Starting A Firearm Collection
What to do with all the guns I’ve accumulated
It is amazing what we accumulate! I’m talking about all of the inexpensive firearms I have picked up since I was 7 years old. I looked in my safe one day a few years ago and thought, boy, I have a lot of guns!!
Collecting firearms as a legacy
Then I started to notice not one of them was a “collector” or a “safe queen”. I decided then I would start to sell off the many firearms I had owned over the years and replace them with works of art. Yes, I would consign 4 or 5 of them just to pay for 1 but over the past couple of years, my firearm quantity has extremely dwindled, and in their place are a few, beautiful, works of art.
I simply wanted my grandkids to open that safe door one day and think they were in gun collector heaven! If you have a similar interest, get with me or our staff and I can share how I made the change and what I pursued. We can even help with Federal Firearms License transfers.
Who Needs Gun Classes?
I’ve had plenty of experience shooting firearms
I have been shooting firearms since I was 4 ½ years old. Dad had a 22 Browning semi auto rifle and would take us to the country where no tin can, rabbit, or squirrel was safe. And yes, we did clean and eat the rabbits and squirrels. Not saying I like them much in my older age, they seemed to taste better as a kid.
Fast forward 50 years and I have always believed I was pretty good at handguns, rifles, and shotguns. I had a couple of well trained and experienced employees take me into bay 3 of our indoor shooting range to evaluate my skills and to do a little coaching. Obviously, I felt I didn’t need it, like I said, I have been shooting for 50 years now.
Was I ready for a high-pressure scenario?
Both employees had retired from an active military career and were extensively trained in the use of firearms. Well, they dummy loaded my magazines, “raised” their voices at me, and put me through a shooting sequence I had only seen in the Matrix. I failed miserably. I lost my fine motor skills looking like a bumbling idiot, dropping my mags on the floor, couldn’t clear a jam (they created), etc. Wow, 50 years of practice and that was my debut.
Regroup and Re-evaluate
The next day, instead of selling my guns and picking up cross stitch needle work, I realized I have been carrying the wrong firearm for a person used to shooting at stationary targets not firing back. I needed a firearm comfortable to conceal carry (my choice no matter what the laws say I can do; I don’t really like open carry) so I bought a Smith &Wesson 351C, which is a 7 shot 22 mag revolver with no hammer. After a few weeks of practice, I had the guys run me through their stress test again. Guess what? Perfection!! No jams!! No misfires!! No mags to drop!! And I shot a perfect score!
Chose a concealed carry gun that’s right for you
Now many of you may not like this because it paints your semi auto in bad light. The truth is, a semi auto handgun, larger caliber, is by far the first choice, hands down. Thing is, I don’t have the time to commit at this stage in life to be proficient under duress with a semi auto, so I found a firearm that would work for me.
If I was younger, I would have stuck with my semi auto handguns and simply trained with instructors more often. Will I sell my semi auto’s? No way, I enjoy shooting them and do so often, but at a stationary target, not shooting back at me, and in a peaceful, harmonious environment (bay 3 on a Tuesday morning) ….