Flintlock Fire ; Deer Season 71-Year-Old Gap Woman Bags Trophy Buck With Homemade Rife - Insurance News | InsuranceNewsNet

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May 1, 2015 Newswires
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Flintlock Fire ; Deer Season 71-Year-Old Gap Woman Bags Trophy Buck With Homemade Rife

PJ Reilly

For many hunters, getting game isn't anywhere near as important as how they get it.

Or what they get it with.

The deer hunter who hits the woods toting a stick and string during gun season doesn't view his bow as a handicap.

The small gamer who carries the double-barreled, black-powder shotgun his grandfather gave him isn't thinking about bag limits as he works through the grapevine tangles.

Margaret Allison, of Gap, could have taken a scoped, semi- automatic shotgun with a rifled barrel when she went deer hunting Dec. 12 in Chester County.

Instead, the 71-year-old slinked through a skiff of snow firmly gripping the .50-caliber flintlock rifle with buckhorn sights her husband of 53 years, Paul, had built for her in 1986.

"I love that rifle," Allison said. "It makes me a better hunter, because I have to think about what I'm doing so much more when I go to shoot."

On this chilly, next-to-last day of the 2014 firearms season, Allison was a good enough hunter with her trusty flintlock to take her biggest buck ever - an 11-pointer - with a single shot at 85 yards.

"I'm usually pretty calm when it comes time to shoot, but I have to admit, I was shaking on this shot," she said. "I knew it was a nice buck."

Old school rifle

It's actually not all that surprising that Allison would choose to carry a flintlock into the woods for deer, when she could legally carry a more modern firearm.

Her husband is owner of Federal Gun Shoppe in Gap and has been building custom flintlocks for decades.

Also, the husband and wife are long-time members of Lancaster Muzzle Loading Rifle Association, where she serves as secretary.

The Allisons shoot regularly, which Margaret Allison says is key to being proficient with a flintlock.

"The more you shoot these rifles, the more familiar you become with how they function," she said. "They're all different."

Paul Allison recalls a time when a man asked his wife "why she would want to take out one of those unreliable guns that don't always go off.

"She looked him right in the eye and said, 'Sir, my rifle has never misfired.' "

Retired from the insurance business, Margaret Allison didn't seriously take up deer hunting until her husband built her .50- caliber flintlock.

In nearly 30 years, she has taken 16 deer with that rifle. Six of those - including this year's monster - have been bucks.

She's got notches in the rifle's stock for each deer - big notches for bucks, smaller ones for does.

The rifle will one day be passed down to one of her granddaughters. The Allisons have five daughters and 15 grandchildren; three of those grandchildren are hunters.

The hunt

On Dec. 12, the Allisons headed to a piece of private property where they have permission to hunt.

Their plan was to sit in the truck until daylight, then slip through the woods to their favorite hunting spots, looking for deer along the way.

"In this woods, you might see deer anywhere," Margaret Allison said.

Within seconds after she left the truck, she bumped some deer.

"I am impatient," she said. "I like to get to my stand and then wait for deer to come to me."

Bumping those deer reminded her of advice her husband had given her about walking slowly, with light feet, and scanning the woods for deer. So that's what she did the rest of the way.

She figures it took her an hour and 45 minutes to get to her stand. "And I really didn't go that far away from the truck," she said.

As she approached her spot, she saw several deer ahead of her. They were the five she had spooked earlier.

"Apparently, I didn't scare them too bad, because they were just feeding along," she said. "They never left the woods."

One of the deer was noticeably larger than the others. That's the one Margaret focused on.

And within short order, she noticed it had antlers. Big ones.

"I didn't know how big it was, but I knew it was big," she said. "That's when I started shaking."

She was shaking so much, she thought she might have trouble shooting.

"I remembered what Paul told me about finding a tree to use to steady myself, and I really took my time to think about what I needed to do to shoot," she said.

Even with that laser focus, Margaret Allison admits she still was shaking.

But when she squeezed the trigger and became engulfed in a cloud of white smoke, she felt good about the shot.

She didn't see where the buck went, but she could tell by listening that he ran away from her before circling back and crashing barely 40 yards away.

"It was a big crash," she said. "I knew he was down."

Ground shrinkage? Not

When Margaret Allison walked up on her buck, she couldn't believe her eyes.

The long, sweeping main beams had good mass to support the 11 points, and about an 18-inch spread.

"He was even bigger than I thought," she said. "He had a big rack, and he was a big-bodied deer."

The property manager heard her shot, as did her husband, and the two rushed over to find her.

Both shared in the hunter's delight.

The property manager fetched his tractor and hauled the buck back to the Allisons' truck in the bucket.

"That made things a lot easier on us, I can tell you," she said.

This was the biggest buck she ever shot, but it's not going to the taxidermist.

"His antlers were broken in a couple places," she said. "I'm happy just to remember him with the rack."

And with another notch in her rifle stock.

I'm usually pretty calm when it comes time to shoot, but I have to admit, I was shaking on this shot. I knew it was a nice buck.

Margaret Allison

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