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Hey Tim, remember when...
On Fri, 06 Mar 2015 21:49:42 -0500, Someone wrote:
John H. wrote: On Fri, 6 Mar 2015 12:22:15 -0800 (PST), True North wrote: On Friday, 6 March 2015 15:40:32 UTC-4, wrote: On Friday, March 6, 2015 at 10:01:36 AM UTC-5, John H. wrote: On Fri, 06 Mar 2015 09:54:09 -0500, "Mr. Luddite" wrote: On 3/6/2015 9:31 AM, John H. wrote: On Fri, 06 Mar 2015 08:50:45 -0500, "Mr. Luddite" wrote: On 3/6/2015 8:11 AM, John H. wrote: On Thu, 05 Mar 2015 19:13:49 -0500, "Mr. Luddite" wrote: On 3/5/2015 4:20 PM, John H. wrote: ...we were kids and would shoot the tip off a deer antler with our .22's? Damn, that was fun. But, the most fun was when they took off running 'cause they were scared, and then we shot off the rest of the tips. I wonder how many hunters killed a deer and found tipless antlers on the damn thing! How sporting. I assume you posted this just to get attention. 'Twas an 'in' joke. You'd not get it. But I'll bet you're impressed with circled pencil holes on cardboard, yes? You're right. I didn't get it. I've never shot or even tried to shoot an animal. And no, I don't get excited shooting at paper targets at the range either. I do so occasionally only to maintain my familiarity with the guns and to sharpen my aim should it ever be necessary to use one in self-defense. Actually, I am thinking of getting rid of all the guns except one. Each gun shoots differently, some more accurately than others. For my purposes and interests it would probably be better to have just one gun that shoots the most accurately and stay familiar with it. Right now, that would be the Walther pistol however I actually prefer a revolver like the little .38 Chief's Special. No fiddling around loading a round in the chamber. Just aim and shoot. I don't really have a need to "carry" anymore, so the small Sig has no real purpose. The Ruger SR22 pistol just sits in the safe. Rarely use it. Might have another handgun that I've forgotten about... have to check the safe. Still have a shotgun that I've never fired or even loaded and the Ruger 10/22 rifle. My wife's favorite is the Chief's Specail, although she does like the P938 also. Of course her accuracy with the CS on SA is much better than with the P938. I like the Kimber .45. I can shoot it better than any of the others. Save the guns for your grandkids. By the time they're old enough, you should know them well enough to transfer them (legally of course). Nope. While I am still kicking I'll either sell/transfer them to licensed individuals as allowed by state law or to a FFL dealer. Note: In MA, that means the firearm now becomes uniquely registered to the new, licensed owner. If I kick the bucket the only one who will inherit any firearms I have is my son in South Carolina, assuming he wants them. He took the time and effort to attend a lengthy (2 month) safety course with his wife that far exceeds the mandatory but simple 5 hour course required for a permit in MA. I have already made my wishes documented on where they go. If he doesn't want them they will be turned in to the local police department for disposal. My other son has no interest in guns and they scare the crap out of my daughter. If grandkids want guns ... they can go take the required courses, pass the background checks, qualify like anyone else and go buy their own. My wife and I were recently looking at Charleston, SC. Then I looked at the state income taxes. Damn. SC doesn't give a lot of breaks. It's not that bad. And unlike a lot of places, SC caps sales tax on a vehicle at $300. A new $60k Audi? $300 in sales tax. :) Say what?? That would be $9K up here. Well, that $8700 difference is what you're paying for your 'free' medical care! Damn, you beat me to it. Maybe the 'a ha' light is turning on for him. -- Guns don't cause problems. Gun owner *behavior* causes problems. |
Hey Tim, remember when...
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Hey Tim, remember when...
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Hey Tim, remember when...
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Hey Tim, remember when...
True North wrote:
On Friday, 6 March 2015 15:03:29 UTC-4, John H. wrote: On Fri, 06 Mar 2015 12:51:22 -0500, wrote: On Fri, 06 Mar 2015 10:44:31 -0500, John H. wrote: Funny you should mention that. The March Golf Digest has a nice article about 'virtual golf'. The Nintendo Wii version even promotes activity and requires a 'decent' swing. But, I'm into golf primarily for the exercise and playing with friends. However, I would never put down those who wanted to play the game that way. From the article, there are a lot of similarities between virtual golf and real golf. One of the quotes in the article from an individual who'd played the Pebble Beach virtual game to prepare for the real thing: "It was an incredible, weird feeling. I started correcting the caddies because I already knew the angles, because it's like I had seen it all before," he says. "Those games, they're just so realistic." We have a WII machine and I never thought of it as being like any real game. To start with, you don't get to move around much. It is nothing like the 5 or 6 mile walk you get chasing a golf ball. For me that is more like a steeple chase, jumping over creeks and climbing through the brush. I do have an idea for a video game that is connected to a real exercise machine so you are actually working the muscles you would in the real thing. The first one that springs to mind is to put slotted wheel sensors on a rowing machine and interface them through a mouse port. Then you just need the right software. For that matter you could just put a slotted wheel sensor on the 2 main pulleys in a Bow Flex. Simply reading your Email or playing solitaire would give you quite a workout. Any game you play with a mouse would work. I am really surprised the exercise machine people have not hooked up with a PC guy. At the gym, the bicycle machines have 'routes' where you watch the video and you climb through the woods, go downhill, etc, and the pedalling gets harder and softer as you go. But, I don't like bicycling. On the treadmill I read. It seems like every year lately there are more and more days with snow cover - keeping the golf courses closed. Might have to sign up at the gym again, just for the treadmill. -- Guns don't cause problems. Gun owner *behavior* causes problems. ...or buy your own, you cheap #$@%$#. I have a PaceMaster Bronze. Bought it just after I retired and use it 3 times a week. Maybe you should use it more. My United Healthcare plan gives me a gym membership. |
Hey Tim, remember when...
wrote:
On Sat, 07 Mar 2015 06:46:56 -0500, John H. wrote: On Fri, 06 Mar 2015 23:16:42 -0500, wrote: On Fri, 06 Mar 2015 15:43:13 -0500, John H. wrote: At the gym, the bicycle machines have 'routes' where you watch the video and you climb through the woods, go downhill, etc, and the pedalling gets harder and softer as you go. But, I don't like bicycling. On the treadmill I read. It seems like every year lately there are more and more days with snow cover - keeping the golf courses closed. Might have to sign up at the gym again, just for the treadmill. -- This is just the machine talking to you tho. there is no feedback from you to the machine. Yup, you're right. It would be more fun if I could pick the terrain and the route and just go. Then they'd have to have the handlebars providing input to the computer. The two technologies exist. I just haven't seen them put together. If the video game people would hook up with the exercise machine people, they would have something. I think I read something on that a few months ago. |
Hey Tim, remember when...
On 3/8/2015 3:28 AM, Califbill wrote:
John H. wrote: On Fri, 6 Mar 2015 11:40:30 -0800 (PST), wrote: On Friday, March 6, 2015 at 10:01:36 AM UTC-5, John H. wrote: On Fri, 06 Mar 2015 09:54:09 -0500, "Mr. Luddite" wrote: On 3/6/2015 9:31 AM, John H. wrote: On Fri, 06 Mar 2015 08:50:45 -0500, "Mr. Luddite" wrote: On 3/6/2015 8:11 AM, John H. wrote: On Thu, 05 Mar 2015 19:13:49 -0500, "Mr. Luddite" wrote: On 3/5/2015 4:20 PM, John H. wrote: ...we were kids and would shoot the tip off a deer antler with our .22's? Damn, that was fun. But, the most fun was when they took off running 'cause they were scared, and then we shot off the rest of the tips. I wonder how many hunters killed a deer and found tipless antlers on the damn thing! How sporting. I assume you posted this just to get attention. 'Twas an 'in' joke. You'd not get it. But I'll bet you're impressed with circled pencil holes on cardboard, yes? You're right. I didn't get it. I've never shot or even tried to shoot an animal. And no, I don't get excited shooting at paper targets at the range either. I do so occasionally only to maintain my familiarity with the guns and to sharpen my aim should it ever be necessary to use one in self-defense. Actually, I am thinking of getting rid of all the guns except one. Each gun shoots differently, some more accurately than others. For my purposes and interests it would probably be better to have just one gun that shoots the most accurately and stay familiar with it. Right now, that would be the Walther pistol however I actually prefer a revolver like the little .38 Chief's Special. No fiddling around loading a round in the chamber. Just aim and shoot. I don't really have a need to "carry" anymore, so the small Sig has no real purpose. The Ruger SR22 pistol just sits in the safe. Rarely use it. Might have another handgun that I've forgotten about... have to check the safe. Still have a shotgun that I've never fired or even loaded and the Ruger 10/22 rifle. My wife's favorite is the Chief's Specail, although she does like the P938 also. Of course her accuracy with the CS on SA is much better than with the P938. I like the Kimber .45. I can shoot it better than any of the others. Save the guns for your grandkids. By the time they're old enough, you should know them well enough to transfer them (legally of course). Nope. While I am still kicking I'll either sell/transfer them to licensed individuals as allowed by state law or to a FFL dealer. Note: In MA, that means the firearm now becomes uniquely registered to the new, licensed owner. If I kick the bucket the only one who will inherit any firearms I have is my son in South Carolina, assuming he wants them. He took the time and effort to attend a lengthy (2 month) safety course with his wife that far exceeds the mandatory but simple 5 hour course required for a permit in MA. I have already made my wishes documented on where they go. If he doesn't want them they will be turned in to the local police department for disposal. My other son has no interest in guns and they scare the crap out of my daughter. If grandkids want guns ... they can go take the required courses, pass the background checks, qualify like anyone else and go buy their own. My wife and I were recently looking at Charleston, SC. Then I looked at the state income taxes. Damn. SC doesn't give a lot of breaks. It's not that bad. And unlike a lot of places, SC caps sales tax on a vehicle at $300. A new $60k Audi? $300 in sales tax. :) I thought I read SC had the highest marginal tax rate in the country. I guess I'll just have to sit down and calculate it. Might prove interesting. In NC, my Army retirement pay and my wife's fed retirement pay would be excluded from state income tax. I would figure California was among the highest. I'm sure it is. It takes a lot of other peoples money to provide all the handouts that liberal states are so proud of providing. :-) -- Respectfully submitted by Justan Laugh of the day from Krause "I'm not to blame anymore for the atmosphere in here. I've been "born again" as a nice guy." |
Hey Tim, remember when...
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