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Fox as a pet
Does anyone have experience with either domesticated foxes or those raised from young kits?
Posted in advice requested, beast
9 Comments
Unit cost averaging
When the cost of guns increases, buy ammo. When ammo is too expensive, buy training. When you can’t afford training, invest in practice. If you can’t afford range time, have no ammo, practice trigger control and getting into firing positions. If that’s not possible for some reason, put your time into physical exercise. That rifle will feel lighter and your heart rate would be low enough to permit accurate fire after a hundred yard dash.
Most of us have the “first world problem” — too much gear, less skill and even less practice with that skill. If you have skills and practice, teach them to others. Or practice working as a team with others. Not being able to get ammo is not an excuse to neglect the other component of making yourself into an effective fighter.
If you don’t have time…make time. Can you forgo TV, video games, something else inessential? If not, then perhaps being ready to stand off zombies, government troops or marauding ground hogs just isn’t a high enough priority for you.
Pretty is as pretty does
When I first saw this holster, I wondered why anyone would make a pretty holster for a completely utilitarian Glock.Then I got to shoot a new Gen.4 G19 at the range and the accuracy was enough to remind me. Reliable, accurate, lightweight — that’s beauty in its own right.
The holster holds the gun flat to the side, and the quality of work is pretty impressive. The leather isn’t fully boned but holds the shape well enough for one-handed re-holstering. The tooling is subdued enough not to come across as garish but still festive — and black details reduce the bright orange orange flash of the leather.
EJ Redding does good work.
A little girl’s upgrade
Last year, she started out with a single shot Crickett, now she’s ready for a 10-22 Tactical.
In today’s market, the box in her left hand might be worth nearly as much as the rifle.
I think Garibaldi would have been proud to claim her as his own.
A matter of credibility.
Due to cultural expectations, some defensive arms have more credibility that others. For example, a young woman wearing chain mail and wielding a sword would not be taken all that seriously by many. The look is too quaint, and there no certainty that she’d be competent with her weapon. Never mind that a sword can be extremely effective at close range. This lack of credibility is aggravated if the defender is old or infirm, or if the sword is replaced with a knife or a baton. The probability of of the defender having to actually fight against an unconvinced attacker is higher than with a firearm.
The same person with a ranged weapon and multiple shots on tap would be taken rather more seriously. She may be clumsy or only slightly trained, but she would still have 31 tries at poking very deep holes through her attacker at standoff distances. So carrying a firearm would win more fights by default from the foe — and be easier both on the defender and the local ER staff.
Carrying a pistol concealed is also rather more socially acceptable than clanking along in armor, with a sword on your side.
Posted in interesting people, pistol, rkba, self-defense, weapon
Tagged 22Magnum, blade, chain, mail, PMR30, sword
21 Comments
“Terms of Enlistment.”
I recently mentioned Marko’s new book as the best military science fiction I’ve read in quite some time. Good to see it gain the deserved popularity. At three bucks, it’s the best entertainment you can get for a day or more. Would have been a bargain at thirty.
The things I can’t afford.
In my entire adult life, I couldn’t afford broadcast television. Not the set itself, but the time required to watch it. Now I find that computer games are prohibitively expensive. A business colleague gifted me a disk with the sequel to my once-favorite game, Red Orchestra. I’ve had it since November and have yet to install the program. I can’t figure out where I would get the time to play it when so many other things compete with it…work, cat, books, girlfriend, range time.
Ah, to be rich! If only I had 30 hour days…
Want to buy: Panasonic G2 or GH2 camera, lenses
Just checked the usual stores and didn’t see one for sale. If anyone has a G2 or GH2 for sale, please let me know. Also interested in lenses, particularly 20/1.7, 45/1.8, 60/.28 macro.
Posted in camera and lens
2 Comments
Poor pulp fiction writers
Gun enthusiasts are fond of making fun of pulp fiction writers for inaccuracies concerning gun descriptions. For example: “Joe eased the revolver safety off and carefully walked through the apartment.” Isn’t that funny, to think that revolvers have manual safeties?
This Velodog revolver has it, a flag on the hammer. German Army revolver of 1879 had it. Many of the pocket guns of the early 20th century had it, and several of today’s designs do as well.
Let’s read another example. “The zombies kept coming. Clara shot her revolver dry, ejected the empty clip and reached for another.” They are called magazines, not clips, right? And revolvers don’t have those…except when they do.
Half-moon clips on the left hold rimless 45ACP ammunition for use in American M1917 and converted British Webley revolvers. The full moon clip on the right holds .357Mag ammunition for quick loading of Chiappa Rhino revolvers. S&W625 also takes 45ACP in moon clips, and S&W940 does the same with 9mm. Taurus made a clip-fed 9mm for a time also.
Going forward, let’s try this gem: “The noise in the small room was deafening. Holding the big gun with both hands, Peter shot from the hip. With each blast, a smoking spent shell casing came out of the cylinder and rolled on the bloody-soaked floor.” Revolvers don’t auto-eject, do they? Some do, using diverted cylinder gap gas pressure. So before you pick on the pulp fiction writers, consider the slight possibility that they might know their stuff.
Bad self-defense advice: Idiocy or Malice?
Recently, we have been treated to spectacularly stupid advice on self-defense by the vice president of the US. Doing what he advised would endanger the defender, the defender’s neighbors AND put him in legal trouble. That has been discussed in detail. My question is: was Biden deliberately trying to entrap unwary listeners or is he truly that stupid?
A Colorado representative thinks that the best defense against rapists is a whistle. While that advice has been similarly discussed in detail, I’d like to add to it.
A whistle is not just a poor way of responding to a rape. It’s a spectacularly harmful accessory. Here’s why:
- The concept of using a whistle to summon help comes from 19th century police officers. They knew that their colleagues were nearby and ready to rush for help when summoned. How far would the sound carry in a noisy city? More importantly, who is going to rush to help upon hearing a whistle in today’s environment?
- Whistling requires blowing through the mouthpiece. It uses up air and oxygen that would otherwise be available for running away or fighting. In other words, the rapist wouldn’t even have to strangle the victim because the act of summoning help would use up the air in her lungs. Whistling also takes time during which even a slight backhand across the face would knock the whistle away, possibly with teeth around it.
- Whistles emit a high-pitched sound. High-frequency noises don’t propagate as far as low frequency noises. They are also fairly difficult for listeners to localize (ever tried to find which of the smoke detectors is beeping?) That can be an advantage if you are an officer summoning infantry out of trenches but definitely a hindrance for a rape victim.
- Trying to attract attention is a valid strategy, but not if it takes attention away from fleeing or resisting. If a woman must use a noisemaker to draw attention to a situation, an aerosol air horn would work better. And if we assume that she can reach for an air horn, why not reach for something more effective instead?
Gunfire would attract attention even better, also cause a rapist to become incapacitated or flee. Why is it not considered by the advisers? Many of the students are under 21, disarmed legislatively in most states by the combination of state laws and school rules. But the whistle solution is pushed at women of all ages, not just the most vulnerable younger girls.
Defensive firearms can be small and light enough to carry with no more effort than carrying a wallet. They are simple in use and quite effective. Yet certain elected creatures are pushing the non-solutions like “rape whistles” that would leave rape victims literally breathless in the face of their attackers. Do they give bad advice because they are merely stupid? The other possibility is that bad self-defense advice advances some evil agenda of theirs, such as creating more victims. Considering that high-profile anti-gun organizations are made up of convicted rapists, kidnappers and other violent criminals, that seems more likely.
Posted in holster, pistol, rkba, self-defense, Uncategorized, weapon
Tagged rape, whistle, women
13 Comments
Czechpoint 22WMR revolver
You might recall the photo I posted last year of a 6″ Czechpoint revolver in 22Magnum. This year, I finally got around to firing it. At the birthday party, we had clays set up from about 25 yards out to nearly 70. Shooting this gun single action, I could hit 100% of the clays at 25 yards and better than 50% at 40. For me, especially not knowing how the gun was zeroed, that’s pretty good. The narrow front sight blade and crisp trigger make it an easy gun to shoot well. The factory target shot at 16 yards indicated dispersion of two inches. I suspect that the revolver is actually a bit more accurate than that, as I was hitting clays just over four inches in diameter regularly at more than twice that range. The ammo was soft point BVAC 40gr delivered instead of CCI Maximag I ordered. Its performance seems very good.
Being an alloy framed revolver, Model 361 weights only 34 ounces and holds 9 rounds, while the comparable Taurus Tracker weighs in at 44oz. MSRP is $300 vs. $555.
At this point in time, the price premium of 22WMR over 22LR isn’t great and the availability is much better. The advantages are several: 70% more kinetic energy at the muzzle for more reliable expansion of semi-jacketed bullets, slightly less drop (2.8″ vs. 4.5″ at 50 yards, 12″ vs. 18″ at 100 yards), less wind drift. From a 6″ barrel, 40gr .22LR gets 1050 to 1080fps, and 40gr 22WMR 1380-1400fps. For shooting at point targets, that’s a useful increase and allows tackling larger varmints like coyotes from a farm tractor cab without having to wrangle a full-length rifle required to get even close to such a velocity from 22LR.
While Czechpoint is out of these revolvers and won’t get more until August, they have 22LR and 22WMR revolving carbines. Slightly different niche but identical action and rather higher muzzle velocity with 18″ barrels.
Mid-length 38s, old and new
Years ago, I got an old revolver for a small sum. Eventually, it went to a good friend. Then the friend died, and I inherited it. It had great lockwork and tight lockup but was pitted and worn.
It was fitted with laser grips. In low light, the adjustable laser is a big win over the black on black fixed sights. The rubber also made the already mild recoil even less noticeable.
Chad Kandros (Nashville, TN) beadblasted and Cerakoted it for me. If you are in Florida, Spectrum Coating does great work (they OEM for several large gun companies). In Iowa, Galt’s Guns does equally well.
It’s not perfect but I no longer have to worry about it rusting further. The slightly textured finish looks nice and feels good to the hand. I plan on comparison-firing it side by side with a brand new 5″ revolver, a Charter Police Bulldog.
So called “logic” of gun bans.
To make the “logic” of gun bans a little more obvious, I’d like to use the analogy of cars as more familiar to everyone. Imagine a situation in which some tiny number of vehicles are used for criminal purposes, such as transporting drugs, kidnapping and drive-by shootings. By the logic currently applied to guns, the hypothetical car-banners can try several approaches:
- Ban everyone from using the same kind of cars as used by the majority of criminals. If the most popular “crime car” is a Ford Escort, ban those. Or all compact sedans. As everyone, including criminals, switches to other types, ban the most popular of those.
- Ban the most high-performance vehicles (or those with largest number of seats, greatest cargo capacity or some other useful feature) on the theory that they are most suitable for criminal use and evading police. Next year, ban the next to the most high performing types and so on.
- Prohibit ownership to specific people, defining the “specific” people broadly enough to include everyone besides specifically exempted politicians and their, so called “public”, servants.
Neither of these approaches is reasonable but anti-gun people push for them anyway. They are ok with victimizing the blameless. That tells us that their real goal isn’t disarming the criminals but disarming everyone they view as potential political opposition.
Some segments of gun control are aimed at producing a local electoral majority, the prime example being the Colorado bills that would cause enough pro-gun people to move out of the state to ensure a long-term Democrat majority. Others are aimed at disarming the “most probably enemy” population groups, and both political parties are guilty of that to some extent, though Democratic party does it far more.
Very nice jewelry
Mike Williamson just turned me onto jewelry by Jeni Benos. Gorgeous work — and the artist herself is a work of art too.