Watergun: coating

You guys remember the Watergun?

Found some folks at the gun show who do cerroko…cerok..cerrocoa..cer…screw it….they ceramic coat firearms. Their prices were very reasonable and the examples of their work looked pretty good. So…I left the Watergun with them and in a few weeks we will see what it looks like. For those who don’t recall, the Watergun is a HiPower brought up from the bottom of Lake Michigan. I purchased it as a box of parts and was surprised to find 90% of the parts were present and usable. Shoots fine, looks hideous. SO…in a couple weeks, we’ll do a grand unveiling. Stay tuned.

Lights out

So, as I mentioned, the gun show is being held in the ballroom (for lack of a better term) at the Hilton here in town. Ballroom. No windows. Large room. And i’m standing there chatting with a vendor when the lights go out. Now, the emergency lights did not come on, so that tells me the lights going out was not a function of a power outage or other unexpected event. Rather, someone simply must have turned the wrong switches down in the basement. Here’s the interesting part….as several hundred people are standing around in the dark, a handful had the presence of mind to use the flashlight function on their phones. But a very, very small handful of people had personal flashlights on them…myself included. Thus, it was easy to see who was drinking the same flavor of Kool-Aid as me and who wasn’t.

It was…amusing.

Missoula gun show

Oh, it’s bloody hot.

This weekend is the Missoula Gun Show which is, as I understand it, the oldest and largest gun show int he state. And it happens darn near in my backyard. Or, at least, it used to. This year, for the first time since I’ve been attending it (30 years), they have changed the venue. Why? Mmmm. Not sure. I’ve heard two competing rumours and both probably have some merit. The first is that our illustrious alcoholic, obese, philandering, statist mayor’s (“The Biggest Boozer”) pet project – a “no private gun sales w/o background check” law – would make the gun show impossible and the University, who hosts the show, didn’t want to get caught up in that potentially legal morass. The other rumour I heard was something about the University charging exorbitant fees for air conditioning. The reality? Who knows? Maybe both. Eithe way, it’s going to be at the Hilton Garden Inn up on Reserve St.

I keep saying Im going to try not to spend money at these things and every bloody time I wind up ….spending money.

And, of course, the gun show is an opportunity to catch up and visit with people I almost never see except at these sorts of things…so thats pretty cool.

Speaking of cool, when the end of the world gets here I a going to have a heck of a time putting up with summer heat without an air conditioner.

Guns of Wisdom

Went alllllllll the way out to the Wisdom gun show today. Wisdom is a really small town. In fact, it is so small….

“How small is it!?”

Its so small the “You are now entering..” and the “You are now leaving…” signs are on the same post. :::Rimshot:::

Ah, but seriously folks……..

I was there for the gun show which is pretty much the biggest function the town has during the year. In the evening they have a street dance, there’s BBQ, and you can pretty much camp in your truck by the side of the road. It’s quite nice. I hadn’t been there in a few years because, honestly, its a bit of a haul. Its in the middle of this enormous valley. An island in a sea of green hay. Seriously.

But, because of its isolation and the bucolic demographic, you get a lot of used and old guns. Me likey used and old guns. And, while I was planning on not spending more than a few bucks on some reloading gear I walked away with this:

A pre-Remington Marlin 1894 in .44 Mag. Has the crossbolt safety, unfortunately, but it also has this:

The “JM” stamp showing this gun was made before Remington bought the company and destroyed it’s reputation with crappy quality. Go look on GunBroker…the JM stamped guns bring markedly higher prices over the REM stamped guns. Price? Well Old Dude wanted $500, I wound up getting it for $400. Honestly, if it didnt have the safety I would have been okay with $500.

I have the .357 version of this gun sitting in the safe. Paid $300 for it ten years ago. I see them on GB for about $500 more than that now. :::sigh:::

Anyway, this’ll go in the safe until I pick up a Ruger .44 of some flavor to match it with.

I Sold a Glock 30 last week that had been sitting in the safe since last September, so I’m going to consider this a zero-sum game. Basically just transmuted the G30 into the 1894.

 

 

 

“Boogaloo” – news to me

I’ve become old enough that I am apparently now out of the loop in regard to ‘those crazy kids and their slang’.

Apparently, when I wasn’t looking, the term ‘boogaloo‘ has come to mean a fighting-in -the-streets type of national-level (or global-level) bullet party. Who knew?

Come to think of it, we have had some interesting euphemism for the day it all comes crashing down, haven’t we? Lets see: Collapse, EOTWAWKI, Ragnarok, the aopcalypse, Armageddon, World War 3, Judgement Day, TSHTF, etc.

I kinda like “Der Tag”, from Heinlein’s ‘The Moon Is A Harsh Mistress’. In most survivalist fiction the day the world comes to an end is often simply called “The Day”. No surprise there, hm?

But ‘boogaloo’? Mmmmm….thats gonna take some getting used to.

It’s not just for breakfast anymore

I was going to say that deep down, I’m really just a big kid. But, if you knew me, you’d say that its really not that deep down since my immaturity and ‘boyish charm’ are quite readily apparent on the surface. I mention this because when I saw that breakfast cereal was on sale, I went deep. What breakfast cereal, you may ask? Why none other than the palate-shredding extruded waist-expander that is….Cap’n Crunch (Although to be fair, I knew him when he was Lieutenant Crunch back in Basrah).

I love a bargain, and I love food. Mix the two together and you get a happy Zero. So, when they had cereal marked down to $0.99/box I figured “Ok, lets get our crunch on.”

Normally $103, paid $27, saved…a bunch.

I actually don’t usually eat this as breakfast cereal. Neither, I suspect, does anyone else. Its more of a eat-it-out-of-the-box-while-playing-on-the-computer thing. But, no matter how you do it, I  apparently have at least a years worth of the stuff on hand. And, yes, it’ll keep for a year.

In case anyone is curious, what is my favorite breakfast cereal to actually eat as breakfast cereal? Surprisingly, on of the most boring things you can imagine – plain Kellog’s Corn Flakes. (But it’s best not to delve too deeply into the rather…NSFW?….origin of corn flakes.)

So, there’s a couple of cases of kid’s cereal sitting on the shelves in the basement. I suspect they’ll last until about this time next year. Unfortunately, milk does not. And, yes, I’ve tried the shelf-stable milk and it just doesn’t taste very good to me. So..if I want to actually eat breakfast cereal qua breakfast cereal, I’m gonna have to run to the store once in a while for a half gallon of moo juice.

But..hey..bargain!

Article – How To Read A Map

The next idiot that has to get hauled out of the woods horizontally because he blindly trusted his GPS, or worse, his celphone, will not be the last. Natural selection in action. There’s plenty of good books on the subject, but here’s some basics.

“Once you’re outdoors, you can’t rely on technology anymore,” says Christiaan Adams, developer advocate for Google Earth. Being able to read a good old-fashioned paper map is one of the most fundamental outdoor skills. In case you never learned or need a refresher, here are the basics.

Nuts with bolts

The $199.99 upper I ordered from PSA to go with my $60 lower arrived yesterday. As I was looking it over, I noticed that they apparently use M16-style bolt carriers. That is to say, the back of the bolt carrier is not ‘cut out’ like on an AR-15 bolt. You know what, its easier to just show you…

I recall way back in the 80’s/90’s, the prevailing wisdom was that any machinegun part, regardless of whether it actually made the gun full auto or not, was a no-no. Apparently nowadays an M16 bolt in your AR is not a cause for concern (perhaps it never was, but with ATFE they tend to write their own rules depending on how the coffee was that morning). The M16 bolt by itself doesn’t make your gun full-auto…you still need a handful of other parts and the magic little DIAS.

I have no love for ATFE. (Heck, I don’t even have a ‘but I don’t DISLIKE you’ for them.) But I also have no love for spending years in a federal rock-hockey farm. To avoid any ‘grey area’ issues I usually just keep far away from things that might cause problems with overzealous or ignorant enforcement types. (And, over the years, I have had plenty of people try to offer me parking lot deals on things that were definitely of a shady nature.)

So, even though apparently its cool to have the M16 bolt in the AR, it still kinda caught my eye.

Anyway, regardless of M16 bolt legalities or non-legalities, the upper showed up yesterday and I now have a little AR that I am into $260. And I can remember back when Obama took office seeing someone in my shop sell an AR to some panic-buying kid for almost two grand. How the market changes!

Commander Zero’s 4S Motivational Process

Im taking a course about Management & Organization Behaviour. One of the assignments was about how to motivate employees. (My preferred method, “Do your work or go find a job elsewhere” is apparently not the best method.) There was some interesting stuff about when incentives work and when they don’t, that sort of thing. But then there was the question: “List five forces that have motivated you to attain goals (both simple and complex) in your life:”

This was interesting to think about because my motivational imperative has always been my own self-interest. After all, isn’t it reasonable to expect people to put their own self-interest at the top of the list? In fact, I would think that anyone who doesn’t operate out of a sense of self-interest is acting irrationally. Of course, then we have to figure out exactly what we mean by ‘self-interest’.

But the question asked for five forces. Self-interest is just one. So I gave it some thought and realized that as a survivalist, my actions and behaviours follow a pretty simple rubric. I’ll share it with you, not because I think you should adopt it or that its groundbreaking, but rather because perhaps you should think about the framework that you use for your motivations when it comes to preparedness.

Although the question asked for five, I could only come up with four. But, to me, and for me, these four give me a pretty good foundation for how to move forward:

  • Self interest – does this benefit me? Or does it at least not hurt me? Does this improve my situation?
  • Security – does this keep me from needing the help of others? Does this provide a stable platform or environment for me to operate in?
  •  Safety – will this hurt me emotionally? Financially? Physically?
  •  Satisfaction – will I regret this? Does it please me to do this?

Example: I really want a Barret 82A1. And, technically, I can open a new browser window, visit my vendor (who has the things on sale right now, dang it), hit a few keys, and have one here Friday. Should I do it?

  • Self interest – does this benefit me? (Yes, it gives me massive firepower) Or does it at least not hurt me? (Uhm..that might hurt my wallet) Does this improve my situation? (Yes. It gives me a lovely antimateriel/vehicle/Bigfoot capacity)
  • Security – does this keep me from needing the help of others? Does this provide a stable platform or environment for me to operate in? (It provides an additional level of protection from ranged threats or lightly amored ones, thereby making my environment safer)
  •  Safety – will this hurt me emotionally? Financially? (Absolutely. There are a dozen better things to do with eight grand right now) Physically?
  •  Satisfaction – will I regret this? (Probably.) Does it please me to do this? (yes)

There are too many answers there that should not be there. So, no, at this moment getting the 82A1 is a bad idea, according to the forces that motivate me. Let’s try a positive:

Should I switch my car insurance:

  • Self interest – does this benefit me? (Yes. Saves me money.) Or does it at least not hurt me? (Yes, does not hurt me) Does this improve my situation? (Yes. I keep coverage and have more money)
  • Security – does this keep me from needing the help of others? (Yes, it transfers risk to someone else) Does this provide a stable platform or environment for me to operate in? (Yes, I can operate my vehicle without constraint)
  •  Safety – will this hurt me emotionally? Financially? (No, it benefits me, actually) Physically?
  •  Satisfaction – will I regret this? (No, I’ll be gad I did it when I shave a couple hundred bucks a year off my bill) Does it please me to do this? (It pleases me to get the same coverage for less)

So, in this case, my little Magic 8 Ball of motivators says “Yes, do it”. Note that this is a decision-making framework as well as a motivational one. In other words, I use this to help me make a choice (Do I or don’t I), but also to make me do something.

All the answers don’t have to be in agreement. Should I take a crappy job after ten months of unemployment? The satisfaction answer would be ‘no’… I would not be pleased. BUT, all the other answers suggest its a good idea. So you don’t have to be ‘in agreement’ on everything, you just need to be aware of the different factors. And you may weigh some more than others. I weigh being pleased far below being safe financially. YMMV.

None of this is groundbreaking self-awareness. In fact, this is basically just ‘sleeping on it’ when it comes to making an important decision. But by having some guidelines to work against you can compare apples-to-apples when it comes to weighing whether a course of action is better/worse than another. And when it comes to preparedness, there’s a lot of decisions to be made.

Again, Im not saying you should copy my list or anything. I’m just suggesting that you think about what it is that makes you do the things that you do…what are the factors that you take into account when deciding whether or not to drop $1500 on an optic, or talk to a coworker about preparedness, or pack it up and move to the hills.

As I said, my own self-interest is the main thing for me, and when expanded it includes those other three S’s – Safety, Security, Satisfaction. Heck, let’s just call it Commander Zero’s 4S Motivational Process. But thats pretty much it….my motivational imperatives.