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nelsonted1
08-17-2006, 01:02 AM
Why I Don't Shoot Blackpowder!

Understand that from the time I could put together a rational thought, I've been fascinated by guns. My mother used to prop me in front of the little round picture box as a baby so I could watch men on horseback shooting at each other with guns...

The first "real" shooter I owned was a Mattel Fanner 50... it shot Mattel Shootin' Shells and used Greenie Stick 'Em caps. I was greased-lightning fast and Grim Reaper deadly with it... for my punishment of erroneous deeds my
> mom would take the gun away for a few days... dad, on the other hand, used the gunbelt for a more heartily applied punishment to the South end of this Northbound cowpoke. It seems like that gunbelt got as much [applied] use as that Fanner 50.

When I was twelve I was shipped off for the summer to church camp, where I was introduced to the joys of the .22 Long Rifle cartridge. There were six shooters in my squad and we could choose from the six semi-auto and two
bolt action rifles available. While the other kids were busy shooting hundreds of rounds of ammo downrange as quickly as they could, I
carefully aimed my bolt action in the general direction of the targets... while actually shooting birds over by the pond like Gary Cooper taught George Tobias to shoot turkeys in Sgt. York- "sorta from back to front...", and imagining each of those evil birds was wearing a German helmet. I still say the counselors
should have told us on Orientation Day. I mean, who even knew there WERE swans, huh? They looked like big ducks wearing holdup masks, if you really want to know the truth. Dad didn't see it that way, though... especially since he had to pay for the swans- and they didn't refund the seven weeks' unused camp
tuition when they expelled me, either. Did I mention what dad used my Fanner 50 gunbelt for?

After my exposure to the real thing at camp- albeit for only a brief period- I wasn't too interested in playing with the Daisy BB guns my friends had. I was above owning one of those childish things... but not above borrowing one to play with every once in awhile. And Ritchie? Sorry about the eye,
buddy. But at least it kept you out of the army...

I finally turned eighteen and could [legally] own my own black powder revolver, but I was just a bit short in the savings department. Not being the patient sort, I chose the most expedient means to get the money. As I
look back now, I suppose I am sorry those junior high kids couldn't turn in their
paper route money that week...

I'd been looking at a pretty, brass-framed BP revolver in the case at Shattuck's Hardware for a couple of months, and boy! Was I ever proud the day I went in and plunked down the money for it! Eleven dollars in one dollar
bills... and eighteen dollars in quarter and dimes. Old Man Shattuck was a great old guy, whose eyesight, thankfully, had gotten really bad over the years... he didn't recognize me as he sold me the .36 caliber pistol... he even threw in a box of pure lead balls with the pistol and percussion caps when I bought the pound of black powder.

I told Mr. Shattuck that I was anxious to shoot it and was heading straight for the dump, and asked him to show me how to load the gun. "It's pretty simple," I recall his telling me. "You measure your powder into the
cylinder chamber, put a bullet over it, ram it down in with the hinged thing under the barrel, put your cap over a nipple, and you're set to shoot." I thanked him for his help and headed for the door.

"One last thing!" he called to me as I was running out the door, "Don't forget to put grease over your balls! Crisco works fine!" I didn't understand the need for the last part, but I stopped at Tony's Grocery and bought a
little blue can of Crisco grease. And now... to the dump! Where bottles and cans, rats and crows were just waiting for this ol' cowboy to do 'em in!

I replayed Mr. Shattuck's instructions in my head as I laid out all my gear on the smothed-out, brown paper bag at my feet. The first thing I realized was that I didn't have anything to measure the powder with... UNTIL I
remembered my knife! I carried one of those folding stag handled camper's knives- you know, the ones with a fork on one side and a spoon on the other? The spoon was perfect for what I needed! Very carefully (thank heaven there wasn't any wind blowing) I poured a spoonful of powder from the can into the spoon,
then tipped the spoon up and tapped the powder into the cylinder. Sure, I spilled a bunch over because the spoon held so much more, but what the heck! Powder was cheap, back then... and I had plenty to spare...

Being a methodical kind of kid, I filled all six chambers with the powder, managing to spill as much around my feet, I suppose, as I was getting into the cylinder. I can laugh now, but when I bent over to get the bullets all the powder fell out of the cylinders onto my boots... so I had to fill them all over again! I managed to get all the chambers filled with powder and then stuck a bullet into the first cylinder... I had to really tap it in with my knife to get it started... then shoved it in as far as it would go with the rammer thing. I lost a little powder in the process, but eventually I had all six chambers loaded and ready to go. Then I put percussion caps over the things sticking out the ends of the cylinders...
Oops! I forgot a couple of things!
Now, I'll admit my ignorance about a lot of things... but why I was supposed to smear Crisco on my balls is still a mystery to me. But I figured Old Man Shattuck knew what he was about, so I looked around to make sure I was alone, then dropped my pants to my knees, opened the can of Crisco and began to smear it over Lefty and Righty. Standing there in the hot summer sun, slowly massaging soft, silky grease into my scrotum... gee WHIZ! I guess the old man knew what he was talking about after all ! Welcome to the joys of shooting!

I had to force myself out of my reverie...

One last thing and then I'd be ready to shoot... I took my baseball cap off and stuffed it inside my shirt over my left nipple. Okay... I guessed I was ready (except, of course, that in my haste I'd forgotten to pull up my pants...)

Well sir, I crooked my left am out in front of my face, rested the trigger guard of the pistol in my right hand on it, drew a tight bead on an old Four Roses bottle, and squeezed the trigger. I remember a bright flash, a
burning sensation on my arm and face, then something hit me square in the forehead
and the lights went out.

It must have been quite sometime later when I awoke. I was laid out across the back seat of Sheriff Miller's car (I knew this from the plexi-glass partition and a previous ride when I'd been sixteen), the rider's side door was open and my feet and lower legs were hanging out. As I raised my head to look for the source of the voices I heard I felt like someone had hit me in the head with a sledgehammer. I could see two men in the dim, evening light, just outside the door and within my range of vision. At least, I thought they were two men... I could hear two speaking but they were sorta spinning around and they looked like six. From the voices I knew they were Sheriff Miller and my Dad... "... busy on another call so the volunteer fire department was the first out here," I heard the Sheriff explaining to my dad. "Mabel Krutchner called it in... said she saw smoke comin' from the dump and had heard an awful
explosion over this way."

"Near as I can tell from what the firemen say, when they got here they found your boy lying over there. At first they thought he was dead. The dump was on fire all around him, his left arm and face were all black, his boots
were scorched pretty badly, he had a HUGE knot on his forehead where somebody'd cold-cocked him... And... well, we think the boy's been... well, taken advantage of."

"What do you mean 'Taken advantage of?'" I heard my dad ask.
"Well, Al, it's like this," the Sheriff said. "The first men to get to your boy said he was unconscious; they found part of a gun by his body; his pants were down around his ankles, his crotch was smeared with KY Jelly
and he was sportin' a big boner..."

Then I heard Mr. Shattuck's voice. "I always knew there was something wrong with that boy...This will probably keep him out of the army..."

And THAT'S why I don't shoot black powder...

Frank46
08-17-2006, 02:52 AM
Thats gotta be the funniest tale that I have heard in a loooong time!!!!. Took some time to stop laughing so's I could write this. Thanks for sharing this with us. Frank

Gun-adian
08-17-2006, 04:03 AM
Damn, that's funny!!!!

I'm laughing so much, I got tears running down my face.

Thanks a bunch for the giggle.

Mike

Bigscot
08-17-2006, 09:43 AM
That was great. I just bust out laughing. So you say that crisco felt pretty good?

Bigscot

Old Ironsights
08-17-2006, 12:07 PM
That is so wonderfully wrong in so many ways...

And believe it or not there are black-powder oriented boards that find it too offensive to post.

Go figure.

Maven
08-17-2006, 03:12 PM
Bigscot, But not nearly as good as Bag's Balm!

johniv
08-17-2006, 03:25 PM
That is so wonderfully wrong in so many ways...

And believe it or not there are black-powder oriented boards that find it too offensive to post.

Go figure.
Thats funny. I dont care who ya are.

Bodydoc447
08-17-2006, 05:11 PM
BWAAAAAAAAAAAAAHAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAA!!!!

Now I have to scrape the boogers and coffee off of my computer monitor.


Good One!!


Doc

Bigjohn
08-17-2006, 07:45 PM
I'm amazed that he made it to adulthood and has he fathered any children? :confused:

I think I'll check if he is on the shooting line next to me next time I go to the range.:bigsmyl2:

John.

1Shirt
08-17-2006, 08:20 PM
Probably a good thing it wasn't a musket----think how many spoonfills that would have taken. Good laugh! Great story, one to tell around a campfire. Probably did make it ok in the Army. Sounds like a couple of Majors that I ran into.
1Shirt!

13Echo
08-17-2006, 08:52 PM
Hey! I resemble that remark.

Jerry Liles
Maj MC

bruce drake
08-17-2006, 09:22 PM
THe Major part or the other.....:)

Bruce Drake
CPT, OD

dragonrider
08-17-2006, 10:23 PM
Was chuckeling at the beginning and roflmao by the end. Great story,

9.3X62AL
08-18-2006, 12:08 AM
Utterly priceless......thank you!

Frank46
08-18-2006, 04:20 AM
How about "Boudreau's Butt Paste", they sell it here in loosiana for baby's bottoms. Frank

1Shirt
08-18-2006, 09:25 AM
13Echo, Guess you could say he suffered a Major Hurtin!
1Shirt!

13Echo
08-18-2006, 10:20 AM
Top, that story nearly made me crack a rib laughing. Where did you get it and did the author write any more? I sent it to a friend and now I see it has appeared on the Shiloh site.

Jerry Liles

nelsonted1
08-18-2006, 06:56 PM
I got a private message from Stan Dahl saying he had found the author of the "Why I Don't Shoot Blackpowder" on another website. I got it from the Accurate Reloading site that had no attribution. I also had to edit it quite a bit to get under the 850 word restriction on this site so I am guilty of that too. Mark Twain got in a twister with his Huck Finn publishers over Huck Finn's grammer in the book. Twain was so insistant he told them to leave it alone or he pulls the book. Luckily he held firm. Same with Will Rogers.

Here is a thread containing the entire article and here is the statement by the author:

"The text ["Why I Don't Shoot Black Powder"] posted herein was originally posted on the Single Action Shooting Society website forum, The Wire, on 30 July-- the day on which I wrote it.

http://sassnet.com/forums/index.php?showtopic=43707&hl=why+i+don't+shoot+black+powder

As I am a copyrighted author, I would appreciate the proper recognition when being quoted.

Thanks... and thanks to you folks who smiled at it! Wink

Boston John Doucette

Here is the post: http://www.scottmanning.com/forum/viewtopic.php?t=22&highlight=shoot+blackpowder


When StanDahl pointed this out to me I told him this is exactly why I don't post my best photos on the web. The minute they are posted I have lost all control.

TED Nelson