Sunday, July 11, 2010

Is It Sunday Already?

This being off the road is confusing me. I usually blog when I get back to my hotel room after a day on the set...I've got to figure out the old non-road blogging waypoints! LOL! It'll be all too short...I glanced at my August calendar a couple of days ago, and it's back to the road. Sort of like a country song...

The results from last week's Hell On Wheels up in Cheyenne were posted yesterday, and I couldn't be happier. I finished 78 out of 241, 9th in my division (out of 23). I'm creeping my way toward competitive. In fact congrats are in order for the whole COWBOYS team — Indiana Jackson and Pic-Y-Une — who turned in impressive performances.

Of course, you've couldn't have seen me creeping toward competitive at yesterday's club match in Boulder, where I once again proved conclusively that if you pull the trigger when the sights aren't on target, you will, amazingly, not hit the target! Another LOL! My Sweetie, OTOH, watched the sights, shot fast and clobbered me. Congrats due on that!

Gonna have to address a shotgun conundrum. As you all know I had that solid-frame 1901 vintage Winchester '97 overhauled as my back-up shotgun. It has a 24-inch barrel that, for me, points a little faster than the short-barreled Chinese guns (which are not availble with longer barrels). However, after 2 years of waiting for the gun to come home, it is still a thorn in my side. It's a bundle of doesn't-work-right quirks...occasional failures to eject, leaving the shell in the gun; failures to go completely into battery; and a new one yesterday, the carrier failing to completely rise even with the pump fully forward, requiring me to use thumb-power to shove the carrier back up so we could continue running the gun. The key word here is "occasional" — if it did the same thing every time one could diagnose it and maybe fix it. Intermittent problems are bears!

Winchester 1897 shotgun

Joke! Joke! A Super-Soaker is a lot more reliable than an 1897 Winchester! I keep working with it because I kept trying to separate my failures with the gun — and old '97s are WILDLY susceptible to operator-induced errors...hey, my gun is more than 100 years old! — from the gun's failures. I swore yesterday the thing would be on Gunbroker.com by this morning, but now I'd feel guilty if I pawned my problems off on anyone else. I woke up this morning and decided to clean it and relegate it to the back of the gun safe...maybe a few more years will improve it's demeanor.

In the meantime, I need another back-up '97, since the odds of a Chinese clone running 100% for any length of time are pretty much on par with the originals running 100%. Sometime in the next few days I'll either get a Cimarron '97 clone or try and find an original that isn't a complete and total POS, then send one or the other to "Jim Bowie" at the Cowboys and Indians Store with a whining note and my credit card number.

This week, I'm going to start tuning up for the Wild Bunch World Championships in August in New Mexico, which we'll be filming for SHOOTING GALLERY 2011. My plan right now is to run the Para 1911 A1 copy from C&S. I've been talking to Remington about running an R1, but I'd need a couple of weeks with it to see how it runs with lots of ammo. I'll be shooting the 1911 from the Ted Blocker 1911 rig. I'm not crazy about the flat spring mag pouches (wasn't crazy about them when I was using them in IPSC back in the day, either, although Mike Dalton swore by them), but I've tortured them into shape. I will probably use the Taylors 1866/Long Hunter .44 Special lever gun (which I use regularly in my club matches) and '97#3, an old Norinco "Trench Gun" that I'm very careful not to run too many rounds through, saving it for the big Wild Bunch matches.

11 comments:

  1. Wallaby Jack1:51 PM

    What you NEED to do ....
    ... is to learn to shoot a double gun ... with TWO triggers !


    :)

    ReplyDelete
  2. Good Lord, Wallaby...what it you're right! What if I jst abandoned the damn things and got a plain old boring double-barrel shotgun? Heck, I HAVE a double-barrel Stoeger I've had for zillion years. Okay, next Saturday I'm shooting the Stoeger and see what happens...

    mb

    ReplyDelete
  3. Wallaby Jack2:18 AM

    Want a challenge ?

    Try being competitive with a single barrel hammer-gun ...

    (ejector IS allowed :D)

    ReplyDelete
  4. Anonymous4:45 AM

    well... Michael....please let me know what the secret is to getting model '97s to run. I might just make the jump from USPSA/IPDA/steel to CAS. I have bunches of money trying to burn a hole in my pocket. I try to keep reminding myself that I have a $1,200 TA-11 HG ACOG on order from Larue....on backorder...for use on my 3 gun AR. for me to get set up for CAS, I would need everything....2 single action revo's, a lever action carbine, and a shotgun that works reliably...a 10 gallon hat, spurs, holster, boots, and belt. I would rather spare myself the expense and headache of getting a '97 if none of them work. argghh....

    ReplyDelete
  5. How about upgrading to an old remington model 11 or browning 5? I have the rem 11, 1930s vintage, that that baby hums like a machine.. a jmb design that winchester could have manufactured, but passed up on!

    ReplyDelete
  6. MB, re back on the road:
    This Hotel Room - (Steve Goodman)

    http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=5ejWLH6ONaI

    ReplyDelete
  7. SASS never should have allowed the '97 in the first place. I'm sorry, but when I think "cowboy", I don't think "pump shotgun."

    ReplyDelete
  8. Anonymous9:07 PM

    cheap Christian Louboutin Bianca 140 platform suede pumps
    Most fashion stylists and aficionados believe that Black is Fashion and to exhibit an all black statement would always be chic. But Christian Louboutin seems to have an appeal to this since the brand has come up with this off-white 2011 new season Christian Louboutin Daf 160mm Calf Leather Hidden Platform Booty.
    Turn your plain slouchy pants and top into a high class beauty as this pair of shop Christian Louboutin Lady Peep Spikes 150mm Peep Toe Pumps
    poses an eye-catching statement having been designed and created with off-white, all leather made upper and heels. The pair has rounded toes, braided multi straps with interwoven gold metal rings through front and an exposed gold zip fastening at back of heel. The heels are towering with the approximate measure of 140mm/ 5.5 inches and a 40mm/ 1.5 inch platform.
    Show off your striking summer style or contemporary evening fashion wearing this $1,095 worth of sexy Christian Louboutin Bambou 140 Black Suede Platform Pumps
    and just get glamorous! shop Christian Louboutin shoes at SHOPFORUGGBOOTS.COM

    ReplyDelete