For me it's a Belgian made Browning .22 pump action rifle. I wouldn't sell it for anything.
My grandfather bought it when he was in his teens during the great depression. He was living on his parents' farm in central Alberta, Canada.
It cost him $14 in the 1930's, which was a fortune at the time, especially for a teen-ager. In those days the government was paying a 50 cent bounty on muskrat pelts and my grandfather told me that it took him about 6 weeks or less to pay off the rifle on their farm that his father had homesteaded some years before.
It was that rifle and their trap lines that helped see his family through the depression. Before my grandfather died at 97 years old some years ago, he asked me if there was anything I would like to end up with. I told him I didn't want anything or any money from his will, but if he would like to give it to me, I'd sure like that Browning. He gave it to me on the spot, and I have been shooting it ever since. It's at least as accurate as my friend's ruger 10/22 and shoots great just with the iron sights which have held their zero after all these years.
I'm going to pass it on to my daughter or my nephew along with its history from, and the meaning it had to their great grandfather.