tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-131950312024-03-07T20:43:01.500-08:00Giraffe in a compact carGiraffehttp://www.blogger.com/profile/05556306156373942923noreply@blogger.comBlogger206125tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-13195031.post-23853081465315633502015-01-09T14:57:00.000-08:002015-01-09T14:57:00.057-08:00Ruger Amercian RimfireI like the 17 HMR. It is a fun cartridge to shoot. And that is the category it fits in: Fun. It isn't a serious cartridge for hunting coyotes or deer. The ammo costs more than .22 lr. That harms the fun factor, but only a little. You make up for higher ammo costs by hitting what you shoot at more often, and the results of a hit on a varmint are more certain, sometimes even spectacular.<br />
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I bought a Remington 597 Magnum in 17 HMR. I like the idea of the gun, but as is typical of Remington, they botched it. The magazines feed like crap, and the bolt barely closed on an empty chamber. The rifle was very accurate, but not reliable at all. And then Remington recalled it. Seems a bottleneck cartridge in a blowback action wasn't a great idea. Others did it though.<br />
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So anyway, the gun wasn't getting shot, and Remington's recall was a joke. They'd give me $200 towards a Remington gun. This meant I'd have to spend about $600 out of pocket to get my $200, and I paid over $300 for the gun. I wasn't taking that deal; at the time Remington had nothing I needed. So I just hung on to it but never shot it.<br />
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Now, the problem with 17 HMR is that a good rifle costs as much as a cheaper (or even a more expensive centerfire). There is a savage for about $200, but I didn't like that one. Marlin makes a nice one, but I haven't seen one in years and they cost too much also. This is a fun cartridge, not a serious one, so if I'm spending serious rifle money I should get a serious rifle.<br />
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So then, the 17 WSM comes out. Wow. I wanted one. The 17 WSM is starting to get into serious cartridge territory. It
shoots a heavier bullets faster than the HMR. It will work as a fox or
coyote rifle close in, anyway.My uncle got one, my cousin got one. They liked them. I shot my uncle's. The <a href="http://www.savagearms.com/bmag/bmag/">savage B-mag</a> is not impressive. The round is awesome. I did some research on Rimfire.com. Apparently there's a lot of problems with the Bmag rifle and some speculation on the ammo. Oh well, I wanted one anyway. I need to fill that niche. (It doesn't matter that the niche didn't exist a dozen years ago, it does now). One problem, three local gunshops have rifles but nobody has ammo. I don't want to buy a gun I can't get ammo for. So, I figured I'd wait. Maybe somebody would make a better rifle in the meantime. <br />
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A new gunshop had opened up in town. I took my brother in law in to show him the AR's. When we were just about to leave, something caught my eye in the used rifle rack. "Ruger American .17 HMR. $260" Now what is this? The dealer told me he had sold the gun new and the guy traded it in after a week because his wife wanted a .204 AR and she told him she needed that worse than he needed this gun. I told the dealer I needed a wife like that. 15 rounds through it. So I made a deal for $240. You can't beat that. Finally a decent 17 HMR that I feel good about spending the money on. His price for a new one was $270.<br />
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This is a <a href="http://www.ruger.com/products/americanRimfire/models.html">bolt action repeater </a>that holds 9 in the magazine. Uses Ruger's rotary magazines just like the 10/22 only scaled up. It has an adjustable trigger similar to savage's acutrigger. The bolt is solid feeling. No binding. It isn't as silky as a tikka, but it is pretty smooth and has a substantial feel to it. I was loading a round once and bumped the mag release. The magazine fell out, but the round stayed on the bolt face even when I moved it forward and back. I wouldn't call it controlled round feeding, but it is similar. Feeding, extraction and ejection were very positive. <br />
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It has a fold down rear sight and a fiber optic front sight. I hate fiber optic sights, they usually are so big. This one I liked, and I liked the sight picture. I feel you can get a pretty fine hold with them. Despite this, I couldn't hit anything with the iron sights. I don't think they were sighted in. The stock is synthetic and comes with two inserts, one with a higher cheekpiece for using the iron sights. The stock is fairly solid feeling. Not at all like the rubbery plastic one on the Bmag.<br />
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I took a set of rings off a .22 and mounted a Weaver Grand Slam 4.5-14 off my old .17 HMR. I think that is a pretty good choice for optics. It may seem silly to mount a scope on a gun like this that I paid twice as much for as the gun. Yet, the cartridge is capable of great precision so higher magnification is in order. A small field of view isn't a problem, You aren't going to be swinging on a whitetail running through the trees. This is a cartridge you take your time to set up your shots with. Quality optics are called for when the gun and cartridge are capable of making the most of it.<br />
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I got it dialed in quickly. The third shot hit dead on. I shot a five shot group. I didn't measure, but it was around 1/2" at about 40 yards. Not too bad for just screwing around and only trying one kind of ammo. The wind was blowing about 30 mph so I didn't try it at 100.<br />
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I proceeded to spend my fathers day shooting various varmints. I only remember missing once, when I hit a stick between me and my target.<br />
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Pros: Bolt feel, magazine, looks OK, accurate, light weight, iron sights are functional, good trigger.<br />
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Cons: the magazine release sticks out a little. I bumped it once and the mag dropped out. You have to bump it forward, though.<br />
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My brother has the Marlin in 17 HMR. When the 17 WSM came out his reaction was a yawn. I can see why, now that I have a rifle that I think I will love in 17 HMR. Ammo will be cheaper. Performance may be reduced, but really, the 17 HMR is a good round. The WSM is pretty attractive, but if I need a serious gun, I have those. I think I will wait and see if the 17 WSM makes it as a cartridge. They will also have to chamber it in a good rifle. I haven't seen one yet. Giraffehttp://www.blogger.com/profile/05556306156373942923noreply@blogger.com3tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-13195031.post-89864645585166195192014-12-30T14:49:00.002-08:002014-12-30T14:49:12.219-08:00David Wood: Why I am a Christian<div class="separator" style="clear: both; text-align: center;">
Came across this video. I found it pretty interesting. </div>
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<br />Giraffehttp://www.blogger.com/profile/05556306156373942923noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-13195031.post-48334988519778156182014-04-14T11:59:00.002-07:002014-04-14T12:27:57.585-07:00Hot Lead.Note: This post will possibly be updated from time to time. I might add some pictures. I will probably link it on the sidebar. <br />
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El Borak gave me a heads up that he was going to put me on the spot regarding bullet casting. I think that he knows that I have only been doing it for a little longer than he has, and therefore I am no kind of expert. But, I am the sort that reads a lot on the internet about things that interest me, so if I don't actually have the experience, I think I can send you to the people who do.<br />
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I got started with cast boolits* because I got started shooting revolvers. Revolvers are very versatile and very unfussy in their care and feeding. I had thought jacketed bullets were more modern and therefore superior. In some ways they are, but if you have a well made and loaded boolit, you can't improve on it much with a jacketed bullet. I've been a handloader for quite awhile. Adding another component I can make appealed to me, and hunting and shooting is my main hobby. I also have moulds for my semiauto handguns and one for .30 cal rifle. My newest addition is a mold for <a href="http://buckshotmold.com/">buckshot.</a> I tried it out over the weekend and I got about 50% nice round buckshot. The others were out of round and small. I suspect my mold wasn't hot enough and my melt should have been hotter. I was just testing it out. I can see that it will take a lot of time to cast usable quantities of buckshot.<br />
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Lead is the primary metal used. It is actually an alloy of lead, antimony, and tin. Zinc will ruin the castibility of your alloy. Only a minute amount will ruin a lot of lead. I get my lead on ebay. I have tried to get old wheelweights at the tire shop and they had sold them to the recycler. I never tried again, as I had read that our overbearing federal govt had banned lead wheelweights. However, others are still getting them, so I need to try again. Wheelweights are in a sweet spot regarding hardness. Elmer Keith shot boolits cast from wheelweights without a gas check. There are other sources of lead, old plumbing, roof flashing, old xray shielding, etc. When I buy my lead on ebay, my boolits cost around $.05. Compared to <a href="http://www.bign.com/bignmarketplace/searchredirect.aspx?id=http://r.popshops.com/r/cEQ2cFhpUnZCWjlsRHZhVmM4WWFRSFN3Z3hONDNhTXlQVGhFMzJ4MUhUUzRoUnM4Z1N0c20rdVNSVXYvCkE4dXJ1UjMxZERhQmltOHBlNGxkbE53c1l3PT0K/421-48-564K">$.20+</a> for jacketed, that's a pretty good deal. Obviously free is better. An added benefit is that a gun shooting boolits will never wear the barrel out. Jacketed bullets will, eventually.<br />
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Smelting is melting scrap lead, cleaning it, and mixing your alloy. This is a litlle more advanced. (that just means I have never done it, not that it is more difficult. El Borak has). Lead is heavy, so impurities float to the top. Keep your temp right, and I believe zinc wheelweights will float and can be removed. Flux the melt to mix alloyed metal back in. Then you ladle your allow into ingots to use for casting bullets. Muffin tins work good for ingot molds. Obviously they can't be used for muffins again, so don't take the Mrs's. good ones.<br />
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Casting bullets is both an art and science. It can be as simple as buying lead ingots , melting them, casting, loading, and shooting. More
advanced casters mix special alloys to achieve a desired hardness,
concoct their own lubes, and make or have made their own mould designs. The members of the <a href="http://castboolits.gunloads.com/index.php">Cast Boolits Forum</a> are an invaluable resource regarding all aspects of lead boolits. There is information on sources of lead (and lead for sale), equipment, alloys, lube recipes and generally anything you need to know about casting or swaging boolits. They are good guys too. One of them, screwed by the overbearing government of California, sent me a Lee bottom pour lead pot and some lead for the cost of shipping because he can't shoot lead anymore.<br />
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There are many variations of boolits. Softer lead is used for low velocity loads, and muzzleloaders. As you increase in velocity, the hardness of the bullet should increase. The hot propellant gasses blowing past the boolit will strip lead and deposit in the barrel. This destroys accuracy and is a pain to remove**. The boolits are also lubed to keep lead from sticking to the barrel. The downside is more smoke. For the most powerful loads a <a href="http://www.hornady.com/store/Gas-Checks">gas check</a> is used. This is a copper cup crimped on to the bullet base. Since the price of copper went north, the guys at Cast Boolits have taken to making (and selling) their own punches to make gas checks out of aluminum. There are also esoteric things like paper patched boolits*** and swaged boolits.<br />
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Boolits are a little different than what the average shooter is used to. In rifles, they top out at about 2000 feet per second velocity. Boolits can be very accurate, but they are generally less so than what we are used to with jacketed bullets. They are plenty accurate for hunting. They are not going to be useful for long range marksmanship, except perhaps the kind Matthew Quigley demostrates. There were some long range feats with bullets like this, but modern bullets are greatly superior because of their accuracy and the ability to product more streamlined shapes. You can produce small caliber boolits, say in .224" for a .223 or .22-250, but they are more difficult, to make, and not very accurate in the more cavernous cases. You can turn a .223 varmint rifle into a glorified .22 long rifle, but why? Well, because it is cheaper to shoot. Boolits tend to expand less. I have dug boolits out of a green ash log that were fairly intact, that I thought should be smashed unrecognizable. I've found shiny boolits lying on the matted grass in the spring that I had shot into the snowbanks. They were pristine except for rifling marks. I suppose they expand less because they are harder. You get the tendency to have a bigger, heavier boolit moving slower, yet hitting like a ton of bricks. Rifles might tend towards larger bores so that expansion becomes less necessary.<br />
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You will need equipment. You can start with a camp stove, a cast iron pot, a lead dipper and some <a href="http://leeprecision.com/bullet-casting/">Lee moulds</a>. Or you can buy Magma Engineering automatic machines that cast hundreds per hour. I'd recommend starting with a bottom pour pot. You fill it up with lead and turn it on. Once the lead is melted, flux it to remove impurities. Put a pea sized piece of wax on top and light the vapors with a match. Stire the melt and then use a dipper to remove the slag on top. Some of the stuff that rises may be your tin that you want to keep. I recommend you do some further reading on fluxing.<br />
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Lee moulds**** are inexpensive. Cheap isn't good enough for some people. That is what use. There are higher priced cast iron molds that may bring value. You can buy six cavity moulds that cast six bullets at a time. I recommend those. They don't cost much more and there isn't anything more to learn, but you triple your production. With a new mold, you "smoke" it buy holding a candle or a match flame on the cavities. The soot is deposited and allows boolits to release freely. The procedure to cast boolits is to rest your mould on top of the pot to warm it up. You fill the cavities with lead and let the lead harden, then you cut the sprue off with the sprue cutters, open the mould, and dump the boolits out. Some quench them in ice water. Read the paragraph on safety before you try that. Any reject boolits and the sprues go back in the pot.<br />
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Next, you need to size the boolits and lube them. There are lubrisizers that do both simultaneously. I just bought Lee tumble lube molds. The boolits have small grooves. You put them in a container, squirt some Lee alox lube on them, and tumble them until coated. Dump them on some wax paper, dry them overnight and they are ready to load. Lee says sizing is not necessary as long as they chamber easily. I have never sized a boolit. More traditional boolits have deeper and wider grooves that are to be filled up with lube. Supposedly you can tumble lube these too. I do have sizers for my boolits for my semiauto .45 and 9mm. I just haven't got around to loading any of these, since the 9mm is a new acquisition and the .45acp doesn't get shot much. If you size tumble lube boolits, you lube them twice, once before you size them to keep the sizing die from leading up, and once after, in case you rub the lube off. Gas checks are also crimped on during the sizing process. The goal is to size your bullets .001" larger than the cylinder throats of your revolver. This is for accuracy and to prevent propellant gases from blowing by.<br />
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Then that is about it. Your boolits are ready to load. You do have to expand the necks of your cartridge cases so the bullets seat without shaving lead or lube off. I sometimes don't do that when loading jacketed bullets in handgun calibers. You usually don't do it in rifle calibers. So it is an extra step and an extra die you need, but most of the time it comes with the set in handgun calibers.<br />
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Cast boolits are something you think of as old technology. They are. Yet there is still innovation going on. I hadn't been to the Cast Boolits forums for quite awhile. I went back a couple months ago and got a big surprise. Someone had invented a process to eliminate lubing bullets. You simply <a href="http://castboolits.gunloads.com/forumdisplay.php?184-Coatings-and-Alternatives">powder coat</a> them with acrylic powder coat. Bake it on, load and shoot. The advantages are you don't have as much smoke when you shoot, you can eliminate leading, and you don't have to taylor your hardness to your velocity. The downside is you have to have a powder coat machine, although there are some who are tumbling it on in coats. You also need an oven to bake it on. Some are using toaster ovens. I'm thinking I may go this way some day, as I don't have all the expensive lubing and sizing gear, so $60 for a powder coat machine from harbor freight and $30 for a toaster oven my be preferable than buying a lubrisizer and dies for each caliber. (Some have a complete machine for each caliber). Another downside is you have to stand all your bullets up in rows in order to coat them. It may not actually save any time over old methods (certainly not over tumble lubing). Other people are doing a similar thing with certain types of spray paint. I find it attractive because I might be able to use range scrap lead that I buy on Ebay which tends to be soft.<br />
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<b>On safety</b>: <a href="http://castboolits.gunloads.com/showthread.php?51265-Badly-Burned!!!">Leather gloves are a necessity</a>. Lead melts at about 650 F. Your mold will get hot, the boolits coming out will be hot. You can handle the boolits for short times with leather gloves. Always cast outside, as vapors may be produced that you don't want the kids around. Lead is toxic. Wash your hands when done. I understand the worst stuff is oxidized lead that you skim off when you flux. Get rid of that. Be careful adding lead back into the pot. You don't want splashes. You do need eye protection. UNDER NO CIRCUMSTANCES ALLOW WATER TO GET IN CONTACT WITH MOLTEN LEAD. What results is a steam explosion, and hot molten lead flying around and coating everything. There are stories on the forum of guys coating their faces. Be aware that the lead you are adding to the melt may contain moisture. I guess that means be certain it does not contain moisture or don't add it. Some people recover bullets from the range and recycle them in a smelting pot. You must always completely empty the pot before adding new lead. Any water will evaporate before the lead melts. But if you simply dump it into the melt, you can get the <a href="http://castboolits.gunloads.com/showthread.php?81451-Smelt-pot-explosion">tinsel fairy</a>. Now perhaps you see why I look a little askance about quneching boolits in icewater as you cast them. I've never had a steam explosion, and I don't want to. One also needs to be careful with range scrap that you don't get any dud .22 shells in there. Basically, you should decide if this is something you can or should do or not. <br />
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*"boolit" is the actual technical term for cast projectiles. I may forget and type "bullet". Please forgive me.<br />
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** Fortunecookie45LC says just shoot jacket bullets occasionally to clean out the leading. I'm not sure about that, but the man has a wealth of information on Youtube about <a href="https://www.youtube.com/channel/UC8mM8eaTSFODu1QpedvpInA">shooting and boolits</a>.<br />
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*** <a href="https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ab9Xep5pDwU">Think Quigley Down Under</a>. One my favorites.<br />
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**** for some reason I'm spelling it mould. I don't know why. Lee spells it mold. Giraffehttp://www.blogger.com/profile/05556306156373942923noreply@blogger.com8tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-13195031.post-42207354894654682412013-10-14T07:42:00.000-07:002013-10-14T07:42:00.999-07:00Return to Sender<iframe allowfullscreen="" frameborder="0" height="360" src="//www.youtube.com/embed/XHdNtEvDfu4?feature=player_embedded" width="640"></iframe><br />
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<br />Giraffehttp://www.blogger.com/profile/05556306156373942923noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-13195031.post-37043447312354533642013-04-13T08:38:00.000-07:002013-04-13T08:38:04.856-07:00I didn't think they had people this stupid in Wyoming<br />
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http://abcnews.go.com/US/wireStory/wyoming-man-hit-killed-moving-injured-rabbit-18914890<br />
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Of course, the comments are most likely not from people that live in Wyoming, so stupidity is expected:<br />
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<i>That poor bunny - I feel so sick right now</i><br />
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and<i>:</i><br />
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<i>I'm sure the Trooper mercelessy shot the rabbit after the man died
trying to save it. god bless the man who died. We obviously know who
the good guy was. The kindness in this mans heart is what we need so
much more of on this earth. May he rest in peace.</i><br />
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<i> </i>Then again, I don't really know anybody from Wyoming. Res?Giraffehttp://www.blogger.com/profile/05556306156373942923noreply@blogger.com25tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-13195031.post-72772748646267404552013-02-15T08:54:00.004-08:002013-02-26T15:14:40.234-08:00We need this to be universal among firearms and ammo companiesFOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE:<br />
Olympic Arms is a staunch believer in and
defender of the Constitution of the United States, and with special
attention paid to the Bill of Rights that succinctly enumerates the
security of our Divinely given Rights. One of those Rights is that to
Keep and Bear Arms.<br />
<br />
Legislation recently passed in the State of
New York outlaws the AR15 and many other firearms, and will make it
illegal for the good and free citizens of New York to own a large
selection of legal and safe firearms and magazines. We feel as though
the passage of this legislation exceeds the authority granted to the
government of New York by its citizens, and violates the Constitution of
the United States, ignoring such SCOTUS rulings as District of Columbia
v. Heller - 554, U.S. 570 of 2008, McDonald v. Chicago - 561 U.S. 3025
of 2010, and specifically the case of United States v. Miller – 307 U.S.
174 of 1939.<br />
<br />
Due the passing of this legislation, Olympic Arms
would like to announce that the State of New York, any Law Enforcement
Departments, Law Enforcement Officers, First Responders within the State
of New York, or any New York State government entity or employee of
such an entity - will no longer be served as customers. <br />
<br />
In
short, Olympic Arms will no longer be doing business with the State of
New York or any governmental entity or employee of such governmental
entity within the State of New York - henceforth and until such
legislation is repealed, and an apology made to the good people of the
State of New York and the American people. <br />
<br />
If the leaders of the
State of New York are willing to limit the right of the free and law
abiding citizens of New York to arm themselves as they see fit under the
Rights enumerate to all citizens of the United State through the Second
Amendment, we feel as though the legislators and government entities
within the State of New York should have to abide by the same
restrictions. <br />
<br />
This action has caused a division of the people
into classes: Those the government deems valuable enough to protect with
modern firearms, and those whose lives have been deemed as having less
value, and whom the government has decided do not deserve the right to
protect themselves with the same firearms. Olympic Arms will not support
such behavior or policy against any citizen of this great nation. <br />
<br />
Olympic
Arms invites all firearms manufacturers, distributors and firearms
dealers to join us in this action to refuse to do business with the
State of New York. We must stand together, or we shall surely fall
divided. <br />
<br />
Sincerely,<br />
<br />
Brian Schuetz<br />
President<br />
Olympic Arms, Inc.Giraffehttp://www.blogger.com/profile/05556306156373942923noreply@blogger.com20tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-13195031.post-56348752836128261402013-02-08T13:17:00.001-08:002013-02-08T13:19:51.829-08:00So God Made A Liberal...<div class="separator" style="clear: both; text-align: center;">
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<br />Giraffehttp://www.blogger.com/profile/05556306156373942923noreply@blogger.com2tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-13195031.post-727310986687689032013-02-02T12:37:00.000-08:002013-02-04T12:00:43.101-08:00Now that's credibility <div class="separator" style="clear: both; text-align: center;">
<a href="http://a57.foxnews.com/global.fncstatic.com/static/managed/img/Politics/0/371/Obama_shooting2.jpg" imageanchor="1" style="margin-left: 1em; margin-right: 1em;"><img border="0" height="179" src="http://a57.foxnews.com/global.fncstatic.com/static/managed/img/Politics/0/371/Obama_shooting2.jpg" width="320" /></a></div>
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<blockquote class="tr_bq">
The official photo apparently depicts Obama – wearing protective glasses
and earmuffs -- firing the rifle Aug. 4, 2012. It was released Friday
on the White House’s Flickr account.</blockquote>
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I guess thats it. We can all breathe easier. Obama is on our side. He must be pretty good to shoot clay pigeons with a rifle, especially a big bore like that one appears to be. Takes a serious gun nut to take that kind of punishing recoil to develop his skills.<br />
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I think it is great that he is such a <a href="http://www.foxnews.com/politics/2013/02/02/white-house-puts-out-photo-obama-shooting-at-camp-david/">great second amendment supporter.</a><br />
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<b>Update</b>: Some were suggesting it is fake. I don't think so. The only reason to fake it would be if he was afraid to actually shoot it. It looks like a over/under shotgun with ported barrels. It is what any classy liberal would use to try to impress the bitter clingers. John Kerry would go hunting geese with it. [Hillary would use a rifle for waterfowl].<br />
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If the president enjoys shooting the shotgun, he ought to run a few thirty rounders through an AR. It's a blast.<br />
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<b>Update Part Two:</b> Well <a href="http://co-ironwill.blogspot.com/2013/02/rules-for-radicals-rule-5.html">they did ask for it.</a>Giraffehttp://www.blogger.com/profile/05556306156373942923noreply@blogger.com5tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-13195031.post-64291426831852258742013-01-29T15:14:00.001-08:002013-01-29T15:16:08.411-08:00American By Choice, and welcome.<div class="separator" style="clear: both; text-align: center;">
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Henson Ong at Gun Violence Prevention Public Hearing - Hartford, CT - 1/...<br />
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<br />Giraffehttp://www.blogger.com/profile/05556306156373942923noreply@blogger.com2tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-13195031.post-68952314693048908692013-01-28T11:55:00.003-08:002013-01-28T11:55:46.506-08:00The economics of stupidWhy can't this <a href="http://dcxposed.com/2013/01/27/seattle-gun-buyback-gets-jacked-turns-into-a-damn-gun-show-lol/">kind of thing</a> fall into my lap once in awhile? I heard they actually took in a half dozen scary black rifles. I would have definitely outbid them. No mention in the MSM of the side action. Giraffehttp://www.blogger.com/profile/05556306156373942923noreply@blogger.com3tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-13195031.post-43192209035532680302013-01-24T11:59:00.003-08:002013-01-24T11:59:28.000-08:00If they are against usSeveral corporations have decided to weigh in a gun policy. I don't care what their opinions are, but when they use them as an excuse to not do business with someone, then I think it is fair to turn it around. Others wanted to create more gun free zones.<br />
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I started compiling a list of the ones I had seen just lately:<br />
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<a href="http://www.thetruthaboutguns.com/2013/01/robert-farago/boa-to-american-spirit-arms-foad/">Bank of Amigo</a><br />
<a href="http://www.inquisitr.com/440829/no-guns-allowed-buffalo-wild-wings-gun-ban-angers-some-customers/">Buffalo Wild Wings</a><br />
<a href="http://www.examiner.com/article/geico-cancels-insurance-because-policyholder-works-the-weapons-industry">Geico</a><br />
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Then I realized someone has <a href="http://www.nraila.org/Issues/FactSheets/Read.aspx?ID=15">probably already done that</a>. <br />
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Looks like the list needs updating.Giraffehttp://www.blogger.com/profile/05556306156373942923noreply@blogger.com7tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-13195031.post-80291294306682285712012-12-19T15:20:00.000-08:002012-12-19T15:20:21.555-08:00In case you need some Christmas CheerFirst up:<br />
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The dude made an AK 47 out of a <a href="http://www.northeastshooters.com/vbulletin/threads/179192-DIY-Shovel-AK-photo-tsunami-warning!">freaking shovel</a>.<br />
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Next, Larry Pratt handing <a href="http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=-FVQgLkbLjQ">liberal douche his head</a>.<br />
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<br />Giraffehttp://www.blogger.com/profile/05556306156373942923noreply@blogger.com3tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-13195031.post-52112522550677407372012-11-19T15:12:00.000-08:002012-11-19T15:12:13.487-08:00HuntinIt is that time of year again. Time for the annual Thanksgiving deer hunting trip. A week in an old army tent in the Black Hills of South Dakota.<br />
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Been doing this since before I got married. How else would I be able to do it over Thanksgiving? Told her before we got hitched it was part of the package. I think she's glad to be rid of me, but she doesn't let on.<br />
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My dad and uncle have been doing this trip since time began. I still hear the story about the year they set the tent up and decided to go hunting instead of cut firewood. They figured they had a good sleeping bag*. My uncle said he had all his clothes on inside the sleeping back and still was so cold he couldn't sleep. The next morning the soda was frozen solid and the pickup wouldn't start. He had to walk a few miles to a local rancher and get a ride to town to buy a new battery. The temperature was more than 20 below zero that night. That was 1985 and was the first year they used the old army surplus tent. We've always gotten firewood first thing ever since. This year we are bringing some wood from home. Sure to be dry that way. <br />
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My first trip out there was 1987. I was too young to hunt, but I caught a few trout from some beaver dams. Only time I've had trout that was fit to eat.<br />
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We were discussing the other day that we should have kept a diary of all the trips out there. We can remember all kinds of things** but can't really remember what year they were. Lots of things have changed. We don't go to the same place that we used to. They logged the area around Nemo and the hunting was never the same, so we moved to Whitetail Peak, and after several years we stopped seeing very many deer there so we moved again. There have been three or four forest fires in the new area, including the Jasper fire.<br />
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Anyway, you all enjoy your turkey. We will enjoy ours, if we come across one***.<br />
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* more commonly called a "fart sack"<br />
** Like the year we forgot the tent poles.<br />
*** Cut the breast meat of a young wild turkey up, and saute it in butter. Good stuff.Giraffehttp://www.blogger.com/profile/05556306156373942923noreply@blogger.com12tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-13195031.post-2424964873745626662012-10-03T07:31:00.003-07:002012-10-03T07:31:58.269-07:00Bad Joke Wednesday.There's a guy in Afghanistan who started a business making landmines disguised as prayer mats. <br />
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Prophets are going through the roof.Giraffehttp://www.blogger.com/profile/05556306156373942923noreply@blogger.com14tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-13195031.post-29694722568642364742012-09-20T10:12:00.002-07:002012-09-20T10:12:44.668-07:00I found the topless Kate pics<div class="separator" style="clear: both; text-align: center;">
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No need to thank me<br />
Giraffehttp://www.blogger.com/profile/05556306156373942923noreply@blogger.com8tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-13195031.post-27332818575410619382012-09-11T09:26:00.002-07:002012-09-11T09:26:59.178-07:00Fair warning<br />
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<a href="http://sphotos-a.xx.fbcdn.net/hphotos-ash3/643878_443626062347290_1943938806_n.jpg" imageanchor="1" style="clear: right; float: right; margin-bottom: 1em; margin-left: 1em;"><img alt="" border="0" class="spotlight" src="http://sphotos-a.xx.fbcdn.net/hphotos-ash3/643878_443626062347290_1943938806_n.jpg" style="height: 293px; width: 320px;" /></a>Giraffehttp://www.blogger.com/profile/05556306156373942923noreply@blogger.com6tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-13195031.post-32135265056297936412012-08-29T08:02:00.003-07:002012-08-29T08:02:59.547-07:00Am I the only onewho wants to see New Orleans flood again just so I can shout "WHY DOES OBAMA HATE BLACK PEOPLE!"?Giraffehttp://www.blogger.com/profile/05556306156373942923noreply@blogger.com10tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-13195031.post-21384621067197723832012-08-28T09:02:00.002-07:002012-08-28T09:02:42.912-07:00Skunks, Tejas.<br />
Some comments for<a href="http://now.msn.com/texas-woman-accidentally-shoots-husband-instead-of-skunk"> this story</a>:<br />
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1. Women shoot like they drive.<br />
2. She shot the wrong skunk.<br />
3. stolen from the comments of the article: Its her story and she sticking with it. P.S_ skunk is slang for cheating husband.<br />
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Add your own. Giraffehttp://www.blogger.com/profile/05556306156373942923noreply@blogger.com2tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-13195031.post-32392407447721287122012-08-07T07:30:00.000-07:002012-08-07T07:31:13.470-07:00Told you.I said we would see copycats due to all the media coverage. Not over yet. End freedom of the press now!Giraffehttp://www.blogger.com/profile/05556306156373942923noreply@blogger.com4tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-13195031.post-58883987472973170192012-07-22T15:04:00.003-07:002012-07-22T15:04:57.295-07:00Don't forget the first.With all the calls to infringe on our second amendment rights coming as a result of some asshole in Colorado, lets not forget our first amendment rights. <br />
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The endless attention the media gives this tragedy will result in copy cats. It happened before with the school shootings. It will happen again. The media is partially to blame.<br />
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Why isn't anybody (besides me) suggesting we put a muzzle on the media? Lets get rid of <i>all </i>of our freedoms.Giraffehttp://www.blogger.com/profile/05556306156373942923noreply@blogger.com2tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-13195031.post-82245166257501425672012-07-22T13:48:00.000-07:002012-07-22T13:48:01.280-07:00Chicken MathRaising your own chickens for meat is stupid. You have about $1.50 per pound into them and you can buy chicken for 69 cents per pound on sale. Well you could; who knows what the high corn prices are going to do to our food bills.<br />
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Then you have the work of raising them and butchering them. I did 8 yesterday. It took 4 hours. It is a shame that I feel the need to raise chickens every few years to remind myself why I don't raise chickens.<br />
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There are some things that could make it better. I need a better setup to raise them. I could let them free range, and feed them less. They can eat bugs and graze, and perhaps my feed bill will be lower. I also need a better setup to butcher. Specifically, I need to build my own tub plucker. That would take about 60% of the work and time out of it. Probably cost a hundred bucks, and then I have to raise even more chickens to justify it. <br />
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On the plus side, I now have some home grown chicken. It just tastes a little better. Also, my four year old daughter helped me butcher. Mostly she just got dirty, but she did help hold the chickens while I trussed their feet and she helped pull some feathers. I think it is good for her to understand where our food comes from, instead of growing up into a urbanized wuss who would starve to death if she couldn't get her chicken in the form of a nugget. Either that or I am raising her to be a homicidal terror. She seemed to be enjoying the process. Giraffehttp://www.blogger.com/profile/05556306156373942923noreply@blogger.com5tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-13195031.post-44444967792929319412012-07-19T09:07:00.001-07:002012-07-19T09:07:22.132-07:00Chickens on the roofMy barn is falling down. This does great harm to the chicken pen inside*. The door frame is warped due to the barn taking on a lean, leaving a gap under the door. Some of my chickens found the gap, and were outside the pen when I came to feed them. I had blocked the gap with a roll of chicken wire but somehow they moved it. So I figured I'd leave it open and let them free range.<br />
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Oops. I come home and the fat broilers are there but the layer chicks were not. Two were on the barn roof. Several had climbed up to the hayloft where a section of it had fallen partially down. Once there, two had taken the further step of going through a hole in the roof to get onto the roof. The rest of the chicks were still in the hay loft. <br />
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I chased one off the roof by spraying water with the hose. The other wouldn't come. By nightfall, they were all at least off the roof. Which is good, there are owls about. <br />
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This morning some were back ready to be fed, but about 4 were still up in the loft. By a rough count, I haven't lost any yet. I am guessing they will come down when they get hungry enough. I am not going up after them. <br />
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* I do have another pen in another building. I just need to butcher the broilers and the mean rooster and then the layer chicks can be integrated with the hens I have now. That should happen this weekend. How the heck I catch the little buggers I don't know. Giraffehttp://www.blogger.com/profile/05556306156373942923noreply@blogger.com4tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-13195031.post-39629668199275681222012-07-18T11:26:00.002-07:002012-07-18T11:26:40.611-07:00:)<div class="separator" style="clear: both; text-align: center;">
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<br />Giraffehttp://www.blogger.com/profile/05556306156373942923noreply@blogger.com1tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-13195031.post-69763622707095501192012-07-10T11:39:00.000-07:002012-07-10T11:39:17.782-07:00Leftists is so stupidScranton Pa is <a href="http://bottomline.msnbc.msn.com/_news/2012/07/10/12659748-scranton-pa-slashes-workers-pay-to-minimum-wage#comments">out of money</a>. So the mayor cuts everyone's pay, including his own, to minimum wage. The liberal solution? Same as always, sue. <br />
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That'll show 'em. I'm sure when they win the city will pony up. The math will bend to fit your whim, libs. The unions broke a few big companies. The big companies decide to go overseas. The unions decide to go after the government. Big win boys. The government isn't going to leave at least. At the end of the day, those city employees work for the people, and the people are eventually going to start wondering why government employees make so much more than they do, and quite often don't work as hard for it.<br />
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Some funny comments after the article about how we need to tax the rich more. I don't know how they run things over there, but here our city runs on sales tax, and to a small extent, property tax. So there is no power to tax the rich, other than increase their property tax. I'll bet that will work.<br />
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Coming soon to a city near you.Giraffehttp://www.blogger.com/profile/05556306156373942923noreply@blogger.com2tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-13195031.post-24115850640250640402012-07-05T12:24:00.003-07:002012-07-05T14:44:41.795-07:00Torpedo awayEric Holder may have avoided the contempt prosecution, but he had better resume his <a href="http://sipseystreetirregulars.blogspot.com/2012/07/sipsey-street-exclusive-mike.html">zig zag</a>:<br />
<a href="http://www.blogger.com/goog_1546696486"><br /></a><br />
<a href="http://www.examiner.com/article/ethics-complaint-filed-against-holder-with-dc-bar">more</a><br />
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