How old were you when you purchased your first big bore?
I was about 40 when I had my first 375 H&H made up on a LH 700 action, back when it was tough to find LH ones. It was for an Alaska bear trip that I never did, though I later used it in Africa.
I then fiddled with a couple of 458s, one a RH Model 70 push feed and the other a Ruger Model 1. Neither much suited me, so I ended up quickly getting a dandy old H&H double in 500/450.
I was supposed to get a "free" LH 505 Gibbs as a perk for investing in the original Kimber firm, but it went bankrupt before the rifle came. What a bad investment, by the way.
My latest is a LH Model 70 in 375 H&H, bought today. I have to stop doing that. That's about it for big bores, though I still think about a 416 Rem Mag and and a 340 Wby.

19 May 2013, 20:43
ApprenticeMy story is pretty un-impressive but here goes. I bought a Marlin 45/70 when I was 14, with money earned from mowing yards(worked part time in a mower repair shop as well, the owner was a friend of my father). At 17, I acquired a Model 70 in 375(still mowing yards and working at the local lumber yard). At 23, a Ruger RSM in 416 Rigby(worked as an electrician through college). At 25, a Model 70 in 416 Rem(still playing with electricity). Now, at 29, I'm off in the right direction and have .404J in the works(currently attending college, again, and working as a CNC machinist for electro-optical materials industry). Maybe something like a 450 Dakota/Rigby next. I only dream of a nice double someday. A .450 3 1/4, but my pocket book is nowhere near that deep. Luckily, it doesn't cost a thing to dream.
In 1964, I was 16 years old. I already had a Weatherby Mark XXII, and wanted to upgrade. I convinced my father to help me buy a .460 Magnum. The gun was from the Southgate, Ca plant, weighed 10.5 lbs.,and had an integral muzzle brake. It was stocked in a blond colored mesquite wood with a rosewood tip and grip cap. If I recollect, the gun was a tad over $500.00 back then. I never had the balls to shoot the thing, so it languished on my bedroom wall as I went through college. In the early seventies, when I got my first taste of the real world, money, for me, became an issue, (I needed it!). I reluctantly instructed my father to sell the gun. It fetched $200.00 from a Chicago vicinity gunsmith. I wish I had that gun today. Oh well!
19 May 2013, 21:29
jaegerfrankAt 26 an Sako L61 in 375, wonderful rifle but the scope mounted to close to the eyes with Suhler Claw Mount and Habicht 1,5-6x42 in Steel. I sold it as it did hit me all the time. Excellent components but lack of experience tolde me the lesson.