Thanks for the information and well wishes. I will be living in Sheridan sometime in July. I have four boys, the oldest not yet seven and the youngest two today, plus a six month old baby girl. Thus I am not sure how many days it will take to get from here to there. It has been an unusually crazy month getting ready to move and taking care of odds and ends. Many of which are still loose.
The largest problem has been trying to find a place in or near Sheridan to rent, for the first year or so, until we buy a house. Still have not found a place. Rather a problem. If anyone knows a place drop me a line.
Unfortunately the "cheap" ammunition to feed the Rigby runs about five dollars a round. Zombie rifles had grown boring, so I felt a pressing need for a Sasquatch rifle in an attempt to start a new trend.
The Cz550 is a very well made and stout rifle. Unfortunately, no where nearby will let me shoot it, so it has yet to see real use. Though I do take solace in knowing that so long as I have it I remain safe from the unfortunate fate of ending up a forest bride to an amorous Bigfoot.
I purchased a single action .44 Magnum revolver of workmanlike construction as a more practical aquisition to take along.
Other than the .416, the only hunting rifles I have are a pair of .30-40 Krag sporters and an 1884 Trapdoor sporter that came off an Indian reservation in Oklahoma. I imagine that a man can still get all sorts of tasks done with a Krag. I have what I would imagine is a reproduction Mills cartridge belt to go with them.
Curiously, one of my distant ancestors died in Sheridan county, or so the story goes. He was one of the two Henry armed civilians that met his end with Fetterman. (The largely forgotten Fetterman Massacre took place nearly a decade before Custer met his end.)
I will feel better once we find a place to live. Until then it will be hotel time and perhaps some camping. (Anyone have a cozy shack?)
One of my few Smith and Wessons to survive my time in SC, a 67-1 that was a sailor`s mom`s housegun until everyone in that family ended up with Glocks and I ended up with their revolver ought suffice. The stainless construction and relative youth of it meant that it tolerated the terrible humidity here.(As I thumb type this in front of a fan, it is 85 and 70 percent humidity inside the house.)
Anybody know whether Trapdoor safe 45-70 and any various or sundry .30-40 loads will be common in the area?