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The return of the
wood nut
A brief word about the addiction,
it's causes and how it's nurtured.
The first broad exposure most
American bird hunters had to good quality wood on a
production shotgun came when the Parker Reproduction was
introduced in 1984. We also got our first real look at
California Claro Walnut. The wood on most of these Parker
Reproductions was highly finished "3 Star' (a mid-range
grade generally defined as one side, Very Good, one side
Good) California Claro walnut. It was beautifully fitted and
finished with meticulous Japanese craftsmanship and Italian
leather-cased for perfection. Everyone liked what they saw.
Little did we know that we were witnessing the birth of a
firearms marketing paradigm that was to be embraced by many
shotgun makers in the decades that followed: Good wood sells
guns.
Great wood, like gold, is where
you find it
Today, the demand for high grade wood exceeds the supply.
Here's the problem -- when a sawyer opens a tree it is not
unlike opening a surprise package. On average, only 5% of
the blanks he cuts can be defined as high grade. The best
opportunity for a top-graded piece of wood will come from
the crotch of a big, old walnut tree -- at least 50 years
old -- but preferably 75 or 100 years. The traditional
sources of great wood -- England and France -- don't have
many century-old walnut trees left to cut. But their progeny
live on all around the world.
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Today's country-of-choice for great wood is Turkey where
large, ancient walnut trees can still be found. Trophy
pieces of Turkish Exhibition Grade wood can be priced
well into four figures and simply the reputation of
Turkish wood has pushed prices of all high grade Turkish
wood higher. The Russian Republics have discovered that
those old walnut orchards have become a major assets in
world trade. Australia produces some great "English"
walnut.
My friend, Jack Rowe -- who describes himself as
"America's oldest English-trained gunsmith" -- has added
a few pieces of Kashmir Walnut to his own larder. He buys
it from a retired Indian Army Major who gets it out (with
an armed guard) of one of the most dangerous places on
earth -- the Kashmir valley --that disputed territory
between Pakistan and India.
Gunstock wood is a global business today.
A bigger bang for the buck
As beautifully demonstrated by the Parker Reproductions,
California English and Claro Walnut is not only handsome,
but cheaper that many European walnuts. If you compare
Turkish with California walnut, grade for grade, you'll
find that Turkish is priced about 2X to 3X higher. The
California walnuts give you a much bigger, much more
beautiful, bang for the buck.
The center cut is the prime part of the
crotch.
The center slab taken out of the crotch might show wildly
gorgeous, gaudy, curling feathering on both sides. Or it
might not. Skill plus the luck of the cut applies here.
But this is where Exhibition Grade wood comes from. Among
wood aficionados it is, as they say, "to die for." And it
is always priced accordingly. The slabs on either side of
the center slab will probably have feathering on one side
and flame on the other. The two outside those will have
flame and marbling, then fiddle back, then good
contrasting stripes, then plain wood with good grain flow
and on out to sap wood. The farther you get from the
center, the straighter/fainter the grain/figure and the
lower the price. That's the good news. Here's the bad
news.
The 5% rule is narrowed still further...
Cecil Fredi, who cuts and sells gunstock blanks, sums it
up this way:
... if a slab has feather in it we cut it for a rifle
or an over/under size blank with a pistol grip because it
will bring two to three times what a side-by-side blank
will.
Since rifle and over/under blanks will sell for 2X to 3X
more than a side-by-side blank, there's less financial
reward to cut high grade wood for side-by-side shotguns.
This rarity moves the price for higher grade side-by-side
blanks (and pumps and semi-autos as well) back up on the
pricing scale. Tricky, tricky.
The Wood Nut's Reward
Virtually every shotgun manufacturer today -- taking a
page out of the Parker Reproductions play book --
utilizes upgraded wood somewhere in their marketing
program. You have to only glance at their colorful print
advertising or literature to get a feel for it. Merkel
introduced "Luxury Grade" wood to their line a couple
years ago. Browning's high grade Citoris all feature more
engraving and upgraded wood with some of the best of both
appearing on Grades III, VI and the new 525 Golden Clays.
Franchi's AL 48 Deluxe semi autos and Alcione over/unders
offer "Select Walnut" as standard. Remington doesn't
discuss wood grades much in their catalog, but some of
the wood I've seen on newer Ml 100's has to have come out
of their Custom Shop. Ithaca Classic Doubles has a
$28,000 model featuring (as you may have guessed) a piece
of highest grade Turkish crotch wood. Both Berreta and
FABARM have enhanced wood techniques on some models that
give the illusion of high-priced wood, but without the
higher cost.
A couple of years ago the head of SKB here in the U.S.
told me that he personally hand-picks every piece of wood
that goes on SKB's three shotgun grades and AYA, the
great Spanish maker, puts the same grade wood on Bill
Hanus Birdguns and model 4/53 shotguns that they put on
their $4,700 Model 53 custom sidelock.
"I'm a bird hunter of course, but..."
That's it. You're hooked. When the "but" means you like
nice wood on a shotgun (and who doesn't?) you're a wood
nut. You're one of us. Welcome to the club.,
"Some days life kisses you right on the lips" (from
the Garfield comic strip) and applicable to this
California English Crotch Walnut blank. Hard to find
certainly -- and pricey when you do Ä but a
smackeroo you'll never forget.
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