Ah OK, I understand.
I had gun safety hammered into me as a 14/15 year old when my old man and his mates started taking me out Roo and Rabbit shooting. And I do mean "hammered". All guys present were given permission to belt me if I did something wrong. Probably sounds harsh in todays PC society, but a few smacks in the back of the head made me learn REAL fast, and after years of shooting (until we got our guns taken away...) the only injury's anyone in our group received were from bush ticks (ouch) and I did have some unusual burns on my chest after one night spotlighting for foxes. We were driving around in an old ute, I was crouched in the back holding a giant spotlight and my dad was too my left trying out my newly modded SKK.
"There's one, hold the spot steady"
"BBBRRRRRAAAAAAAAP"
"holy crap this thing kicks"
"AAAARGGGGGHHHH (from me as 20 hot brass casings fall down the front of my half unbuttoned shirt")
OK new rules. Shooters with automatic/semi automatic weapons need to check what side their weapons eject from before picking their spot in the ute!!
Oh just reminiscing out loud as I am, I also recall getting some pretty hard core bruising a few times from trying out things like an old Enfield 303 (how did ppl fight wars with those things), an M1 Carbine on full auto (I didn't have it shouldered correctly) and a 12 Gague Brunelli with solids. Man that thing KICKED. You could blow holes through car doors with it tho.
What else.... Oh I was using a real old hex barrel .22 cadet rifle when the round exploded in the breech. Scared the crap out of all of us. I didn't drop the rifle, but I was deaf for maybe 15 seconds. I was about 15 and had no idea what happened and I could just hear ringing and see ppls lips moving. I ejected the round and there was a hole in the brass right near the base. That rifle was immediately retired.
Ah good times.
Anyway, sorry for thread hijack
