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IS IT REALLY NECESSARY TO OWN SO MANY GUNS?

Do you have a spouse that sneaks guns and ammo into the house before you can see it? Kind of like when you go on a shopping spree and don’t want him to see all your new shoes and outfits? Or have you become that woman that can’t resist buying a new firearm just because it is pretty or a sweet shooter, and you have to explain the new addition in the safe? Why do we find it necessary to own so many guns? Ask any firearms enthusiast and the answer is, “because I want too, and I can.”

Seriously, though, there are many reasons to own a variety of guns. They are a great investment; rarely do they lose value. It is common to have different guns for hunting, recreation, competition and self-defense. There is a certain sense of accomplishment building different caliber rifles, tricking out your shotgun, mastering various handguns, and just having a collection of prized possessions to gaze at.

To some people, owning more than 2 – 3 guns and having a supply of ammunition indicates you are crazy or up to no good… a gun nut! The term Gun Nut is insulting, implying there is something wrong with a person who collects and enjoys shooting firearms, as well as exercising their 2A rights. Unfortunately, there is a separation of understanding between non-gun owners and enthusiasts. Education is the key and it is extremely important that we as responsible gun owners are doing our part to model safe handling and storage, advocate professional education, engage conversation on benefits of recreational shooting, hunting and conversation, and the importance of self reliance. We also have to accept that some will never understand our passion.

So it is okay to say yes, it is necessary to own so many guns! Invite the person questioning you to the range and let him or her experience it!

SOURCE ARTICLE: https://www.agirlandagun.org/is-it-really-necessary-to-own-so-many-guns/

HOW TO CLEAN YOUR PISTOL WITH SWAB-ITS

When it comes to maintaining firearms, Swab-its’ Bore-tips offer improved barrel cleaning and lubrication while the Gun-tips line offers four distinct sizes and lengths of swabs to ensure cleaning and lubrication of the harder to reach areas that are often neglected. Reusable and easy to clean with soap and water or mineral spirits, Swab-its products are more thorough, quicker and easier to use than traditional methods of firearms cleaning and do not leave the residue or lint left behind by patches, mops and cotton swabs. In this article, we will tackle the Semi-Automatic Pistol. To demonstrate, we will be cleaning a Sig Sauer Spartan 1911, a beautiful piece with a stainless steel slide and frame and a custom Oil Rubbed Bronze finish.

Before Cleaning Your Pistol

Remove the magazine and ensure that your firearm is unloaded by visually and physically inspecting the chamber and magazine well. No ammunition should be present while cleaning. It is advisable to have your manufacturer’s owner’s manual handy for reference for proper disassembly and maintenance procedures. If you purchased your gun used, many manuals can be downloaded by accessing the manufacturer’s website.

Once disassembled, it is helpful to group some of the smaller parts together, using various Gun-tips to apply solvent to the fowled areas.

A. Frame
B. 3” precision tip swab
C. 3” mini tip swab
D. 5” large surface swab
E. Slide Stop
F. Magazine
G. Barrel Bushing
H. Recoil spring and guide
I. Barrel
J. Slide
K. .45 caliber Bore-tips
L. Cleaning rod
M. Individual .45 caliber Bore-tip attached

Gun-tips 5” large surface swabs fit nicely along the slide and into the frame, allowing one to reach into the mag well, as well as the dust cover. It is also a good choice for the recoil spring. By placing the swab sideways between the coils, the spring can be rotated for full coverage. (The same can be done for cleaning the magazine spring.)

The slide rail, barrel lug recess, recoil spring guide, barrel bushing and barrel link are some of the smaller places where the 3” precision or 3” mini-tip is helpful.

A common mistake is not allowing the solvent to do its work. Waiting 10 to 15 minutes before using a bristle brush, such as a tooth brush to loosen the fowling, will yield the best results. Depending on the degree of buildup, it may be necessary to repeat the process until the fowling is suspended in the solvent. Once satisfied that the debris has been sufficiently loosened, use clean and dry Gun-tips to swab the slide and frame and remove the loosened solvent and fowling. Use another Gun-tip to apply the manufacturer recommended amount of lubrication as directed. Remember: less is more. Hint: when looking to see where lubrication is necessary, focus on the wear marks on the metal.

Cleaning the Barrel

Attach the appropriate caliber Bore-tip, in this case, .45 caliber, to a standard 8/32 cleaning rod. Bore-tips are caliber specific and self-centering. They are also color coded, so that all 9 sizes are easily recognizable. Due the absorbency of the foam, less solvent is required than you may generally be accustomed to using. An application of solvent should be made and, like the parts that we just applied solvent to above, the solvent should be allowed to set. Then, use a bore brush, and follow with the Bore-tip you applied the solvent with, blotting off on a rag or paper towel to remove fowling. Use a clean Bore-tip for drying and, if storing your gun, another clean swab for applying lubrication.

Remember: if you are storing your firearm and coat the barrel with light lubrication, this lubrication MUST be removed prior to shooting your gun. Swab-its products are washable and reusable. If you used a bio-based CLP, such as FrogLube, the swabs can best be cleaned by washing in a degreasing dish soap, rinsing thoroughly and allowing to dry completely before the next use. If you prefer a petroleum based solvent or CLP, cleaning the swabs can best be achieved by dipping in mineral spirits, blotting debris and air drying.


By Michele Makucevich, Firearms Products Territory Manager of Swab-its. She oversees the Rhode Island CMP and is a long-time youth coach and competitive shooter.

SOURCE ARTICLE: https://www.agirlandagun.org/clean-pistol-swab/

Review: IWI Galil ACE Pistol, An Epitome in EDC Carbines

I’m often pleased by the performance of a firearm. It’s been a rare occurrence, only once in just over a year, that a firearm has given me trouble. That incident was remedied by a part swap and the rifle itself continued on to success in its trials.

It is far rarer I’m surprised by a firearm. Where picking it up and running it produces the expected reliability and performance but the experience feels natural, like the firearm itself was built to be precisely where it is, in your hands.

The Galil ACE was just this sort of rarely melded firearm. Not only did it work it filled the requested role so phenomenally it was intrinsically pleasurable to work with.

So for anyone who wants the short version, I recommend the ACE. Highly.

 

Breaking Down the ACE

This updated Galil is a carbine derived from a Finnish AK variant and AR15 platforms. It merges many of the positive characteristics of both. For more on this check my first impressions article.

The ACE dresses out with

  • 8.3″ barrel, cold hammer forged (5.56x45mm)
  • Left side charging handle, reciprocating
  • Last round bolt hold open
  • Left and right side safety levers, non mirrored
  • Ambidextrous magazine release
  • STANAG/AR15 Magazine compatible including Magpul D60
  • Folding adapter for stock/brace.
  • Tritium iron night sights
  • Picatinny rails/shielded quad rail

With a growing list of upgrades the little carbine holds its own feature wise against the competition, even IWI’s own X95.

Tear Down/Maintenance

To understand the Galil ACE and see how its feature set compliments its intended role we need to get into the mechanics

The ACE is essentially an AK someone went over with an ergonomic wish list without throwing out the core rifle. It’s break down is in most ways simpler while the feature set lends itself to more modern rifle technique than the evolving conscripts coming from bolt actions to the Kalashnikov back in the 1940’s and 50’s.

As with any weapon, the breakdown starts with clearing the rifle and then, like its AK progenitor, you press the take down tab. The button on the base of the recoil spring assembly is longer than the AK and has a recoil buffer so instead of just pushing it and popping the cover you push the button all the way inside the receiver cover and then down which will brace it on the receiver.

You can see the single point sling and folding brace/stock mechanism in the picture above. I ran it with a Blue Force Gear Single Point.

The receiver top cover is all AK until you hit the top rail. Fit to the receiver is very precise and it does not willingly separate even when the take down button is pushed, hence bracing the recoil spring on the receiver.

The dual axis rounded tab you see on the front helps index and align the cover properly on reassembly and the rear of the cover is additionally reinforced for rigidity. Putting it back in place for reassembly required bracing the recoil spring assembly in the receiver again, placing the plate, and then charging the weapon pops the assembly into place and locks the cover.

Unlike the AK the Galil ACE uses a peep sight. The aperture is adjustable for windage and with tritium inserts for night time use. The full length rail supports a modern optics suite however you will want to avoid bridging the gap between the cover and the gas tube to keep take down simple.

While I have not used a precision optic on this little carbine I did not notice any shift in point of aim/point of impact from disassembly and reassembly confirming the indexing process does its job correctly.

This has always been a system built on well engineered simplicity and this is a well executed iteration of that system.

Pull out the recoil spring and buffer and the bolt carrier can now retract and lift free.

Like the AK the Galil ACE bolt carrier group and piston mate up with cuts in the receiver to allow it free, these are the end of its travel track rails. The full stroke piston and carrier are a little heavier than the Kalashnikov design.

Galil ACE and AK 5.56 BCG’s

The charging handle is pinned to the carriers left side. The carrier has a few minor machining changes from the AK original.

The bolt assemblies are also similar and remove from the carriers identically. The Galil’s extractor claw is shrouded and the firing pin is spring braced to minimize the chance of a slam fire on lighter primers.

With the Galil ACE the gas tube gives a wonderful take on the benefits of modern machining. Instead of a tab that rotates to retain the stamped steel gas tube assembly of the old AK the Galil’s gas tube slides into place on machined cuts.

It self aligns off of the gas block and is braced by the receiver cover to hold it in place. This is undoubtedly my favorite aspect of the carbine from a maintenance perspective. The picatinny rail from the receiver cover continues to the front of the gas tube.

With the major components removed the interior of the Galil ACE has that familiar AK layout. The differences here include the safety lever, shortened and more ergonomic with a control switch for the thumb and index finger for right hand shooters.

Note: I wouldn’t call the fire controls an ambidextrous feature, it favors right handed shooters. The safety control is not a mirrored system. It is comfortable to shoot left handed but the controls are designed to take someone familiar with an AK or AR style firearm and transition them to this easily. Ambidexterity was a secondary design concern.

You can see the bolt catch control just forward of the safety lever. This placement makes it very easy to lock the bolt to the rear and gives you a release method via your index finger (or right hand thumb while shooting left side). I found that I preferred reloading with the charging handle but locking the bolt open with the control was a much smoother operation than you get with most rifles.

Five assemblies, most of which you do not have to break down any further for good maintenance.

From muzzle to brace the Galil ACE is an intrinsically fit firearm for the EDC Carbine role that this pistol fills. Out of the box ready in all lighting conditions.

Adding a good flashlight like the INFORCE WML in the photo, a Streamlight HL-X, or a Surefire 300 or 600 series Scout light is the only necessary addition in my opinion. With the sights as good as the are, and tritium inserted for night time, an optic becomes a value added addition instead of a necessity. An RMR on a SCALARWORKS mount kept iron sights as an option even though they are not co witnessed. The raised optic set up worked very well and using iron sights was just a matter of rolling your cheek further down on the brace.

On The Range

With the RMR on the ACE I grabbed my PSD for a baseline and I hit the indoor range to zero.

The Galil’s trigger is a smooth AK grade trigger, steady pressure until a soft wall and then a pull through break. It is no Geissele SSA, not remotely. It is capable of dependable accuracy. My PSD does have an SSA-E inside it, but my groupings were only marginally improved and only while supported. Granted too the zeroing was using 55gr ammo out of 8.5″ 1/7 twist CHF barrels so that was also likely a contributor. In short the trigger is more than a match to the task asked of it.

Shooting the the little carbines side by side highlighted the live fire capability of the stock Galil ACE.

My PSD is my go to EDC Carbine, it’s an AR15 and it moves and shoots like an AR15. The ACE shoots like its AK ancestry would imply, the bolt carrier movement gives it a smooth lateral recoil impulse that combined with the weight of the gun keeps it tracking on target easily. The chin and cheek welds are lower with the iron sights but with optics can be higher than normal on an AR. The similarities are there and fundamentals are fundamentals, but ergonomically working the Galil ACE is a different animal and it was a pleasure to learn.

Going LFAM (Live Fire and Maneuver) a friend and I brought out some of our best to give the gun a run.

Running the ACE right handed is its ergonomic sweet spot. The left side safety lever and charging handle combined with the bolt lock are all precision placed for superior control as a righty.

I found running reloads off the charging handle felt more natural than trying to drop the bolt lock shooting right handed. That changed offhand where the bolt lock is in an AR like place from that orientation.

Working the safety off hand shooting is a right hand job. There is no easy was to push forward on the thumb lever or down on the more traditional right hand side ‘AK’ safety switch with the left hand. Off my left side I ran the Galil ACE much more like a run an AK with the exception of reloads, the ambidextrous magazine release and the bolt lock make that a quick process either side.

All that being said it was still a wonderfully smooth gun to run offhand. Spent casings are sent away with typical AK suborbital speed off of the fixed ejector. They kick off in a 2 o’clock direction and keeping your arm out of the path is no issue.

Now with a couple of cases of a variety of ammo through it and I can happily report no stoppages of any variety. Being a short 1/7 twist barrel it will favor heavy grain loads but it functioned and grouped with every commercial brass and steel case variety I put through, 7 in total if I recall correctly.

 

Considering it as an EDC Carbine option: The Galil hits both needs and desirable features time and time again.

  1. Reliability
    • No stoppages
    • Variety of ammo consumed
  2. Capability
    • Night sights, standard
    • Smooth controllable recoil
    • Accurate
  3. Ergonomic
    • Intuitive control scheme
    • Off hand usability
    • Picatinny rail suite for optics, lights, and other mission essential equipment.
  4. Compact

The Galil ACE can fold away into my Sentinel Concepts Revelation 2.0 by Tuff Products with a Magpul D60, a light, and optic without issue. It’s fireable folded too although the safety rubs on the brace so it must be pushed with intent (it will push the brace out slightly on the hinge). It is easier to pull and lock the brace solidly open before working the safety.

IWI’s Galil SAP556SB was built as a part of a modern upgrade to a phenomenal rifle series. It and it’s brethren are shining examples of firearms design excellence.

As for filling the role of EDC Carbine, truck gun, or any other close quarters personal defense weapon?

It’s an ACE of Spades.

The Range Injuries You Really Should Expect

Can you count all of the different ways this range equipment can lead to injuries? Do you know what to do about it when they do?
While everyone is worried about gunshot wounds, these are what will really injure you out on the range.

Many people are focused on gunshot wounds when they think about range injuries. They’re certainly serious and you should know how to treat them, but they’re not the most common injury you might see. To be truly prepared for a day of shooting, here are some of the range injuries you’re much more likely to see and need to know how to treat.

Long, sunny summer days practically demand at least one trip to an outdoor range. Unfortunately, they often also come with hot and humid weather. Very high temperatures are most commonly associated with heat exhaustion and heat stroke, but you can also suffer heat injuries if you’re physically active, not used to hot weather, get dehydrated, or have certain health conditions. Dehydration can be sneaky if you aren’t drinking enough water and getting enough electrolytes either through sports drinks, supplements, or food. It’s important to learn the signs and symptoms of heat stroke and how to prevent and treat it because heat injuries are not just uncomfortable – they can be deadly.

If you’re doing something more active at the range like participating in a practical shooting match, you might find yourself catching a toe or landing a little wonky on an uneven bit of ground or piece of brass. Keeping your muzzle in a safe direction and your finger off the trigger when you’re not actively shooting can help prevent a gunshot wound when you lose your balance, but you can still end up with a rolled ankle or even a broken bone if you fall. Do you know how to recognize when all that’s needed is a little ice and rest, or when you need to see a doctor? For more serious injuries, do you know how to safely get someone to the hospital?

If, when you trip or fall, you end up with a little blood dripping, you might not need to break out your trauma kit, but an injury worth treating might still have occurred. As any child can tell you, taking the skin off your shin or knee is not a pleasant experience. For the average shooter, a “boo boo kit” is more valuable than any other injury treatment skill or supply. Being able to clean out and cover a cut or scrape can make a day at the range much more pleasant.

And don’t forget, it’s not always the ground that’s out to get you. The targets you’re shooting at can exact a little of their own revenge too.

Steel targets or target stands can bounce bullet fragments back up range even if they’re in good condition and set up properly. Chunks of copper jacket hitting a shooter or spectator might just be an odd surprise – or might cause a cut on the delicate skin of the face or even an eye injury if luck is bad or someone isn’t wearing good eye protection. Steel is heavy too. Having a piece land on a shin or a foot, or getting your fingers caught underneath a piece can break bones or cause painful scrapes and bruises that need to be treated.

If you use wooden sticks to hold up targets, they will acquire sharp edges as bullets start going through them (and they will). It’s not just the scrapes and cuts as you walk too close to one or when you have to move them around, it’s also the splinters that inevitably bury themselves in your hands. Do you know how to get them out?

For that matter, the lowly stapler you use to hang up targets is the cause of perhaps the most common range injury out there: a staple into a finger. No matter how careful you are, it’s bound to happen one day. The tiny puncture wound made by that staple can be incredibly painful. Do you know how to tell if it’s become infected? You’ll wish you did after you nail your finger with that stapler.

Last, but not least (and back to heat): burns. Whether it’s sunburn or brass burns, mild burns are range injuries that every shooter will see. Don’t succumb to the myths, and make sure you know how to treat them properly.

Shooting can be risky in unexpected ways. It’s vital to learn how to treat the obvious dangers, but it’s equally important to be able to treat other range injuries. They can be just as serious at times and when they are not, fixing them can still save your day at the range.

Independence Day

IN CONGRESS, JULY 4, 1776
The unanimous Declaration of the thirteen united States of America

When in the Course of human events it becomes necessary for one people to dissolve the political bands which have connected them with another and to assume among the powers of the earth, the separate and equal station to which the Laws of Nature and of Nature’s God entitle them, a decent respect to the opinions of mankind requires that they should declare the causes which impel them to the separation.

We hold these truths to be self-evident, that all men are created equal, that they are endowed by their Creator with certain unalienable Rights, that among these are Life, Liberty and the pursuit of Happiness. — That to secure these rights, Governments are instituted among Men, deriving their just powers from the consent of the governed, — That whenever any Form of Government becomes destructive of these ends, it is the Right of the People to alter or to abolish it, and to institute new Government, laying its foundation on such principles and organizing its powers in such form, as to them shall seem most likely to effect their Safety and Happiness. Prudence, indeed, will dictate that Governments long established should not be changed for light and transient causes; and accordingly all experience hath shewn that mankind are more disposed to suffer, while evils are sufferable than to right themselves by abolishing the forms to which they are accustomed. But when a long train of abuses and usurpations, pursuing invariably the same Object evinces a design to reduce them under absolute Despotism, it is their right, it is their duty, to throw off such Government, and to provide new Guards for their future security. — Such has been the patient sufferance of these Colonies; and such is now the necessity which constrains them to alter their former Systems of Government. The history of the present King of Great Britain is a history of repeated injuries and usurpations, all having in direct object the establishment of an absolute Tyranny over these States. To prove this, let Facts be submitted to a candid world.

He has refused his Assent to Laws, the most wholesome and necessary for the public good.

He has forbidden his Governors to pass Laws of immediate and pressing importance, unless suspended in their operation till his Assent should be obtained; and when so suspended, he has utterly neglected to attend to them.

He has refused to pass other Laws for the accommodation of large districts of people, unless those people would relinquish the right of Representation in the Legislature, a right inestimable to them and formidable to tyrants only.

He has called together legislative bodies at places unusual, uncomfortable, and distant from the depository of their Public Records, for the sole purpose of fatiguing them into compliance with his measures.

He has dissolved Representative Houses repeatedly, for opposing with manly firmness his invasions on the rights of the people.

He has refused for a long time, after such dissolutions, to cause others to be elected, whereby the Legislative Powers, incapable of Annihilation, have returned to the People at large for their exercise; the State remaining in the mean time exposed to all the dangers of invasion from without, and convulsions within.

He has endeavoured to prevent the population of these States; for that purpose obstructing the Laws for Naturalization of Foreigners; refusing to pass others to encourage their migrations hither, and raising the conditions of new Appropriations of Lands.

He has obstructed the Administration of Justice by refusing his Assent to Laws for establishing Judiciary Powers.

He has made Judges dependent on his Will alone for the tenure of their offices, and the amount and payment of their salaries.

He has erected a multitude of New Offices, and sent hither swarms of Officers to harass our people and eat out their substance.

He has kept among us, in times of peace, Standing Armies without the Consent of our legislatures.

He has affected to render the Military independent of and superior to the Civil Power.

He has combined with others to subject us to a jurisdiction foreign to our constitution, and unacknowledged by our laws; giving his Assent to their Acts of pretended Legislation:

For quartering large bodies of armed troops among us:

For protecting them, by a mock Trial from punishment for any Murders which they should commit on the Inhabitants of these States:

For cutting off our Trade with all parts of the world:

For imposing Taxes on us without our Consent:

For depriving us in many cases, of the benefit of Trial by Jury:

For transporting us beyond Seas to be tried for pretended offences:

For abolishing the free System of English Laws in a neighbouring Province, establishing therein an Arbitrary government, and enlarging its Boundaries so as to render it at once an example and fit instrument for introducing the same absolute rule into these Colonies

For taking away our Charters, abolishing our most valuable Laws and altering fundamentally the Forms of our Governments:

For suspending our own Legislatures, and declaring themselves invested with power to legislate for us in all cases whatsoever.

He has abdicated Government here, by declaring us out of his Protection and waging War against us.

He has plundered our seas, ravaged our coasts, burnt our towns, and destroyed the lives of our people.

He is at this time transporting large Armies of foreign Mercenaries to compleat the works of death, desolation, and tyranny, already begun with circumstances of Cruelty & Perfidy scarcely paralleled in the most barbarous ages, and totally unworthy the Head of a civilized nation.

He has constrained our fellow Citizens taken Captive on the high Seas to bear Arms against their Country, to become the executioners of their friends and Brethren, or to fall themselves by their Hands.

He has excited domestic insurrections amongst us, and has endeavoured to bring on the inhabitants of our frontiers, the merciless Indian Savages whose known rule of warfare, is an undistinguished destruction of all ages, sexes and conditions.

In every stage of these Oppressions We have Petitioned for Redress in the most humble terms: Our repeated Petitions have been answered only by repeated injury. A Prince, whose character is thus marked by every act which may define a Tyrant, is unfit to be the ruler of a free people.

Nor have We been wanting in attentions to our British brethren. We have warned them from time to time of attempts by their legislature to extend an unwarrantable jurisdiction over us. We have reminded them of the circumstances of our emigration and settlement here. We have appealed to their native justice and magnanimity, and we have conjured them by the ties of our common kindred to disavow these usurpations, which would inevitably interrupt our connections and correspondence. They too have been deaf to the voice of justice and of consanguinity. We must, therefore, acquiesce in the necessity, which denounces our Separation, and hold them, as we hold the rest of mankind, Enemies in War, in Peace Friends.

We, therefore, the Representatives of the United States of America, in General Congress, Assembled, appealing to the Supreme Judge of the world for the rectitude of our intentions, do, in the Name, and by Authority of the good People of these Colonies, solemnly publish and declare, That these united Colonies are, and of Right ought to be Free and Independent States, that they are Absolved from all Allegiance to the British Crown, and that all political connection between them and the State of Great Britain, is and ought to be totally dissolved; and that as Free and Independent States, they have full Power to levy War, conclude Peace, contract Alliances, establish Commerce, and to do all other Acts and Things which Independent States may of right do. — And for the support of this Declaration, with a firm reliance on the protection of Divine Providence, we mutually pledge to each other our Lives, our Fortunes, and our sacred Honor.

New Hampshire:
Josiah BartlettWilliam WhippleMatthew Thornton

Massachusetts:
John HancockSamuel AdamsJohn AdamsRobert Treat PaineElbridge Gerry

Rhode Island:
Stephen HopkinsWilliam Ellery

Connecticut:
Roger ShermanSamuel HuntingtonWilliam WilliamsOliver Wolcott

New York:
William FloydPhilip LivingstonFrancis LewisLewis Morris

New Jersey:
Richard StocktonJohn WitherspoonFrancis HopkinsonJohn HartAbraham Clark

Pennsylvania:
Robert MorrisBenjamin RushBenjamin FranklinJohn MortonGeorge ClymerJames SmithGeorge TaylorJames WilsonGeorge Ross

Delaware:
Caesar RodneyGeorge ReadThomas McKean

Maryland:
Samuel ChaseWilliam PacaThomas StoneCharles Carroll of Carrollton

Virginia:
George WytheRichard Henry LeeThomas JeffersonBenjamin HarrisonThomas Nelson, Jr.Francis Lightfoot LeeCarter Braxton

North Carolina:
William HooperJoseph HewesJohn Penn

South Carolina:
Edward RutledgeThomas Heyward, Jr.Thomas Lynch, Jr.Arthur Middleton

Georgia:
Button GwinnettLyman HallGeorge Walton

*Links from USHistory.Org

OFFHAND GEAR BLENDS THE FEMININE, ELEGANT, AND FUNCTIONAL

By Nancy Keaton

We have to give credit where credit is due. Many of us start shooting because our husbands took us to the range and introduced us. Sandi Keller is no different, but what she did with that experience is a little different – she started OffHand Gear, a business focused on firearm-related items for women.

It began when her husband took her to range about five years ago. “Oh, my gosh! This is so much fun!” she remembers thinking. “I immediately went to work at trying different handguns, and bought my first one in October.” So at Christmas her husband was on search to get her a gift for her new-found hobby, and really couldn’t find anything that would work well.

Sandi laughs as she explains that her first product, t-shirts, were created out of her “sarcastic personality.” She had a long commute to her then-day job, so lots of time to think. One day in January on her way home, she started thinking about T-Shirts like the PMS T-shirt etc. She walked in house and told her husband her ideas. “He laughed and said, ‘With your design background you should do this.’ [Sandi has a background in interior design and visual display.] So I looked all over and realized there’s nothing out there. I should do it. That day I literally went out and bought a Mac and all software. And in April of 2012 I launched it with just two or three T-shirts in beginning.”

Then she realized she wasn’t happy with the range bags she was finding. “Everyone knew it was a range bag and that I was going shooting. I didn’t like that everyone could tell my business, and also didn’t like that they really didn’t hold much or hold up well under the weight of ammo and stuff.” So her husband again reminded her, “You’ve got a knack for design, just design one.” That same fall she went to work on the NORB (No Ordinary Range Bag.) “I spent eight months designing it, and as I grew in the sport, I knew I had to design something that works as well for a beginner as well as the more experienced.”

Another thing she had to work on was the NORB strap. Shorter women had a hard time with the original strap so she took two or three months to come up with a removable shorter strap.

When I asked her if she had other ideas for products, she laughed. “I have a notebook full of gear that frustrates me. Why doesn’t everyone redesign stuff and stop doing same thing?” But she can only do so much, the business is only her. She has no employees, no investors, no loans. But as her capital grows, she will develop the next product. That’s why she grows slowly.

She recently came out with a redesigned range mat. She wanted one that was a little longer and didn’t roll up while a person is trying to lay on it. It’s thin but with a very dense foam filling. Sandi had professional long-range shooting friends try out the prototype and they loved it.

I had to ask her about those beautiful, works of art – the handguards. Sandi explained that they took a long time to make. Unique ARs is cutting the hand guards for her and it took about eight months to perfect the designs. They had to make sure they were durable and strong. “They still aren’t as swirly as I’d like,” she laughs, “But you can’t push the envelope too far. But they’re working on it. And they only weigh 11.2 ounces.”

The designs of the hand guards are inspired by Sandi’s life. The first one was the Fleur de Lis, a favorite pattern. The new butterfly design is based on a tattoo on her back. The latest “lips” design was inspired by her oldest daughter who is a make-up artist for Mac cosmetics. She has other designs in her mind as well.

“Everything started with me using the NORB. I would think, ‘OK, this is the function that I need for me, then after that how do I make this more feminine. I don’t want everything pink or zebra or cheetah. I want it feminine but elegant, and still have a function.’”

Sandi and Offhand Gear are an AG & AG vendor and tries to sponsor as much as she can. She began looking for other women in the industry and found Julianna. “We connected right away. I go to her a lot, and try to do as much as I can. When you want honesty, you go to Julianna. Sometimes when I’m playing around with fabric I’ll send her snapshots and she’ll be honest. She has become one of my most trusted friends.”

One of the most fun things about Sandi’s business is find out that there is such a market for women’s products. “It’s surprising how many women love the products and are as frustrated as me. That’s what keeps me going, is that it’s not just me asking why is no one fixing this for us and why doesn’t anybody care? We will spend the money!”

One piece of advice she would give to someone was looking to start a business is to make sure you have a partner, that you’re not trying to do it by yourself. “It’s so hard to do as a lone ranger. And because it’s a man’s world it’s hard to get your foot in the door and get the respect, the marketing and connecting. Having a partner is key.”

What are Sandi’s future plans? “I spent 2015 soul searching the brand. This has been fun, but either it’s serious or it’s not. Last year sales were really down, and I was getting tired. So I found people to network with and get advice. I sat down with Kelly McMillan from McMillan Fiberglass Stocks, and he said make a decision. So I did. I know that I’m not the only one who wants this stuff, I love this and I want to do this. So I learned about marketing, which is the hardest part. This year really turned things around for me especially after Kelly got me in to Shot Show. People loved the brand so much, they need it and they want it. It really reenergized me.”

Sandi plans to hire two people next year, one already lined up is a female veteran. “It’s very important to me to hire vets, and to hire women. I want to circle myself with more women. It’s also very important to keep everything American-made. I won’t make a profit as quickly but I will learn how to stay American-made and still grow and still have a profit margin.” Her first hire, though, will be a marketing person. “I would like to spend more time designing and less time marketing,” she explains.

I asked about a “sneak peek” at her next project, but she was coy. “It’s been on drawing board for about a year and a half, and at Shot Show I connected with right people to get it done. It will be something completely different from the line already– but will still be elegant and feminine.” Sandi will spill though, that there will still be more new fabrics for the NORB, the leather NORB will start shipping next soon.

Sandi’s final thoughts are what so many women feel. “This industry that has been huge for me, the friends I’ve made, it’s been a huge experience to connect on such a level and have honest-to-goodness girlfriends. If OffHand Gear ceased to exist, we would still be friends. My husband taking me to the range that day was really a life changer, both professionally and personally. For the first time in my life I have girlfriends that I not only trust, but absolutely adore.”

SOURCE ARTICLE: https://www.agirlandagun.org/offhand-gear-blends-feminine-elegant-functional/

Don’t Like Being a Guinea Pig? Opinion 7304 To The Rescue!

Does the thought of being required to register your guns with the government send shivers down your spine?

Do you worry about them coming for your guns?

For decades residents of Michigan have been required by law to turn in a pistol sales record/registration form for every handgun to their local police jurisdiction within 10 days of sale.  Residents who inherited a handgun or moved from another state are also required under Michigan law to fill out and submit the pistol sales/registration form.  The local police enter the information for the handgun and the owner into a database run by the Michigan State Police. Although this law applies to Michigan residents there is an exemption in the law that allows anyone with an out of state concealed carry license to not have their firearm registered in Michigan while in Michigan. The intent of this was eliminate the need for visitors to our state from registering their guns while they were here on vacation.

This exemption has caused some controversy over the years Michigan residents felt it should also apply to them if they were to get a non-resident permit from any other state.

If you were one of those residents who felt this exemption applied to you and eliminated your requirement to register your handguns you were somewhat of a guinea pig in our legal system.

From my time in law enforcement the judge trying a case would look at the intent of the law (meaning of the law in whole). Was the intent of the law to allow Michigan residents to circumvent registration? No, but if you went by the letter of the law you would believe you were okay.

Unfortunately it depends on what judge you get as to how your particular case would be treated. Our legal system isn’t perfect, our laws can be interpreted differently by different people. So for those of you who chose to follow the letter of the law and get your non-resident license from out of state you just hit the legal jackpot.

Michigan’s Attorney General made it official last week with AG Opinion 7304.  No more wondering if your non registered firearm is actually legal or not.  If your one of the millions of handgun owners in Michigan and you want to use the latest AG Opinion to exercise your rights and not register for handguns, you will need to get a concealed pistol license from another state.  You must have the actual license to be legal.  A quick online search will provide you with a list of states that will issue a non resident permit.  One of the easiest is New Hampshire They have a short two page application, and a fee of $100.  Their processing time is 14 days and its valid for 5 years.  Of course there are many others, I chose New Hampshire because no training was involved and it is valid for 5 years.

One question that will arise is “why would someone not want their handguns registered?”

First of all only 8 states require some type of firearm registration.  The purpose of registration, or in Michigan the requirement to get a license to purchase a handgun, was to help in fighting crime.  Our legislators felt it would be easier to track stolen guns and return them to their rightful owners. If a gun was found at the scene of a crime the owner could be easily identified.

According to the Bureau of Justice half of all illegally trafficked guns originate from straw purchases where someone buys the firearm for someone else.  Someone who is committing a crime is not going to register or get a license to purchase.  With only 8 states having some type of registration that means that any stolen guns from the other 42 states will not be in their states computer systems. Even more this permitting does nothing to assist in battling straw purchasing as the registry, if completed at all, will be falsified.

Secondly Ronald Reagan signed the Firearms Owners Protection Act making a national database illegal. While many people feel they have nothing to hide, thus have no issue registering their handgun, the most popular view is that registration process can be a hassle; long guns are not required to be registered why should handgun registration be required.

There can further be issues at the county or city level of the registration process.   A close friend received a letter in the mail from his local jurisdiction saying there was an issue with the serial number on the Taurus revolver he was attempting to register.  He does not own a Taurus revolver so we took a drive to the city police department.  Apparently they had just fired a clerk, and after going through her desk found thousands of registrations that were never entered into the system. Did they notify people? No, they decided to enter them in the system. My buddy had owned a Taurus revolver several years ago but sold it a while back. Had it not been for a mistake on the registration form it would have been re-registered under his name without his knowledge. What if that gun were then used and left at a crime scene? They would have traced it back to him.

Michigan’s gun groups have been working for years to get the registration system eliminated, however our legislators have been slow to act on every proposal brought to them.  With Opinion 7304 Michigan residents now have a legal way with a little paperwork, a hundred bucks, and a little patience to exempt themselves from the pitfalls of Michigan’s registration system.

Is this the beginning of the end of handgun registration in Michigan?

Possibly, with the legal requirement to register now only covering those who do not want to become exempt Michigan’s registration system is going to be even more incomplete with spotty information. Do your due diligence, if your going to apply for an out of state licence find the one that works best for you, and be aware you still need a Michigan concealed pistol license if your going to carry concealed.

Aero Precision Launching their Freedom Collection Series for Independence Day

In honor of the anniversary of our great nations independence Aero Precision is launching their newest Freedom Collection upper and lower receivers for the M4E1 and M5 Rifles

The lowers are their newest generation (although there is a a run of legacy style AR15 receivers too). The new billet styling layout and pictographs are complimented with the forward moving flag motif mirrored on either side of the magazine well.

The uppers feature the flag above the charging handle cut out and as usual for Aero’s receiver runs the come in both Black and FDE.

It’s only right to build a rifle to honor our independence is it not? One of our greatest expressions of freedom.

Build it up and let it ring!

Check out the whole line here and grab everything you need to finish the build.

Sage Dynamics Takes us to School on Parallax

Parallax is a word you’ll inevitably read and hear before to long when it comes to optics on firearms.

Certain optics have a parallax adjustment tool or knob. Certain reddot, reflex, and holographic weapon sights are advertised as being ‘parallax free’ or have so very little it matters negligibly. Others have a fixed parallax distance that covers a practical range for the optic.

But what is it? It’s a distortion caused by light passing through multiple lens combined with needing a proper position for the shooters eye behind the optic to get a proper sight picture. What you see is not always exactly where you are aiming.

 

YOU, YES YOU: SECURE IT

When you are a parent, you look at the world a different way. When your toddler starts exploring, you may babyproof your house. Some parents put locks on every cabinet, door, and toilet; others target specific areas of danger and may just cover outlets and gate the stairs. For my blind child, I make sure walkways are clear of tripping hazards. Parents educate their children about dangers in the home, including hot stoves and kitchen knives, so that they learn how to stay safe. When it comes to guns, why are so many parents failing to address safety?

Today the Associated Press and USA Today published a study that says “gun accidents kill 1 kid every other day.” The article states that many children under 5 have died from self-inflicted gunshots, and teens have negligent discharges, too, when showing guns to their friends. The article admits that accidental deaths among children are a fraction of firearm deaths; however, it does highlight a tragic problem that can be minimized with education and outreach.

As a community of responsible gun owners we have to say, “YOU! Yes, you! Secure your firearm.” If you don’t have safe storage options in your home, get one today. Keep your handgun holstered on your body and in your direct control unless it is in a safe. If you want to have it off your body, but able to be accessed quickly, get a biometric safe that allows you quick entry in an emergency. If you have your gun in a travel case, put a padlock on it. If you carry your gun in your purse or range bag, immediately move your gun to a safe when it is not in your direct possession. Do not become complacent or lazy about safe storage.

Secondly, talk to your kids about firearms. If you have young children, use the Eddie Eagle program to educate them about how to run away from a gun that they may discover. If you have tweens or teens, talk to them about the 4 Rules of Gun Safety, and what to do if they come upon a gun or a friend brings one to them. Use available resources, such as the Kids & Guns DVD, to make these conversations age appropriate and meaningful.

Sandra Zettlemoyer, who is pictured above with her children, says, “Both of my kids know the 4 gun safety rules by heart at 5 and 8 years of age. We also talk to them about ‘what if’ situations. “What if you are at your friend’s house and you see a firearm and there are no adults around… what do you do?’ And we go over this very often. You can never be too safe and can never go over these types of things with them too much.”

If you can barely enjoy TV shows anymore because seeing someone teacup a pistol or seek cover behind the couch makes you cringe, then you should have the same response when seeing or hearing of an unsecured firearm. Do not allow people (yourself included) to make assumptions about if children would access a firearm — insist that gun owners take responsibility that no unauthorized persons could possibly access their firearms. Discuss safe storage options and educational resources with other gun owners that you know.

SOURCE ARTICLE: https://www.agirlandagun.org/you-yes-you-secure-it/

GUN SAFETY RULES

When manipulating a firearm, there are four universal safety rules that must ALWAYS be obeyed. When these four rules are followed, accidents can be minimized. Negligent discharges of a firearm can result in death or serious injury when these rules are not followed. Every shooter should know and be able to recite the 4 Rules of Gun Safety.

1. Treat all guns as if they are always loaded.
2. Never let the muzzle cover anything that you are not willing to destroy.
3. Keep your finger off the trigger until your sights are on target and you have made the decision to shoot.
4. Be sure of your target and what is behind it.

AND — Secure your firearms so that unauthorized persons may not access them.

#knowthemlivethem

SOURCE ARTICLE: https://www.agirlandagun.org/gun-safety-rules/

Squadding With the Old Guys

I met a friend for brunch the other day – the kind of friend who you don’t see for over a year and then pick up right where you left off. Over coffee and bacon we talked about all things shooting. Through the course of conversation we hit upon how some shooting matches seem less fun than they used to be. My friend shoots matches all over the country, whereas I have stuck to local stuff for the past few years. He has a few decades of experience, while I have been at it for only nine years. 

It’s funny that despite that disparity in experience, we both agreed on a few important points. We agreed that shooting matches are “supposed” to be fun, and oftentimes the most fun squads are the ones full of “old guys”.

Temperamentally, neither my buddy nor I are young guns eager for glory. We shoot because we like to shoot, and matches give us an excuse to do that activity among friends.

The least fun squads in both of our estimation are the squads full of mid-level shooters who are wannabe’s or “think” they are high level shooters. These are often the guys who are “big fish in small ponds”. Sometimes they are wearing sponsor jerseys,  and sometimes not. They argue with the SO’s over every point of minutiae, and make the stage walk-through absolute torture. (Pro tip: Don’t be that guy)

Then there is the old guy squad. The old guy squad is there to have fun with their buddies. They’re there to work the bugs out of the latest tweak to their rig or their ammo load. They already know that they are going to have kinks in their stage plan. And they don’t care. They give each other a hard time, but never the SO – except in jest. They are usually welcoming and supportive of the new guy or the only gal on the squad (me). The old guys have often had knee or hip replacements and aren’t in the match to win foot races or climb over obstacles. They don’t have anything to prove. 

But despite having a hard time moving quickly, they will be the ones hustling to paste and reset. The old guys know that the faster you get through resetting, the faster you can be done and home having a beer and a nap. (or maybe that’s just me)

The old guy squad is where you will hear the best stories too. They might have IDPA member ID numbers in the low double digits, and have known some of the greats back in the days of the “porn star mustache” and giant aviator glasses. They won’t boast about any of that, but if you listen for long enough you might hear some gems.

Last year, I even ended up on a squad full of retired docs. There was a Nam Vet ortho, an ob/gyn, a urologist, an oral surgeon, and yours truly. The stories… I even heard about the one fellow back in the old days slipping a pocket gun into his scrubs when he knew there might be patient family drama in the hospital. You couldn’t get away with that nowadays.

So the next time you need to squad up, don’t groan if you get assigned to the “old guys”. It might end up being the most fun you’ve ever had a match. And you just may learn a thing or three from the experience.

HOW TO MANAGE RECOIL

Managing recoil is done with your entire body. A proper stance gives you a stable platform so that your gun can function. It is important to keep your weight forward on the balls of your feet. Even while standing practicing with static target shooting, your posture should be forward, aggressive, and ready to move.

A proper grip helps better manage recoil and muzzle rise, and helps a shooter with accuracy, speed, and retention. The hands should be as high on the gun as possible. The pistol should fit in the hand to be straight like an extension of the shooter’s arm. The support hand’s fingers should wrapped around the front of the strong hand, so that all four fingers overlay the three lower fingers of the strong hand. Engage the tendon on the support hand by pointing fingers down. While the strong hand squeezes the pistol with front-to-rear pressure, the support hand clamps pressure from the sides. This gives 360-degree pressure on the pistol providing a stable grip.

Keep your elbow joints pointing out, rather than down, to absorb the shock in the shoulders and prevent elbows from bending upward at the joint. This maximizes your stability by using your bones in addition to muscle strength to manage recoil.

Engage your pectoral muscles to press palms together instead of relying solely on hand and arm muscles. This will also help to reduce fatigue, which can cause shakiness and inaccuracy.

SOURCE ARTICLE: https://www.agirlandagun.org/how-to-manage-recoil/

Orange for Gun Violence Awareness?

A few weeks ago there was a campaign by Everytown for Gun-Grabbing and supported by Organized Medicine to “Wear Orange” for “Gun Violence Awareness”. 

This was a sad attempt to co-opt traditional hunter orange for the Anti-2A groups’ own misguided political purposes. I actually received an email blast a day or two before the designated day from the American Academy of Pediatrics to remind me of this “important” event. I admit that I rolled my eyes so hard that I think I was left with permanent nystagmus.

Even if I agreed with their message (which obviously I don’t) I would still disagree with the campaign because it was yet another attempt to inappropriately drag politics into the medical office. The AAP seems to conveniently “forget” more and more of these boundary violations every year. They apparently don’t see their anti-2A message as inappropriate politicking. But I’ll bet if I wore an NRA hat to see patients they’d manage to proclaim THAT as inappropriate. 

Granted, I don’t work in a large academic medical center. But if I were asked by higher-ups in such an institution to participate in this campaign (and we KNOW such pressure exists) I would be tempted to wear my actual hunting gear instead. I probably wouldn’t have a job for much longer afterwards, but there you are.

Of course it’s all justified as being “For the Children”. I guess that means that distortion of facts, outright lies, and working to destroy the civil rights of millions of Americans is acceptable as long as it is for a perceived “greater good”.

What is wrong with campaigning against “Gun Violence” you may ask. Isn’t that an evil which needs to be stamped out?  Allow me to explain the nuances here. 

Everytown, the AAP and their ilk aren’t campaigning against violence in general. Because “Violence” is a human behavior. It is exceedingly difficult to change a human behavior which has been ingrained since before Cain picked up a rock. No, they are campaigning against a very specific “type” of violence. By defining the type of violence they are against, they seek to identify an object to vilify – the firearm. It is much easier to demonize an object than it is to modify human behavior. By extension, it is then easier to demonize and socially marginalize those who possess and utilize such objects. Heard anyone call the NRA “terrorists” lately? There is a very cold and calculated reason for that.

But by singling out “guns” as their enemy of choice, they also sweep under the rug the vast amounts of violence which utilizes other means – fists, hammers, knives, baseball bats, and all of those other inconvenient and less easily-controlled objects. This is a strategy which has bitten other countries in the hindquarters. One only need look at the crime statistics from Britain to recognize this truth.  

Britain has severely restricted access to firearms, yet their violent crime rates – especially knife crime – has risen. This has reached such a pitch that there are now anti-knife campaigns and moves to file the points off citizens’ kitchen knives. A British judge recently claimed that only butchers and fishmongers need pointy knives – they’re apparently too dangerous for anyone else. 

Does the framing of that statement sound familiar?

The situation in Britain is evidence of human behavior at work. Humans bent on destruction can make virtually anything into a weapon. If you take away firearms, they’ll use knives. If you take away knives, they’ll make their own – or use pointed sticks for spears. They will use anything and everything up to and including a rock. (Remember Cain?) Look online for photos of prison weapons if you don’t believe me. 

But with all these gun control schemes, you know who gets to retain the use of firearms? The government. If that prospect doesn’t scare you, it should. Of course the gun-grabbers trust the government because they think they’ll be the ones in charge. Do another web search for the cause of greatest number of civilian deaths in the 20th century. Then look up the term Democide.

Ok, let’s say I’m just being alarmist with the above. Let’s back up to the term “gun violence” again. Let’s look at a statement from the AAP’s own published study.

“Firearm homicides of older children [defined by them as age 13-17] were significantly more likely to be precipitated by another crime, to be gang-related, to have drug involvement, and/or to involve weapon use also on the part of the victim.”

Here is a link to my own “review” of that study, in case you’re interested.

So by the pediatricians’ own published research, teenage criminal, drug, and gang activity drive a large majority of “child deaths” by firearm? Here is my shocked face. But oops -there’s all that nasty inconvenient human behavior business again. Human behavior is the hardest thing for the control freaks to control. So they ignore it, and go after the rights and reputations of lawful citizens instead. As if it were the law-abiding who are responsible for the actions of criminals – even that very compliant and biddable group – the adolescent criminals.

But never being ones to let their own research and pesky social issues like crime and drugs ruin a good narrative, the gun grabbers continued on with their object-shaming, and trotted out yet another silly campaign for “awareness”. Except they don’t really want awareness. 

I’M “aware”. YOU’RE “aware”. What they really want are nice obedient sheep … wearing orange T-shirts.

INGENUITY AND FRUGALITY: MONEY-SAVING CHEATS

So, I admit it – I’m kind of cheap. It’s hard to shake decades worth of frugality. Raising three children while putting my former husband through graduate school, and then going back to school myself as a divorced mom set a pattern. I don’t fit the “rich doctor” mold. I drive a Subaru and my house doesn’t even have a master bathroom. I’ve had some splurges here and there, but for the most part I live pretty small.

I’m not a cheapskate per se. I don’t mind spending the dollars that it takes to get a good quality shotgun, or holster, or belt for instance – because I have very little patience and a low frustration threshold. I just do not deal well with malfunctions and equipment failures. But when it comes to shooting-specific clothing and gear, I definitely aim to cut corners where I can.

I have short legs and short arms, but the rest of me is size 16-18. I’m not exactly a Hobbit, but I missed the svelte proportions side of the genetics buffet table. So, sewing and alterations skills are a must for me, and that’s where it becomes easiest for me to cut expenses.

Blog readers may recall the two IDPA vests that I sewed for myself out of scraps the other year. I was totally NOT going to cough up the cash for a “tacticool” vest, when I could make one (or two) myself and personalize them. One of those has now become my shotgun vest, because I realized that the pockets are large enough to hold an entire box of shells. Yay – one less thing I had to buy for learning sporting clays.

One of my multiuse personalized shooting vests:
One of my multiuse personalized shooting vests

I’m all about finding new uses for stuff I already have. I repurposed one of my kids’ old school backpacks for a travel range bag when I went to Gunsite, and then used the same bag when a friend took me dove hunting. My regular range bag was too bulky to fit in the suitcase, and this daypack was just lying in the basement, so why not? Things don’t have to say “tactical” on the label to be useful – and you often pay extra for that special designation.

A trip through the washing machine cleaned this right up:
frugal-backpack

Look for alternatives that aren’t in the shooting department – or are already in your basement, or the back of your closet. I’m still wearing the silk and polypropylene base layers that I bought for skiing back in 2004. (Yes, I have twelve-year old underwear- don’t judge me LOL)  I don’t ski any more, but those old base layers still work great for November/December deer season. They are basic black, not licensed camo, but the baselayer is covered by fleeces and outerwear anyway. The deer don’t have X-ray vision, so who cares? Or maybe they do, since I haven’t bagged my first deer yet after a few seasons. Yeah, that’s what I’ll blame it on – X-ray vision :-)

I admit that I shop in the men’s department a good bit for outdoor clothes. I’m sorry, but there is still a dearth of rugged clothing, proportioned for women, that comes in my size, which doesn’t also cost an arm and a leg. While I have gradually acquired a few pairs of actual “tactical” pants,  the pants I wore when I started shooting matches were Carharts or Wranglers from Walmart. The cost savings was tremendous ($40-50 per pair difference), as long as you know how to dart-in a waistband, and do basic hemming. And with men’s pants, they will often come in a 29-30 inch inseam already, so you may not even have to hem.

The same goes for shooting shirts. If you are are not a sponsored shooter with a pretty jersey to wear (yeah, me neither – LOL), plain T-shirts are fine. If you want to go all “wicking sportswear”, the Danskins line at Walmart works very well. They are even marked down frequently. I stocked up the other year when some stretchy T’s that I use for base layer undershirts (helps keep the brass out of the boobage) were marked down to five bucks each. Five-bucks vs gawd-knows-how-much for UnderArmour? Yeah I’ll shop Walmart, thanks.  I did the same with the Danskins long-sleeve 3/4 zip shirts and fleeces. They layer well for March or October matches. I shoot a lot in Southwest PA, and those months can be freezing or barely above. I need multiple layers plus hand warmers in order to even function at matches in those temps.

You can also find some deals at Sierra Trading Post if you look carefully and frequently. That is where I got my “now ancient” silk base layers. They do a lot of close-outs and factory seconds, so stuff tends to be much cheaper than usual retail prices. They don’t always have my size, but it’s always worth a look before I spend big bucks for a similar thing somewhere else. I’m addicted to Smartwool socks, for instance, and that’s mostly where I get them.

Then there is camo. With starting the learning curve of crossbow and upland hunting last fall, I had some more shopping to do. I did finally find some women’s camo shell pants at Dunham’s (discount sporting goods) on pre-season sale, for which I also had a 20% off coupon. But I had to figure out a way to hem them up several inches without losing the drawstring bottom cuff. I suppose with the drawstring, I could have left them alone, but the MC hammer look just doesn’t flatter me. I also found a shell jacket that matched those pants, and had a 20% coupon for that as well, (thanks to a helpful clerk who had a stash of them – it pays to ask, especially if they keep flyers at the register).

I mentioned the cold, and to that end I found a camo fleece – again at Walmart – for cheap. It was generic woodland camo, and it was in the men’s dept, but it was only nine dollars. In contrast, the licensed camo pattern women’s fleece in the sporting goods dept was twenty. Yes, the sleeves on the generic men’s version were too long, but putting elastic in the cuffs solved that problem. And yes, it wasn’t Cool Licensed Camo TM, but if I’m going to layer a shell over it anyway, who cares? This elastic sleeve trick also works well for the Danskins fleeces that I mentioned above. You don’t need to have a sewing machine to do that either – that can be a simple needle and thread project.

Despite my affinity for off-brands, I did find an incredible name-brand deal in an unlikely place last fall – At Prois.  I love the fact that Prois has top quality stuff designed for women. The problem is that it also carries a top quality price tag. I have been just too “cheap” to spring for it before now, especially since I am still on the hunting learning curve, and unwilling to spring for top of the line gear for an activity that I do only infrequently.

But, cruising their site last fall, I noticed that Prois had their Pro-edition jacket marked as a factory second — because the cuff trim wasn’t sewn on properly. That made the price $100 instead of $240, and then I had a $25 visa gift card lying around that I never used. A 200-plus dollar jacket for 75 bucks plus shipping? Yes please. Five minutes of sewing later, I was a winner :-) I wish Prois’ factory supplier would make a bunch more mistakes like that.

The $140 “flaw” and 5-minute fix:
frugal-fabric

Recently, I started another sewing project that is saving me big bucks. I wanted some camo fleece pants for a ladies duck hunt I am attending in November. Cabela’s had camo fleece elastic waist pants for fifty dollars. That was a “no” – because I realized that my favorite fabric store chain was running a fifty percent off fleece sale that same weekend. The fabric sale, combined with a pattern for pajama bottoms that I already had, and – Ta daah! – camo fleece pants. I even had enough left over to combine with other scraps I had, to make a pullover jacket. I’m not exactly a “hoarder”, but a fabric scrap has to be pretty small for me throw it out. That mentality has saved me a load of money over the years.

My “bonus” jacket from leftover fleece:
My bonus jacket from leftover fleece

All of these little savings don’t sound like much, but they can add up to hundreds of dollars over the course of a season. If you aren’t a sponsored shooter and are playing on your own dime, or you are just getting started on a limited budget, every little bit helps. This may even be a make-or-break proposition for a mom who is trying to squeeze a new hobby out of an already stretched family budget.  The possibilities and savings are endless – if you pay attention and use a little ingenuity.

Happy Shooting!

SOURCE ARTICLE: https://www.agirlandagun.org/ingenuity-frugality-money-saving-cheats/