Previously Gunsite Gossip
Vol. 11, No. 9 August 2003
High Summer
Summer has never been our favorite season,
except during childhood when school was out, but it does have its
points. Among other things, summer provides a good time in which to
check zeros and loads, and also to keep in some sort of practice.
The competition shooter, of course, needs to practice all the time,
but for those of us who wish only to maintain a respectable level
of practical competence, practice is still necessary. Most people,
unfortunately, have to make a measured effort at marksmanship
practice. A good place to shoot is hard to find, even in the "red
counties," and public shooting ranges are usually depressingly
restricted in method permitted. Still we practice, and for a good
shot the problem is eased by dry firing at home. You do not have to
fire a live round to practice quick acquisition of position, nor to
smooth up your reloading speed.
We tend to lose pistol proficiency quicker than rifle skill. I
discovered that I did not lose much during World War II,
though I fired very little with the rifle. But for whatever reason,
marksmanship is not a talent to be neglected, and summertime may
present us with practice time. Besides which, it is fun.
The fifth of August is our own personal
holiday for it is the anniversary of the head-on with our one and
only lion, down on the Crocodile River below Engonyameni. We used
the Lion Scout, the immediate parent of the 376 Steyr "Dragoon,"
and established it as the (almost) perfect tool for the task. So
now 5 August is Lion Day, as inscribed upon the
calendar.
We are informed that Gunsite is now
offering freebies to returning warriors. Now there is an example to
be observed by the good guys!
In the military sense, the 21st century
does not look to be a promising era for the marksman. If these
first years are indicative, infantry action seems to take place
mainly at night and at very close range, circumstances which do not
reward the expert marksman. The squirt gun and the handheld
artillery are the current weapons of the foot soldier, and it
appears that supporting fires do almost all of the damage on the
battlefield. The venerable Marine Corps tradition that a Marine of
any rank must first of all be a rifleman is at this time
endangered. In law enforcement, the situation is less clear, but
the pernicious philosophy of "spray-and-pray" continues to dominate
police ranges. In the private sector, the need to hit the target
precisely, hard and quickly (DVC) is less imperiled, though
in formal competition the need for adequate power is still not
fully understood.
Personal marksmanship still remains an essential attribute of any
well organized man, as well as a desideratum for such ladies
as are so inclined. (Besides, it is fun!)
We were annoyed to learn that the factory
has discontinued production of the 376 Steyr rifles. We have never
been much excited by the appearance of new cartridges, but the 376
Steyr in Scout configuration definitely filled a vacant
niche. Both guns and ammunition are still available, of course, and
we have a loaner here at Gunsite for the deserving poor.
Marketing remains a pretty arcane study in
the firearms industry. The object of the marketer is to make the
prospective customer dissatisfied with what he already has. With
guns this is pretty hard to do, since we have had access to very
superior products for most of a century. A good rifle will give
good service for at least three generations, and unless it is
abused it will not wear out. Even the youth may not constitute a
valid market, since junior can do very well with dad's rifle -
or granddad's. It is also true with pistols, since the great feats
of pistolcraft date back to the Spanish-American War, and the
greatest handgun of them all has been with us since 1911.
So the advertiser has a problem, and it is certainly more political
than technical. We see, for example, that there is now a movement
in the UN (where else?) to strip smallarms from all
non-governmental individuals, because the possession of such
weapons allows people to oppose the UN itself. Certainly we cannot
have that sort of thing - now can we?
"C Stories," our new book, is
now pretty well packaged up, and scouting for a publisher. It is
decisively augmented by a splendid series of full-page
illustrations from family member Paul Kirchner, with whose
work you are all doubtless familiar. We cannot predict a release
date, but the book should make a very nice Christmas
present.
In Europe we noticed that major pistol
contests are now starting in Condition 4, with the unloaded
weapon lying on a table in front of the shooter, hands free. I am
sure there is a good reason for this, but it does show that
practical pistol competition need not be too specifically
practical.
So what are we going to do with this
ragheaded US trooper who took it upon himself to murder his
brothers-at-arms? The act of killing the man who fights alongside
you is so atrocious as to merit special attention. If our
Constitution did not forbid "cruel and unusual punishment," we
would resurrect the exemplary British act of "hanging in irons," in
which the subject is hoisted aloft in a snug-fitting network of
iron straps and permitted to perish of thirst or exposure, whatever
comes first. Clearly we are not going to do that, but whatever we
are going to do will be too good for this
fellow.
As these unpleasant people in Iraq keep
on potting American soldiers at the rate of about one a day, we
have a suggestion for the local command. Let anyone caught in the
possession of a rocket propelled grenade (RPG) be pigged on the
spot. Not shot, just pigged. That is not even against any
stipulation of the Geneva Conference, but I bet it would work.
(Being "pigged" is being doused in pig viscera.)
Despite the squeaking of those who would
have it otherwise, the United States of America remains the last
free nation on earth. God made it so. The Bill of Rights keeps it
so. And the National Rifle Association keeps that
so.
When in England at a fairly large
conference, Colin Powell was asked by the Archbishop of Canterbury
if our plans for Iraq were just an example of empire-building by
George Bush. He answered by saying the following:
"Over the years, the United States has sent many of its
fine men and women into great peril to fight for freedom beyond our
borders. The only amount of land we have ever asked for in
return is enough to bury those who did not return."
It became very quiet in the room.
via Dr. Leon Flancher
This foolish talk about reparations for
slavery would be funny if it were not evidence of disastrous
historical ignorance. Slavery is a natural course of human events
from as far back as we have any record. If you are not going to
kill all the losers on the spot, you put them to work. Somebody has
got to chop the wood and draw the water, and that is generally what
losers do. If we suggest that somebody today should pay somebody
else for something that other people did in times long past, we
might suggest that the Romans pay the Algerians, the Aztec pay the
Maya, the Arabs pay the Berbers, the English pay the Irish, the
Norwegians pay the Russians, the Russians pay the Cossacks, the
Mohawks pay the Pequots, and so on and on and on. American Negro
chattel slavery, which was just one form of the "peculiar
institution," was abolished a century and a half ago, in case Al
Sharpton has not heard. It would not be surprising to learn that
some of Al Sharpton's ancestors did a bit of buying and selling on
their own. Unfortunately there is no law against being
ridiculous.
The new crop of pocket 45 pistols does
seem to be a useful innovation. These little guns may kick pretty
hard, as some suggest, but since they are intended primarily for
arm's-length situations, this is not significant. In practicing
with them, it is a good idea to keep the standard magazine fully
extended to get some purchase for the little finger of the shooting
hand. You can have it both ways.
"For men of understanding do not say that the sword is
to blame for murder, nor wine for drunkenness, nor strength for
outrage, nor courage for foolhardiness, but they lay the blame on
those who make an improper use of the gifts which have been
bestowed upon them by God, and punish them accordingly."
St. John Chrysostom (circa 341-410 AD), from "Treatise on the
Priesthood,"
via B.T. Carlin, MD
Practical shooting in training and
practice should always involve a certain amount of work from
automobiles, both stationary and moving. A lot of pistol action
(including one of my own) is of this sort, and it should not be
overlooked in training. I have always taught it in Latin America,
and I used to teach it here at Gunsite. It should not be ignored
simply because it is difficult to conduct.
It may be that there is such a thing as
racial memory, and it is supported by the undeniable observation
that the goblins will get you if you don't watch out. It
is just that today goblins may not look the part, no matter how
they act. Neanderthalers (for lack of a better term) existed
contemporaneously with the Cro-Magnons (for lack of a better term)
for a very long time, and they did not vanish all at once. If brain
size is an indication, they were the intellectual equals of their
successors, but while the remaining groups hung out in deep woods
and occasionally grabbed off a Cro-Magnon child for supper, they
never mastered missilery. They never discovered the bow and arrow,
and they never found out how to kill beyond arm's length. Thus they
disappeared - but not all at once. You better watch
out!
"Wrath is better than sorrow."
The Guru
Hydrurga, the leopard seal, is a
large, active, carnivorous predator, inhabiting the oceans of
Antarctica. There has been no case of Hydrurga's scarfing up
anybody - until now. Last month Kirsty Brown, a British marine
scientist working for British Antarctic Survey, was attacked and
killed while snorkeling in the ice water off the Weddell Sea.
Snorkeling in these waters strikes us as a questionable occupation,
but there has never been a case up till now of Hydrurga's
claiming a human victim, probably because people just do not go
where he is. Some time ago we suggested that a Hydrurga hunt
might be a spirited enterprise. and not without some scientific
research value. Such a project does not seem likely, however, in
today's climate of opinion. Maybe we should agitate the Safari Club
in this direction. At 11 feet in length and weighing about a
thousand pounds, he would make into a handsome centerpiece for the
trophy room of "The man who has everything."
If there is a war on, and there often is,
it behooves a young, unattached man to go get in it. Until he has
been in a battle a man always wonders about whether he would
measure up to really serious stress. A man who has never been in a
major battle can never be really sure of himself.
We have always assumed that every
household must contain a 22 - at least every rural household.
What sort of 22 depends on circumstances, of course, but the rifle
may be generally more useful than the pistol. The pistol is
handier, but the rifle makes a better trainer for the young since
it is easier to manage. If the piece is primarily a trainer, it
should probably be a single-shot, but if it is to be taken afield,
a large capacity magazine is a convenience. I do not think the
piece should be semi-automatic, though this is not a critical
consideration. The bolt-action is popular, for obvious reasons, but
I have always thought that the best general-purpose 22 is the
Marlin Model 39. Its lever-action is equally convenient for
either hand. Its half-cock safety is convenient and reliable, and
its trigger-action can be honed to complete satisfaction. In the
20-inch barrel, take-down version, it may be the best
general-purpose 22. It should probably not be fitted with a
telescope sight, since a good ghost-ring adapts well to the
hard-top Marlin action and provides all the precision necessary to
all but the optically handicapped.
We need not be exclusive, however. Good 22s of all types are widely
available, and easily modified for shooters of small stature. High
quality, compact 22 auto-pistols are not as common as they should
be, but they fill a specific niche as a convenient household item.
Naturally any household item should be available only to persons of
responsibility - of any age. Children can be taught
responsibility at an earlier age than widely supposed, and prior to
achieving that responsibility they should be kept physically
separated from both firearms and ammunition. Reasonably alert
children may be taught to be responsible citizens at least by the
age of ten, but usually they do not have enough length of bone to
manage a rifle until about fourteen. This varies from case to case,
but it depends basically upon the social responsibility of their
parents. This is not a matter of numerical age, but rather of
character.
Remember how Kipling put it?
"When you're wounded and left on Afghanistan's plains,
and the women come out to cut up your remains, just roll to your
rifle and blow out your brains, and go to your god like a
soldier."
Plus ça change, plus la même chose.
I suppose it is a losing battle, but I
continue to insist that those who undertake to design courses of
fire for smallarms competition should guide themselves by the
principle of relevance. Any challenge posed in a contest should
attempt to replicate a live action taking place in the field or on
the street. If the challenge can not realistically be encountered
in live action, there is no need to test it in a contest. Thus it
is that many standard training courses used in the public sector
are unsuitable for competition.
I repeat that I am dubious about shooting
sticks. They seem to have appeared originally with the buffalo
hunters of the Great Plains, who often had to engage in high grass,
but today they are practically standard equipment in Africa. This
is partly because a large number of African clients take to the
field without any training or experience in marksmanship. It seems
to me obvious that no one should take after big game until he is
thoroughly grounded on small game. In the American West the ideal
practice target is the jackrabbit. Until such time as the novice
hunter is fifty percent effective on jackrabbits, he should not
take after trophy game. Besides, contrary to widespread opinion, a
jackrabbit is quite good provender when properly prepared. (This
preparation must be long and slow, if one is to avoid meat the
texture of truck tires.)
In any case, the use of shooting sticks as a crutch for the
incompetent marksman is a dreary development. Among other things,
they must be lugged about by a servitor, and dependence upon such
is undignified.
License registration for last year
disclosed that as of this time more girls than boys are putting in
for hunting licenses.
Well I guess we did not get him with that
big bomb. I have never been impressed with "assassination by bomb."
Bombs are indiscriminate, clumsy and unreliable. What is needed is
a Hanneken, as we may have mentioned before. Sergeant Hanneken got
his man with his 1911 45 pistol, and then he lugged the body back
over his shoulder to show off without photographs. I have always
been powerfully impressed by having had the honor of shaking dice
for drinks with Colonel Hanneken. What a distinction it is to play
"buddies at the bar" with the truly great!
The consensus seems to be that he is
still alive. If so, he is now in a position to strike a really
shattering blow for The Faith. He can give himself up.
There is nothing that could flummox the infidel as much as physical
custody of the evil image. Fortunately he is not very bright, so we
need not fear this development.
Please Note. These "Commentaries" are for personal
use only. Not for publication.