the same scopes that Goerg used except the one I have is a 2X. I also have a 3X and a 1.5 to 4.5X variables. But after thinking about it some more I realized that that is like a 12 year old buying a jersey with his hero's number on it. But should I ever get a wild hair I have the guns and the scopes.
In the pic is a 2x, a couple of 3X and a 1.5 to 4.5 variable. All original Weavers from Goerg's time period.
You should do it Gary.
Tfrick
[subject]
Tuesday, December 03, 2024, 11:43 (21 hours, 49 minutes ago) @ Gary Reeder
I am sure you have done dumber things. I know I have! Do it for the twelve year old who still lives in all of us.
Back then there probably wasn't any reason to re-print the
Gary Reeder
[subject]
Friday, November 29, 2024, 13:47 (5 days ago) @ WB
book and whether there was a demand for it, enough to spend the money. As far as I know there weren't any re-prints of his Pioneering Handgun Hunting.