I'd sure hope so. I grabbed an open jar of dill pickles once thinking it was my ice tea and managed to swaller a big mouthful of it before I realized the error in judgement.
That reminds me of a horrible joke.Feller would need to be careful and not grab it thinking it was his ice tea.
I had a member of OSA give me a 1928 year Model 12 Winchester shotgun that he was afraid to fire as it was defective. It had been given to him by another person for the same reason. The action would not lock up, butt stock was broken and it was ugly with a piece of belting used for a recoil pad.Joel, I hope you have enjoyed this project as much as I have enjoyed following your progress. You lit a fire in me, but I’m looking to go a little different route.
I’d like to find a rifle or handgun that was built, shot, maybe not cared for as much as it should have been, and put away. I want to try to restore one instead of building one.
So thank you for starting a new project in my mind.
Ya might consider a matched pair o' pistols. That bar might be travelin' with a friend...When a feller is hunting for grizzle bar, or other dangerous beasts, he needs a back-up firearm, liker a good pistol, to give him that last-second shot at surviving the charge. Grizzle bars don't always fall to your first shot. Especially if your cap fizzles or your charge is afouled.
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