This is Not Japan. Get Outside, Now.


Bought a new rifle yesterday. Kind of a kick-around .22, synthetic/stainless, virtually indestructible, just right for shooting at trash on my walks.
Took it down last evening, for cleaning and lubrication. Of course I couldn't reassemble it.
As I lie in bed this morning, much too long, I worked it out. Then put it back together. And, again, it didn't work.
Took it apart, consulted the parts list and diagram, and tried again.
Worked fine. What would take a normal person about twenty minutes only took me a half-day.
This model has had a long, successful run. I traded a quality high-powered rifle for one in the mid-60's, about 45 years ago. Traded the Remington because there was absolutely no use for it in Indiana. Like owning a Ferrari. You never get to wring it out.
My only complaint then was the 10- shot rotary magazine was an asspain to load. Especially when it was cold.
This wouldn't be a problem, except a semiauto can empty a magazine in less than a second.
So I bought four additional magazines. I could load a box of cartridges before I left the relative comfort of my little house on the edge of the prairie (just for you, Britt).
I took it out this afternoon. It's odd. My Abbe is scared by everything, from loud noise to her own shadow. She usually goes to the closet, or the bathtub, during thunderstorms. Nearby shooting will send her to the car, or to the nearest barn. And she even tries to get in any house she can find.
To my surprise, my shooting doesn't faze her.
I put the windows almost down and left the dogs in the truck after our walk, then went back to try the rifle. I heard my collie yelping, which meant one of two things: we had company, or Abbe was out of the truck.
She came over the hill while I was shooting, and stayed, and led me back, albeit with plenty of gap.
On the other hand, my collie is nonplussed by anything. Okay, that's not true. He goes apeshit at the sight of cats and squirrels. An oddity: he has the farthest sight of any of my dogs, and it's phenomenal compared with my collies. It is scary.
He doesn't seem bothered by shooting, yet, when I shoot, he is disturbed for days after.
Dogs. Too smart for us.
There is a theory we didn't really domesticate the dog. That the dog trained us to feed him, shelter him, love him.
Think you're smarter than your dog? He's standing in front of you, barking. What's he saying? You're so smart, you tell me.
So that's why I put the dogs in the truck after our walk, and went back to shoot my new rifle.
I'm there to check if the rifle functions correctly. Five magazines, ten rounds each, a 50-count box of .22 ammo.
I can't find the "round-seated-in-chamber" indicator, if there is one. And the cocking handle doesn't lock open after the last live round is ejected. So I missed count, and ejected a live round.
49 rounds fired. The rifle functioned effortlessly for the first 48. The 49th stovepiped. It didn't clear the ejector, and stuck out straight away, looking like Lincoln's hat.
Shit.
How can one assess this? 48 without a malfunction, yet the last one...?
Shit.
Saw a nuthatch today, one of my favorite (know you're tired of this adjective) birds. The posturing and movement is fascinating, and they are a wonderful blue-gray.
And I'm a certifiable nuthatch myself.
My guess is a white-breasted nuthatch, a guess because I am too dull to put quality glass on my leaving-home checklist. An unscrupulous waste of an expensive tool. Too, while I presume to post about birds, my knowledge is growing, but surely limited. You are welcome to help.
And birds were singing everywhere, singing and calling, celebrating our warmest day of the year.
Great time to get out. The birds aren't just singing for birds, or me. They're singing for you, too.






