Previously Gunsite Gossip
Vol. 5, No. 3 March, 1997
Winterset
As the bulk of the cold weather drifts
behind us, we are off to Bohemia to consult with the Ceska
Sbrojovka about new designs. If my advice is worth the seeking, we
should be able to promote a superior successor to the excellent
Czech 75, in major caliber, and to launch a series of heavy,
bolt-action, hunting rifles. The choice of calibers will be
interesting. At present the 416s are all the rage, but I think of a
400-grain, 40-caliber bullet as something of a half-measure -
rather like the 41 Magnum revolver.
My old favorite is the 460 G&A Special, which has served me
with distinction for twenty years, but this remains a wildcat for
which the shooter must fabricate his own ammunition. Therefore my
present choice leans toward the 505 Gibbs, famed in song and
story.
We expect to go from Czechia to the IWA at Nurnberg, a presentation
I have long been told that I must not miss.
We will have interesting information for you upon our
return.
You may have noted that Lyman is now
re-issuing their folding aperture tang sight, which is great good
news. By removing the target disk, this setup affords an instant
ghost-ring at the flick of a screw driver. I believe the company
decided upon this product because of the popularity of black power
weapons, but it has found its best employment on the tang of a
"Brooklyn Special" 30-30.
"The only things I regret in life are the things I did
not do."
Hemingway's attribution to his grandmother
We are told that a literary poll taken in
Britain has established "The Lord of the Rings," by J.R.R. Tolkien,
as the greatest book of the 20th century. We are great admirers of
Tolkien, but we must mention that school of readers which holds
that "Meditations on Hunting," by José Ortega y Gasset,
is the title to take the prize. Fortunately this need not be an
either/or proposition. I re-read Tolkien and Ortega with equal
pleasure, and quite regularly.
We have an interesting after-action report
from Darkest Kentucky, in which a bank manager totaled a
would-be robber with his 1911. This in itself is not surprising,
but it does bring out a couple of points. The shooter planted only
one shot in the upper chest area of the intruder. When asked why he
did not shoot twice he said that by the time he hauled the barrel
down out of recoil, the target was not there anymore. Now as we all
know, the 45 auto does not recoil very much if you hold onto
it - only if you shoot it one-handed with a limp wrist. The
IPSC people have long sought to reduce recoil by gadgetry, when the
answer, as Jack Weaver showed us, is in muzzle control. In a proper
Weaver Stance, the muzzle of a 45 rises less than half an inch.
This is why we see people shooting in competition from the
isosceles position in which recoil is evident. If you insist on
shooting with a straight left arm, you may indeed need a reduced
charge and a muzzle-brake. That, however, is not the way to
go.
This "kinder and gentler" age we live in
has produced a crop of overcivilized urbanites of an innocence one
can hardly believe. The state of Montana has been a mecca for timid
and wealthy Californians who like the idea of a wilderness
environment but lack all awareness of what a wilderness is about.
It turns out that one such immigrant had her pet dog scarfed up by
a bobcat. This is very sad, of course, but her response was quite
unbelievable. She complained to the Department of Fish and Game
about the incident, and requested that an armed patrol be placed
around her ranch to shoo off bobcats. (Hard as that may be to
believe, that is the way we heard it.)
"Power is nothing without control."
Pirelli (tires)
I did not put anything about buffalo
sticks into the forthcoming "The Art of the Rifle," even
though I see them advertised for sale in all the magazines. I
whittled out a set of those for myself when I was a mere tad, and
found out after some attempts in the field that they were much more
trouble than they were worth. If you know how to shoot a rifle, you
do not need any help in holding it up. A proper shooting sling
takes care of the weight problem as long as there is support for
the elbow, as in prone, sitting, kneeling or squatting. Any
portable support for a rifle useful in the standing position would
hardly be portable.
The buffalo hunters of the Great Plains actually did use buffalo
sticks to a certain extent, but the conditions involved in that
shooting were rather specialized. In the first place, the grass was
too high to allow a prone position to be taken. Secondly, the
buffalo men hunted from horseback, and portability was not an
issue. Thirdly, the shooting sling had not been invented at that
time. And fourth, the slaughter of the buffalo was a slow-fire
proposition at medium to long range.
Buffalo sticks may indeed be an answer to a certain kind of
problem, but that problem simply does not come up
anymore.
"What we can say with confidence is that Rome fell
gradually, and that Romans for many decades scarcely noticed what
was happening."
Thomas Cahill
Does that not suggest a parallel?
After attending a recent training course
for the machine pistol, family member Bob Shimizu declared
his MP5 as "handy as a football bat." (So I have long
held.)
When in a previous issue I listed some
"Good Things To Do," I had no intention of speaking of
heroics, I was speaking of pleasures. The heroic act may be
pleasant, but usually it is not. Most people who have pulled off
heroic acts have not enjoyed them. I must hasten to add that I have
not personally enjoyed the 30 odd pleasures I listed, for among
other things, I do not enjoy playing golf, or spending
extravagantly in London's best hotel. Tastes differ, fortunately,
and I was trying to cover the field.
We note a feature in the current
American Rifleman about the Krag-Jorgensen rifle once issued
to our armed forces. The article is historically interesting, but
does little justice to the virtues of this excellent arm. I have
been a Krag fancier since early childhood, when I used one to shoot
goats on Catalina Island and sharks in the Catalina Channel. When
fitted with a really good trigger, such as can be had on order from
the Kongsberg Factory near Oslo, this is a really nifty gun. It has
the smoothest bolt-action ever manufactured, and its charging
system is so neat it can be operated eyes-off at a dead run in the
dark. When you flip that gate open to the right, you have only to
drop a cartridge in. You do not have to seat it or place it
accurately - as long as you do not throw it in backwards, it
will feed. This allows the shooter to top off his magazine without
opening the bolt and taking the weapon out of action. The piece is
generally found in caliber 30-40, at one time referred to as "30
Army," which is quite a respectable cartridge, though not quite up
to the 30-06.
The principle drawback of the Krag action is that it is designed
for a low pressure cartridge and uses only one locking lug. This
single lug is quite strong enough, but it stresses the bolt
asymmetrically, sometimes giving rise to a hairline crack at the
rear of the extrusion.
If I were up in the bucks, I would engage a designer and
manufacturer to produce a modern high-pressure version of the Krag.
It would be necessarily expensive, since that feeding system calls
for precise and delicate machining; however, when I see the prices
charged for essentially obsolete double-express rifles, I can
hardly view expense as a serious drawback.
(In case you are interested, the name is pronounced "crock," but do
not tell anybody I said so.)
Riflemaster Larry Larsen plans to show us
his new Christensen action at the April conclave at Whittington. As
you know, the Christensen rifle features a paper-thin barrel
wrapped in plastic thread, granting stiffness and bulk without
weight. This may be a good idea, but Larry has got to be content
with a model 700 action, which is one I would never choose for
myself.
"Day-by-day, case-by-case, the Supreme Court is busy
designing a Constitution for a country I do not recognize."
Justice Antonio Scalia
Did you happen to hear of that Chinese
fire drill that took place in the mountains of southern Colombia?
It appears that a private pilot made an emergency landing in the
forest. Since his radio was working, he called for help, and a
search-and-rescue team was sent to find him. This team did not find
him, but after a short stay on the ground it called for additional
help, claiming that they could not get back into their helicopter
since they were beset by wild pigs. A second search-and-rescue team
was sent to rescue the first, presumably armed with peccary
repellant. This effort was successful and both choppers got into
the air, eventually finding the downed pilot, who was injured.
But that does not end the tale. When sliding the rescued pilot into
the helicopter, things were not managed very well and he slid
overboard when the aircraft was well underway. At last report, the
poor fellow was still unaccounted for.
The people who made that film called "The Gods Must Be
Crazy" certainly ought look into this matter as a basis for a
new movie.
Family member Tom Russell informs
us that he was told by someone at the Gunsite Training Center that
I am "absolutely retired." I find this pretty amusing in view of
the fact that the only thing that I ever retired from was the
Marine Corps, and that was a long time ago. Come to think of it, if
working for wages is the antonym for "retired," I have been retired
for most of my life.
It has been discovered by some safety
committee or other that driving while phoning constitutes a
distinct road hazard. If they had asked us, we could have told them
that.
"The scoutscope doth not a scout rifle
make." The first time I used what has been referred to as Scout I
down in Central America, it had only the ghost-ring setup, and no
telescope at all. The current notion that no rifle is of any
consequence unless it has a glass sight on top probably does well
for optical companies, but it ain't necessarily so. I started using
telescope sights in my teens, way back in the Middle Ages.
These caused considerable comment and astonishment when I showed up
in the Rocky Mountains with that doodad on my Remington 30S. I have
used telescope sights ever since, and they do make shooting a
little easier, but they are only really necessary under specialized
circumstances; and in some cases they are a positive hazard.
The scoutscope is indeed handy on a scout rifle, but the scout
rifle is a conglomeration of characteristics of which its sighting
system is just one. The principle virtues of the scout are
compactness, light weight and handiness. The scoutscope is faster
than a conventional glass in snapshooting, but I discover that a
good many hunters go their entire career without ever having to
attempt a snapshot.
The fact is that a properly designed and mounted scoutscope is
handy, but tying one onto a conventional rifle does not give you a
scout rifle. I wish people who do not understand the concept would
quit trying to fabricate and sell pieces they do not
understand - but that, of course, is too much to
expect.
I spend a considerable amount of time
scanning the reports of gunfights taking place all over the world,
and I have come to the conclusion that if we speak generally,
geezers are more deadly than young studs. I think this is because
old geezers derive their sense of dignity from a different culture
and are much less likely to submit to being pushed around by street
punks. Young moderns are all too frequently apt to heed the advice
of the social worker to give up so nobody will get hurt. (This
despite the statistics which tend to indicate that one is more
likely to get hurt if he gives up than if he fights back.) We seem
to be living in an age of indignity - but not all of
us.
In that connection let us rephrase the
identity of
the Four Horsemen of the Apocalypse to bring
them into step with the times. In my view the four horsemen of the
modern apocalypse are:
- MENDACITY
- INDIGNITY
- VULGARITY
- COWARDICE
With all this news about China on the
front page, we must not overlook the ancient Chinese saying to the
effect that "a bowl of rice is the noblest wok of God." (Sorry
about that.)
It has been suggested to me that we are
very fortunate that our adversaries have not discovered the combat
efficiency of the scout rifle. I do not think we have a problem
here, because a hoplophobe can never discover the good qualities of
any firearm since he does not want to think about firearms at all.
The hoplophobe worries about buzz words like "assault-rifle" and
"automatic-weapon," and can never accept the fact that the weapon
is the man and the firearm is just the instrument in his hands.
With this in mind it is pertinent to observe that several recent
army recruits have been told that the enemy they are preparing to
fight is not the English, or the Spanish, or the Germans, or the
Vietnamese, or the Chinese - but rather the good old boys in
rural America who constitute an armed militia. The question arises,
of course, as to how the unorganized militia, no matter what their
politics or determination, can stand up for an instant against the
United States Army. Well, let us hope it never comes to that, but
if the army is teaching it, we had better realize that they are.
The atrocities of the ninja are certainly beating us into an
unpleasantly confrontational society, but if worse comes to worse,
I think that we can assume that the private citizen who owns,
cleans, loads and shoots his own personal weapon is a considerably
more serious antagonist than the trooper who has to turn his weapon
back in every time he uses it. This is probably the principle
reason why socialists never cease their attempts to disarm the
private citizen.
"Consumerism is a virulent form of materialism
developed in the United States in which advertising ensures that
demand is created for products for which there is no real
need."
Michael Gardner
Hartmann had the highest air-to-air
score, as anyone who follows aviation knows, but when he was asked
by his Russian captors if he were not the greatest German flier, he
denied it. They asked him if he did not in truth have the highest
kill score. And he said, "Yes, but that does not make me the top
gun. The best is Marseille." And they said, "But, you shot down
twice as many aircraft as Marseille," and he answered, "I shot down
Russians. Marseille shot down Englishmen. In the Luftwaffe we held
that one English pilot was worth three Russian pilots."
This did not endear him to his Russian captors.
But about Marseille, there was a marksman. On one occasion in the
western desert he shot down seven aircraft with less than twenty
rounds of 20mm ammunition.
Marksmanship such as this must be coupled with that of Rudel, and
it is obviously not something a man can be taught. Neither
Marseille nor Rudel could teach anyone to fly and shoot the way
they did. A man can be taught to use his weapons very well, but
genius is in the genes.
We learn that Riflemaster John
Pepper has been awarded a Swiss decoration for his help in
qualifying Swiss citizens on their rifles when they are resident in
Washington. Good show!
In thinking about heroic airmen, my mind
turns to the pilots of the observation aircraft on America's war
ships in World War II. These people flew the OS2U, which
stands for Observation Scout Second Model from Chance-Vought. This
aircraft was both low and slow, and was almost unarmed. It could
carry a small bomb or depth charge if occasions demanded, and the
rearseat man handled a pair of 30 caliber Brownings, but this
certainly did not make it up into a formidable air-to-air vehicle.
But the flying characteristics of the OS2U were only the beginning
of the problem. The lads in those aircraft had to be fired off the
ship whenever we cleared for action, and that was regardless of
weather or time of day. On a full dark night in a spanking gale,
those boys were shot off the quarter deck into the dark, whether
they could perform their observation mission or not, and getting
airborne was only part of the problem. They had to be plucked out
of the ocean while taxiing alongside on their single float. This is
about as hair-raising an operation as I can call to mind, but I
regret to say that it did not arouse any particular adulation
amongst the other members of the ship's crew. In a major war
heroism is almost irrelevant in the mind of the hero. In a long war
with a major power, the question is not whether you are going to
get it, but when. "And he that dies this day is quit for the
next."
I saw those observation pilots in operation quite a lot, and I can
fully understand why one of them sought refuge with his violin in
his cabin when he could. It would take something like violin
virtuosity to get his mind off his truly awful predicament.
Any man who flew an observation plane off of a cruiser or
battleship during World War II does not have to tell his tale,
his job tells it for him. Putting a full cruise in on that duty in
the Aleutians may not be worthy of a Medal of Honor on the face of
it, but I cannot help thinking of it as "above and beyond the call
of duty."
"The government is mainly an expensive organization to
regulate evil doers, and tax those who behave. Government does
little for fairly respectable people, except annoy them."
E.V. Howe, via Bill O'Connor
This from Russ Orchard in Essex, England.
"I hope America is watching and learning from what is
happening here. We were not strong enough nor united enough when
the man came knocking. I must not bore you with our troubles any
longer, so I wish you the best that life can bring and hang on to
your guns."
We learn from our friends in law
enforcement that the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco and Firearms
(BATF), which we frequently refer to as the "BATmen," is now
commonly termed "F Troop," by other members of the federal
service - presumably because of their astonishing predilection
to foul things up. Could be.
That noisy shooting at Laurel Canyon in
North Hollywood brings to mind the punchline from one of daughter
Lindy's recent poems: "Ain't many troubles that a man can't fix,
with seven-hundred dollars and a 30-06." Two shots from a 30-06
should have been enough to terminate that confrontation, and, of
course, the $700 might serve to buy an extra rifle for the squad
car.
Please Note. These "Commentaries" are for personal
use only. Not for publication.