Friday, May 16, 2025

Interesting Choice of Handgun

 


11 comments:

  1. Hard to train a horse for gunfire. Doable but takes a lot of time.

    Suppressers might help.

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  2. Just think if the Texas Rangers were outfitted with this instead of the Walker Colt.

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    Replies
    1. And imagine if Native Americans had compound or cross bows

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  3. On a wild azz guess, this young lady is aiming her pistol and has no intention of firing it.

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  4. I may be wrong but, . . . hammer fired (not striker fired mechanism), optical sights (not iron sights), four inch barrel, and a silencer [a.k.a. a suppresser (of some sort), . . .

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  5. Proper trigger discipline. Support hand going to be needed to hold onto those reigns.

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  6. Its a .22 caliber auto.

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  7. Her visage in profile looks a bit like Randolph Scott.
    Horse and rider, chaps and chest holster; what's not to love.

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  8. We have a lot of folks with Polish ancestry in our area - we call them 'Polanders', and their names are usually about 20 letters long, with maybe 3 vowels in them. Anyway, they're big into hog hunting on horseback, with dogs. These old boys suture their own dogs up in the field when a hogs rips them up. One of them told me that he had trained his horse to be calm when he fired his saddle gun at a hog, by teaching it to expect a gun shot right after he made a little 'tsking' sound with his tongue, easy enough to do with no hands, and the horse picked it up pretty quick. It's a quarter horse used for cutting, and they're pretty smart.

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  9. And...the hat is on backwards.

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  10. and the desk top experts appear!

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