Top 5 Farmer Guns
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- Опубликовано: 7 июл 2020
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I lived on a farm and been to a lot of farms. I don't remember a single farm where the most used firearm was not a .22 rifle.
12ga is more popular out my way then 22lr seen a few ar15 popping up but like cheap beater ones.
Yep, .22 rifle in some configuration with iron sights. Followed by a shotgun or two, probably a 12 ga and a 410. Good air rifle is very common also for birds and ground based vermin.
Very true , it will take care of all your needs easily.
You ain't been on no damn cattle or hog farms... becuase if you were around em at killing time youd know the importance of a .22LR at killing time...
@@tdgreenbay - Glenn, you ain't a been goin' to no English classes?
You appear to know what you are talking about, you just don't know how to express it.
no .22 lr?!?! Every farmer in my family would put a .22 on the list! Some would go bolt, some 10/22, and some lever....but a .22 is a must! Great vid though
Browning SA-22 put many a squirrel and lamb on our table
Steve Seattle haha this fuckin guys a gun nut like the rest of us who just also has a farm😭 1st pick ar? Guys a total bro haha
He’s not a real farmer, that’s why. He’s a commercial cattle distribution share holder not a traditional American farmer. First gun he picked was a AR 15 pistol 😂.
22lr has been replaced by 223/556 for 25 years now Steve. Everyone has 22lr today but they're just "safe queens". I have 3, and they haven't been out of my safe except to be cleaned and lubed in 20 years. Anything 22 can do 223 can do much better.
@@thebusterdog6358 Lol guessing you're not much of a farmer? The use case for a 22lr is totally different than for a .223. This was a 5 guns video, I would have both on that list. I would replace the baby shotgun with a ruger 10/22 myself
Grew up on a horse ranch in Colorado. The rifle of choice was a .45 long Colt lever action backed up by a revolver of the same caliber.
My first thought, no 30 30 . Every farmer has one or a 32special here where I live.
Same here - a 30 30 with finish burnished off of the wood and a plum brown colored barrel is it here. The clean new look is off of the gun decades ago from sliding across a truck floor.
@@daw162
😉
I hear you. Most of the farmers I knew when I was younger carried a '94 on the corn picker during deer season.
I feel like the rusty 100 year old bolt action .22 is the ultimate farmer’s gun. I don’t think I’ve ever seen a farmer that didn’t have one or two laying around in a farm truck or tractor.
And when asked when the last time they shot it ......"oh I shot a snake,varmint,bird,ect...about 20 years ago with it " been In the truck ever since 👍👍
I’ve lived on a farm my entire life. We got it all done with a 22 or a 12 ga
“Just as good”
Paul Alexander 😭😭
Exactly
@Paul Alexander Fudddddded
Paul Alexander hell yeah especially if someone else is buying ammo. Mk19 would be better though
Your seriously going to have a “farmer gun” video and NOT include the 30-30 ??
Or a .22
Preach it Austin!
@@stewartrun a 30-30 would be better suited for a farmer imo. No frills and gets the job done.
We use lever actions pretty exclusively while bear hunting just because its more reliable and you don’t have to worry about a mag or anything getting caught on a briar. Plus it packs a good punch.
Yep an AR but no lever... Sounds fishy. A single shot shotgun, .22lr revolver, .30-30 or .32-20 lever, maybe a peacemaker, and a scoped .22 rifle.
Yep
Talking about shooting snakes whilst wearing a "Don't tread on me" shirt is kinda funny
I don't shoot snakes and coyotes. They eat mice and rats-plus squirrel.
No lever action? You sure he is a farmer ? Lol
That’s what I was thinking at least some type of lever action
I didn’t even catch that 😂
Right??? I’m a 6th gen Florida cattle Rancher and every man in my family has mostly toted a Winchester 94 30-30. Perfect ranch/truck gun where I grew up imho
45-70 gvt lever and a colt SA in 45LC
Agree. I was thinking it would be basically a list of different lever guns. Apparently not...
The dude seems like a gun guy who happens to be a farmer 😂. This list I think would be different if the guy was a farmer who wasn't that into guns
@Paul Alexander I agree except I could see the pistol being different
@Paul Alexander (I'm not saying 45 long colt wouldn't be a common choice) In my opinion I think a revolver of some kind in 357 mag would be a more common choice
@@danrogers4795 agreed 357 is pretty popular for farms it seems
Agree. As soon as he said .300 BLK I knew he wasn't your average farmer.
4th generation rancher here. We're 6 generations if you count my grandkids. I'm young enough to appreciate and enjoy the modern AR platform. I even got my dad interested enough to buy a couple but we still have a place for the more traditional options. Currently, the best defensive rifle for rural America is probably an AR type. That title used to belong to the lever action repeaters though.
Cool video! The guns we used most on our dairy farm was a bolt action .22, a single shot .12 gauge and a bolt action .30-06. Other favorites among farmers in our area included the .30-30 and a .22 magnum. The latter was useful for pest control and slaughtering animals. This was before ARs really became widely available.
I instantly went back to my youth as a fifteen year old kid when you started talking about buying the 870 a Kmart. I was already loading my own 20ga. shells and would load and shoot the equivalent of a case of 20 guage AA's a month, either bird hunting, or trap shooting. I worked for my dad in his pallet company, and had saved up to buy me a new 870 from the Kmart, and I remember bringing it home and just sitting there staring at it like it was a beautiful woman (it was night time, or I would have been shooting it ). I am now 67 years old, so it has been 52 years since I bought mine, and thousands of shells later, it is just as reliable as the day I bought it.
How many farmers have guns on the gun rack which are older than they are because they were their fathers or grandfathers and they work. How many shotguns do you see which are upwards of 50 years old because they work in the far more versatile than a rifle or even a pistol in terms of what you can kill them. But also in terms of home defence they are better weapon than an a15 in a tight spot under stress.
You could easily do a fire gun video but the reality is how many people that she only got one or maybe two guns and one of them is a shotgun because that that versatile.
I have a 10 square foot garden lol. It justifies owning all of these.
I own a 4x4 SUV I need a 50. Cal belt machine gun for "hunting" purposes
@@jamesprice2163 as a former military guy I suggest a MK-19 for your ATV.
I have US citizenship. It justifies owning all of these. 😉
I’m a chinchilla rancher,I have most of these.
I have a habanero pepper plant and will protect it at all costs.
My list would have been :
#1. Ruger 10/22
#2. Ruger .357 Revolver
#3. Remington 870 12 ga pump
#4. Remington .270 bolt action rifle
#5. Single shot .410 shotgun
Wildcard #6. Marlin Lever action 336 30-30
Only if you’re not a “Cannabis” farmer.
Yes!!!!!
You Sir are 100% correct. Easily the most accurate 5 farming guns in the comment. Can't believe how many didn't include the .22lr and .410🤦♂️ Though I think you might find 30-06 every bit as often as .270 still spot on.
#1. 12 gauge pump
#2. any .24 to .30 cal bolt gun.
#3. 9mm handgun
#4. ruger 1022
#5. barret 50 cal,
Yes and yes. I'd switch #6 and #5.
once in your life you'll a lawyer, a doctor, a preacher, but 3 times a day you need a farmer.
aint that the truth,
What do I need the lawyer for?
@@mrclaw4715 you never know
Getter done with a mouth full of food!!! Thank a farmer!!!!🇺🇸🇺🇸🇺🇸🇺🇸🇺🇸🇺🇲🇺🇸
You should be seeing a doctor once a year, even if you're healthy.
Awesome list. Thanks, guys!
I love these 5 gun videos because of the philosophical discussions, particularly when Barry was still around.
I have been a farmer/livestock raiser all my life and my top 5 "farmer" guns would be:
1. .22lr rifle of some type (probably Ruger 10/22)
2. Pump shotgun in 12 gauge
3. Lever action rifle in 30-30
4. .357 Mag DA revolver
5. AR or Ruger Ranch Rifle in .223
22, shotgun 12 or 16, 303 or 3030 , 243, 3006 , 308, single, bolt, semi, single, double, over under, pump, rarely a combo. Injured animals, stray dogs, cats, gophers, magpies, starlings, crows, partridge, pigeon, pheasant, duck, geese. Variety of makes, models, calibers, gague, ammo. Also a heavy hammer, ax and a butcher knife. Local law enforcement drove over and parked on a deer because they were concetnef a bullet might injure a passerby. Did i leave out bow and arrows?
Grew up on a farm, ended up getting this list lol
Remington Nylon 66
Amen brother. I am also lifetime farmer and have every one of those. That would be my list also
Great list! Those are all classics
Nice video. Surprised there wasn’t a 3030 lever action rifle included in the top five. That would’ve been my first choice.
*Paul Harrell appears*
Yeah, I agree, Nothing rides in a saddle scabbard, on a horse like a lever action rifle.
💯 my favorite ranch truck gun
Short barrel 45-70 lever for the win
Don McEathron now that’s a man’s rifle. My wife or daughter would be picking herself up off the ground.
Great choices, especially the honorable mention. With all of the AR platform options, people have forgotten about the M-1 carbine. They used to be fairly cheap to buy. In the early to mid 80's, I used an M-1 carbine as a "ranch rifle" before I bought my first AR-15. They definitely do the trick. Unfortunately, ammo has rocketed in price, and become scarce in availability, especially now. Mine is a remanufactured carbine, so the collectible value is zero. ~AWESOME VIDEO.~
I grew up on a farm myself, and I also grew up with a Remington 870. It was my first 12g shotgun and my dad had passed his down to me. Took my first of many doves with that firearm 👍
That was the first gun I ever bought, and the last I'd sell. I bought a second barrel for it, and it'll do (maybe overdo) all I ask.
Me: 44 mag Revolver, Mossberg pump action shotgun, Ruger 10-22, Ruger Mini 14 and a Remington 700.
I bought my .44 Magnum in 1965, just after I turned 21. The first thing I learned was the recoil was good reason to learn how to handload. The variety of different handloads eliminated the need to buy a .357 Magnum.
**cough*12gDoubleBarrelAnd 30-30LeverGun*cough**
357mag revolver , sinlg six 22, ruger 10-22 ,p90 SBR, ar 15
I need 7. I cant do 5
410 sing shot and Remington or Beretta shotgun
Thats a farmers load out
These are the best. There was a time when the SKS was $80 and was a popular choice among farmers and ranchers. The M1 will always be in my personal Top 5.
I still have the one I bought for 75 bucks and its still shoots and looks like the day I bought it..
I love the M1 carbine, I have one my grandfather bought as surplus in the 1950’2
Whats a Russian sks going for now in the states?
@james avery yea about the same here. Some of the used ones can be more but prices just went up mainly cuz of the AR M14 and countless other rifles that just got banned here in canada
m1 jams
1)10/22
2)12g pump action
3)Lever action 45/70
4)357 mag revolver
5)30-06 bolt action
Extra) 45 1911
Always, always, always learn something important and are thoroughly entertained with your videos! Thank you
Farmers are the backbone of society 💪
Amen
@Paul Alexander without agriculture there is no culture
hear hear, Amen
Along with crew ship captains, truckers and cargo men
@@bobbylee7801
I am an agric engineer, I wish to move to the USA and get a job there. Sadly my government doesn't care about the agriculture they just keep depending on oil.
Farming sure has changed over the years. When I was growing up in deepest, darkest Appalachia (70s-early 80s), there were probably more single-shot shotguns in rear-window gun racks, leaning or laying within reach than anything else. I rarely saw handguns, but back in those days, attitudes and laws regarding handguns were much different than today. Rifles only came out if one had to reach out and lay the smackdown on a groundhog and usually they were either .22lr or .22WMR.
I can still remember when you could walk into K-Mart or Sears and handle the guns displayed in the open. Even Target used to sell ammo back in the day.
JC Penny Sporting Goods Department. I'm not old enough to remember firearms at Sears or Montgomery Ward.
Nice job Will. All great choices. Only possible farm exception would be a brush gun like a lever 30-30 or 45-70 or bolt 450 bushy. Something that can bust through the thick brush and still get the job done.
What I use on the Farm that I live on is a Henry Single Shot 12 Gauge, Mossberg Pump 12/20 Gauge and 22 lr Rifle.
Ruger 10/22 is a classic and good beginner for kids. Its cheap to shoot and easy for kids to learn on. Its great for small game in the garden or out in the field.
@@blackmesaoutdoors4863 Yes sir, One of my Friends has a Ruger 10/22 I was planning on getting one but It wasn't going to be able to serve for the purposes that I needed at the time(Which was shooting Pigeons and Starlings).
@@blackmesaoutdoors4863 and when the kids get older n wanna make it look all call its super customizable
@@riversideangler120 you need a lot of land to be able to shoot up at birds lol i use to work on a horse farm with 144 achers of conservation land so i could shoot at birds in the trees as long as i was facing the woods
Yep, out here on a West Texas cattle farm we have either the Marlin 336 or 1894 in the trucks. 12&20 M500's, 700 in 7mm magnum, AR10 in .22-250 and .308, and a BN36 in .30-06 at the house.
Live in farm land rural Iowa. Never know what your going to come across. Mountain lions, coyotes, pissy beef, meth heads. Lil bit of everything on hand helps for the appropriate situation
Pissy beef 100%. One of ours about went into the freezer a few weeks back
@@colsoncustoms8994 butcher around 10 beef a week. Get the occasional grumpers. They would kill you if they had the opportunity
I grew up on grain-livestock farm in NW Iowa. Rem Nylon 66 was my #1 tractor gun (no cab). Lay it down on the platform with barrel between the brake pedals and go out and choke in the dust for 12 to 16 hours. Clean it a couple times a year. Never had a problem. Used mostly for gophers, badgers and some seagulls for the cats. :) Coyotes never got close enough. Mt lion or two were around but never saw them. Toughest .22 rifle ever made IMHO.
@@LuvBorderCollies go hawks 😎
Cyclones are fine though. You just never know is my statement. Dress accordingly
I have an old wingmaster that was passed down to me. It was the first 12 gauge I started shooting and it definitely holds some sentimental value.
I grew up on a family farm. These are the guns that we used on our farm.
1. H&R single-shot .410
2. Marlin 39A
3. Remington Wingmaster 12 gauge
4. Model 19 S&W
5. Win Model 94 in .30-30
6. Win Model 70 in 30.06
An AR pitchfork attachment
HAHA! I'd love to see that!
With straw camoflauge
Lol 😂😂
if he raised beef he's not a farmer, he's a rancher
What if he plant crops and run sheep to?
Yup
Maybe he grows hay, too.
@@blastulae Most ranchers do if the climate and such allows, but that don't make em farmers. Farmers grow veggies, fruit and such. I ain't never seen a plant that gives cheeseburgers.
@@tootall5559 I have to agree with you, based on where I come from. Here even wheat farmers without any cattle are called ranchers. But usage in Georgia must differ.
I find the Top 5 series to be the most interesting on this channel , I’ve been a fan since before the Top 5 Home Defense Guns . Love this channel!
I've been born and raised in a ranching family in the great state of Texas and I have to say when we got our first ar15, it helped a lot on the hog population.
I got my old 870 wingmaster for free, it was my grandfather's that he got brand new back in 53
I inherited my old man's Remington1100 12g which was my grandfather's. After I tore it down and cleaned all of the what seemed to be wd40 and bryers out it hasn't skipped a beat.
Ive lived on a ranch in NW Montana my entire life. Growing up, our most utilized guns were: Springfield 1903-A3 in 30-06, 16 Gauge bolt action shotgun made by Sears, Mossberg Model 46B-B .22LR, Savage Model 65M .22Magnum, M1 .30 Carbine, an old Chilean Mauser in 7x57 Mauser, Ruger P-89 9mm, and Ruger Blackhawk .357 Magnum. Those were the ones we used the most.
I like this farmer guy a lot.. maybe some more videos with him? I like how you both go back and fourth both good guys just talking guns.
As my truck gun that I carried for years I had a Rossi Puma .357 lever action. I used it until I wore it out. I harvested 3 elk with it and an uncountable number of deer. I dropped coyotes with it out to 250 yards. I didn't use factory ammunition except to empty the brass for reloading. I created a deerskin sock for it with a drawstring to keep the dust and dirt out because it rode in my old Toyota Landcruiser for years. Now I have a Ruger M77/357 but there is always a .22 in the truck.
This top 5 is great but I have never been on a farm (my own included) without some kind of a .22!
My thoughts exactly! A Ruger 10/22 is a classic and good beginner for kids. Its cheap to shoot and easy for kids to learn on. Its great for small game in the garden or out in the field.
Yeah. When I was growing up, every farm house had a shotgun usually double barrel and a single shot.22. We used to butcher hogs by shooting them in the head with.22 shorts.
Farmers from overseas choose the Kalashnikov.
I'm no Farmer, also an american but i love my Romanian RH-10. AKs are multipurpose.
@@daskook2656 I used to be a big AK guy, but these days I think the AK has become outdated. ARs are cheaper, last longer, and easier to assemble. I used to have over 20 AK (I built a lot when parts kits were dirt cheap because no one knew how to rebuild them), I sold them all to buy ARs and Glocks. I even have an AR with an 80% lower that accepts all my old AK mags so I didn't have to buy a ton of new mags.
AK are still fun for the novelty and they will work if that is what you already have, but for people who have the ability to choose a rifle, I don't think there is any practical reason to not choose an AR as a rifle. Some AR builds under the sales during Trump were even cheaper than buying a bolt action. I got an LR308 for $400! Cannot beat that.
@crazy silly The AR is better and cheaper. Even Russian SOF have moved towards the AR platform (although not exclusively). I can carry a 40 round magazine in a smaller package than any x39 cartridge 30 round magazine.
I bought tons of AR during Trump's presidency, I averaged at about $350 per complete rifle (irons included, but nothing else). Absolute steals.
For fun guns I have gas blowback airsoft guns of all kinds of firearms so I still get the fun. I enjoy the AK platform for that, but I prefer an AR for firearms.
when im on afghanistan deployment also the farmers there also use ak, beltfed machinegun and some rpg.. they are real farmer but they grow a opium fields.
@crazy silly No, they are more terrible.. those opium field is taliban main income to fund their organization.. also afghan policemen that we been helped them there to fight taliban with is heroin user, 80% of them fail a sudden urine drug test.. our army wasting time helping those fool.
Very enjoyable Top 5 edition! Thanks for making this Eric! Kudos to Farmer Will.
Before the start my guess was that an SKS would be in the line up ;-)
Great video guys. Great choices for the job. Lots of knowledge In a short time. Keep up the good work.
No lever 30-30? No revolver? No side by side? And what farmer doesn’t start off childhood with a .22? Not to mention it’s the most practical caliber on a farm!
That shirt and that hat says anything but real farmer or rancher.... nice guy and all but cant take him seriously.
Keep up the good work tho...love most all your videos.
I agree. I grew up on lever action 30 30s, revolvers, and side by side shotguns. Obviously, 22's are an automatic choice for young shooters learning. Not sure where this farmer grew up.
Too bad we even have to worry about guns being “unassuming”. 🇺🇸🤘🏻
Truth! I promise u this, The Founding Fathers NEVER EVER meant for it to be like this!!
We are regressing not progressing!! That I know for sure.
Well with such wise people like Joe Biden telling us to commit potential felonies with shotguns...best to error on the side of safety.
@@mitchelldelaney5872 our founding fathers never wanted our government to have as much control as they do now. They would be absolutely fine with the sufficient arms American citizens can and do own
Mitchell Delaney you are right our founding fathers intended on us have access to the same equipment as the military so we can defend ourselves against Tyranny.
My dad has a wingmaster, that looks exactly like the one you have. We looked up the serial number years ago and I believe it was produced in 1969. Absolutely love that gun, and it is still smooth as ever and excellent.
My Grandpa farmed his entire life and if you looked behind his truck seat you would always find a .22lr, and either a 12 guage or lever 30-30 depending on the month.
Can’t believe I didn’t see a .22 on the table, grew up on a ranch and shot more critters with my 10/22 than anything else. Bolt gun in the hands of a farmer on his land is probably more devastating than any marine with a Scar heavy!
My thoughts exactly! A Ruger 10/22 is a classic and good beginner for kids. Its cheap to shoot and easy for kids to learn on. Its great for small game in the garden or out in the field.
my pa died of cancer cause of the steak
Marines never were issued the SCAR heavy. Go back to playing call of duty
Took a groundhog through the eye with a 10/22 at 30ft as a kid...so I agree.
Semi auto always out gun's a bolt action
"Everything in between" shit guys he knows about my 3 legged game
don't forget all the one legged hoppers
old people who use a cane I guess.....
*camera pans over to Danny devito*
I would concur with most of the choices but I would have to have a .22LR (Ruger 10/22) in the mix. Also I would change the bolt gun to a scout size bolt gun.
The tools I use on my farm by level of use are: 1)Glennfield 25 in .22
2) Winchester 120 12g
3) PWS Mod. Musket .223w
4) Savage 340 .30-30
5) Kahr p9 9mn
*) Savage model 10 .308
Kinda sad as my Glennfield .22 I got on my 12th birthday was stolen....
Bought thru Sears & Roebuck like most were.
Good choices but you forgot one..... the lever action. Marlin 336 in .35 Remington. Or maybe a lever action in 38/357.
I grew up on a farm/ranch operation in North Dakota. We raised Hereford/Angus crossed cattle, and had a few Simmental thrown in for good measure too. We had around 100 head at our peak.
We mainly raised our own feed for our cattle. We had corn for silage, prairie hay and alfalfa along with oats, (some of which was used for oats hay, and the rest was grain oats for feeding calves), and spent the long cold winters feeding them. We also raised Hard Red Spring Wheat as our cash crop.
We had a few .22 pump rifles, which were kept loaded with bird shot for pest control, but we also had a 7mm mag my grandpa had for deer hunting. Dad got a 30/30 Winchester from a friend years ago, and I had a Marlin 60 .22, a Dan Wesson .357 stainless 4 inch and a Ruger 95 9mm. Those were my farmer guns.
When i was younger it was taught to me
Dont fear the noise and the control the recoil
Honorable mentions... Ruger 10/22, Ruger Mark II Target, and a Ruger Six Series in .357 Magnum. I'm intrigued with the 300 Blackout and the 410 Pump.
Ruger 10/22 is a classic and good beginner for kids. Its cheap to shoot and easy for kids to learn on. Its great for small game in the garden or out in the field.
Ruger security six is a damn fine pistol
I like my 300blk for coyotes actually pretty go for that.
@@alfredangelici8294 I have a Marlin 336 SC in .219 Zipper that is a real tack driver. But you can tell by the caliber that it was made long before Marlin and Winchester bent over for the democrats and put that useless crossbolt safety on their lever actions. The only lever actions I would consider buying these days are made by Henry.
@@missouribushwhacker9449 - The Security Six is not a pistol, it's a revolver. Learn the difference between those two different types of handguns, so you won't sound so much like a democrat.
I love the top 5 guns vids. Reminds me of the good ol’ days with Barry
1) 12 gauge Mossberg 500 pump. Shotguns are the most versatile firearms in the world.
2) Ruger 10/22 It's quiet ,lightweight, a must have on a farm.
3) Marlin lever action 30/30. 30/30 rifles have taken the most whitetail deer in US history. Great brush, and truck guns.
4) 7mm Rem Magnum for that long range shot across the field. Flatter trajectory than a 30-06.
5) Glock 17 the one that started it all. Full size, and 17+1 of 9mm.
I asked a farmer about this and their loudout was:
.22lr lever action (henry golden boy)
SKS
Rem870
Glock 17
45-70 lever action (idk what the name of the firearm was)
Quite an eclectic mix. Bravo.
Can you really call yourself a farmer if you don’t have an sks?
Take a pick of any 22lr. That's gotta be #1
When I think of a farmer, I think of a 30" double barrel shotgun for some reason
You were thinking of the farmers daughter!
I grew up in Arizona with livestock, cattle, horses, and sheep. 60 miles from the nearest store to buy ammo and not a large variety in choice. What I always saw from my family and others, growing up was; 30-30, .22LR, .22 mag, 12 gauge, and .270. Also seen a lot of SKS because they were cheap back in the day. Nowadays I have been seeing more AR type rifles. A common theme was a rifle with scope that could take out a coyote or wild dogs at a distance.
Thank you for all the information you share . You folks have a wealth of information and God bless you for not keeping it all to yourself. I enjoy watching and I consider it school time .
"So two legged game, four legged game, and everything in between." Uh, so that would be three legged game? :P
Maybe a daughter’s boyfriend 🤣
old people using a cane maybe
Maybe a tiger too lazy to use his fourth leg...
These are Obviously got those massive spiders from Chernobyl
Snakes with 2 legs?
Some good choices. Include miny 14, 30-30 lever action, and any 22 caliber.
Wonderful top 5 video and excellent wildcard choice!
perfect choices. once again dude, you nailed it.
Before I even watch I’m going with a Ruger 10/22, Remington 870 combo, Remington 700 22/250, some type of AR15 and a semiautomatic pistol (probably a Glock). Let’s see how I do
Chad looks a bit different today.......
Im a farmer too, my guns needed for work are.
1st .22 good for small things like rabbits.
2nd 12 gauge 18" over and under. Sits on the front of the quadbike
3rd 44mag 1892. Good for everything
4th is my 45-70 gov 1895 marlin lever
5th is my 4th, if that does not work its time to run
One of your best presentations. Kudos!!!
Listening to this video he sounds like a slightly country John Lovell. Lol
John Lovell does sound country wdym?
Tried plowing the field with my Mossberg. Anybody got some spare 3" shells?
You don't have more ammo? ... Must be from California
Should have used a Fostech Origin 12. 30 rnd drums...
Are you trying to be funny? Or just stupid?
@@tenchraven As you don't seem to have a sense of humor or a brain I could see how you might be confused.
My Dad's cousin was a Farmer/Rancher, and always had a T/C contender in .357 mag in his pickup. Useful for dispatching snakes with shotshells, and for putting down sick/injured cattle when necessary, can't remember what loads he used for that.
Love content guys fellow Georgian here, keep them coming.
3rd gen dairy farmer. In the barn i use 9mm Flobert. Outside either 12 ga or my 10/22 take care of 95% of my needs.
Flobert rifles are so interesting,around my part of Alaska we like many types of .22s, ruger 10/22 is a great one and I've seen caribou harvested with a ruger mini 14 for many years
You are old school! Nice.
1) Remington 700 30-06 bolt
2) Marlin 336 30-30 lever
3) Marlin 25n .22lr bolt
4)Ruger single six .22lr revolver
5) Remington 870 or Mossberg 500 12ga pump
That's how it is around my farming area or real close to it.
Suppress everything! Same here, I want to suppress it all, even if I still need ear pro. Also, electronic ear pro while hunting makes me feel like I have a super hearing.
My grandfather was a grain farmer and he had guns from a 30-30 lever rifle to a 50 cal muzzleloader
10/22 easily gets the most practical use out on our farm.
I absolutely love the 30 carbine. Great choice. Great video as well!!
8:00 snatch shotgun off guys hands and talks about its drive by capabilitys .lmaooooo his face
Grew up on a farm from the age of 6-17 and we had 306,12 gauge, 1022 rim fire, 223 bolt action, and a 243 cal, all worked well. With the 12 gauge I got for a birthday present was also the same one I took my first pintail as my first duck, it was a good meal as well. I can't wait to get back out to the duck blinds and pheasant fields
I got a 16ga Ranger 105-20 from my grandpa who got it from his dad when he died. It’s a bolt action 16ga shotgun that we use for coyotes at our house. It’s a nice gun and I’d never replace it even if I was given a much better gun.
So far I’ve killed 12 coyotes with it so I think it works well.
Hmmmm I live in an apartment (when I'm on the job anyway) and my bedside quick grab gun is actually an M1 Carbine with a paratrooper stock..... guess I'm like a Super Ninja Farmer 🤣
The .410 shockwave with proper loads would be much more kind to your neighbors should you ever need it.
I was very surprised the list didn't include a ruger 10/22 or a marlin model 60. 2 great 22 caliber farm guns. Besides that, very good choices in farm hand guns. Keep up the good work. Eric, thank you for your service my brother. God bless America.
I get the Glock being more "sealed" than a hammered fired gun. I've still seen a lot of gunk get into the nose of the gun. Not as critical of an area, but it still collects stuff.
wearing a "don't tread on me" and talking about shooting snakes...
thats some funny shit!!...LOL!
Don't tread on me, just step over. No need to bring firearms into it.
No shoot snek.
Will needs to have his own youtube channel.
I grew up on several farms in WV and every farmer harvested their cows pigs or whatever with A 22. So a 22, lever action 3030 or 35 a single shot 12 gauge and some kind of a pocket gun usually a old 32 or 38. All farms had these 4 and most had A old military rifle also.
My carry is 43x with shield arms S15 gen2 15RD mag with its steel mag catch and a TLR6 StreamLight laser/light combo, also it’s my home defense next to my 9mm AR15. Now they even make mos slides for the 43x so you can mount a red dot or get the 48 mos slide.
Wingmaster was/is a great shotgun. My dad has had one since before I was born. Love that shotgun.
I'm driving a tractor and cultivator right now. I typically bring the mk12 mod 1 the mk18 mod 0 or the savage 22lr
Speaking of old guns, I have my grandfather's Winchester model 72 .22 Carnival gun he bought my dad back in the 30s, and it still runs like new and looks like it as well.
Great selection, I really like the 410.
A AR 15? I'm stunned that you would pick this. Let's wait for the AK now. You need a 22 and a shotgun or please don't say you are a farmer.
Shot my first hog with a Russian AK....spun it around 360, ran 10 foot and dropped.. We use to get deer, hog and other critters on our ranch 20 years ago when nothing was built around us, now the city is next door.....time to move again.
This guy is awesome he has a great attitude. Makes me miss the farm
can confirm the m1 carbine is a super fun gun to shoot. A buddy of mine was clearing out his grandpas safe after he passed away so we could get them all the guns cleaned up and working, there were 2 m1 carbines in there and honestly one it was a hell of a good time to just waste ammo on them, we even landed some pot shots on steel out at 200 yards. Auto ordnance still makes new models so you can pick one up for around 800 if you are so inclined, no need to go looking for a decent condition surplus gun if you dont want the trouble.
My #1 pick is a 22mag. Gives you good ballistics for short and medium range shots, quite a bit more range than the 22lr and 22mag bullets are constructed much better than 22lr
thanks
Will is good people!