WGB Wrote:It's not a matter of telling you how to care for your guns, it's a saftey issue for every one at a match. No matter how many people are supposed to watch you at the unloading table.
When the handguns are unloaded, they go right back into the holsters. If I need to handle them I go to a "safety area" -- like when a bolt spring broke and I had to disassemble one of the handguns to replace it.
When the long guns are unloaded, I carry them back to my cart with the muzzles pointed straight up, when the actions are closed and the covers are put on them, the muzzles are
still pointed straight up. And when they are placed in the cart, the muzzles are pointed straight up. The covers, which are intricately beaded in Arapaho designs, are made of leather and cover the actions and triggers.
Quote:At mostclubs they would tell you that if you don't want to follow the safety guidlines that are set for everybody that you should find another club to shoot at. But some local clubs that are non-S.A.S.S. affiliated might let you get away with something like that. Maybe you shoot Western 3 Gun or NCOWS or something. But at any SASS match above a local level you would / should be TOLD to leave if you couldn't follow the safety giudelines.
The club I shoot at is West End Gun Club, the second oldest SASS-affiliated club in the country. The oldest being Coto De Caza which was originally in Orange County, but now shoots at Raahague's in Norco.
Quote:No one says you can not cover your guns with your actions open.
The covers I made were made before that rule was created, and the covers will not fit with the actions open. And I'll be damned if I'm going to make new covers. You have no idea how much time is involved in doing all that intricate beading.
Quote:And lots of people have originals that are valuable, but nothing is as valuable as going home safely.
Except for
closing the actions when covering my guns and placing them in my cart, no one . . .
NO ONE, has ever had the slightest complaint about how I handle my guns. When I get ready to go to the loading table for the next stage, the covers come off and the actions are opened. And at all times, the muzzles are pointed straight up.
Funny thing, when you look into the action of a lever gun or slide action shotgun, (or lever action shotgun) and can see that there is no cartridge or shell in the magazine, in the action, or in the chamber, you can sorta, kinda, be pretty confident that the gun is unloaded.
Same thing when you rotate the cylinder of a six gun past all the chambers twice and see that there are no cartridges or spent brass in any of those chambers.
As I said, safety is one thing, paranoia is another.
Ken V.