I have watched her trying to find things in her purse. Better hope you don't want that revolver in a hurry.Have your woman carry it in her purse that way it is ready when you need it but it is not a burden to you. Lol.
I have watched her trying to find things in her purse. Better hope you don't want that revolver in a hurry.Have your woman carry it in her purse that way it is ready when you need it but it is not a burden to you. Lol.
If not that exact gun pretty darn close. It wasn't any cap and ball.I believe that when Hickock was killed he was carrying a top break S&W .32
it would be scary looking down that barrel when you pull up to deposit the MAIL!!!
who was he? never heard of him? he is sure kitted out! I like the beaver top hat, never seen a cowboy with one.Rip Ford is not impressed with most of y'all.
View attachment 169660
how was it carried on the belt? with a belt hook.? it is a real beauty!!The Paterson models preceded the Navy by two decades. I'm sure it wasn't the first handgun to be carried on the belt. This .54 is a dainty 28oz.
The wide gun belts did not arrive until after cartridges. Before that, they were mostly around 2".
that is why they wore / used muff's. with DERINGERS in them. jmho.I have watched her trying to find things in her purse. Better hope you don't want that revolver in a hurry.
Legendary Texas Ranger. He fought in the Mexican War, Texas Rangers, and then in the Civil War.who was he? never heard of him? he is sure kitted out! I like the beaver top hat, never seen a cowboy with one.
Though not C&B, I would have my wife, now ex, carry my small automatic, a 9x17 Makarov, in her purse as at this time there was no CCW in the state and city in which we lived and like most large cities, San Antonio was and still is, overrun with crime and would be criminals. And YES, she could find anything instantly in her purse, she was that organized.I have watched her trying to find things in her purse. Better hope you don't want that revolver in a hurry.
Very funny, I pack because I am expected to as owner of my custom gun shop! Thanks for the laugh.Don't get too full of yourself for packing heat in public. Here in New England we are not afraid to go to the grocery store without suiting up like a dumpster dumpling wall mart tactical commando wannabee.... when I need to carry no one ever knows.... walk softly, be professional, be polite and have a plan that no one needs to know about...
The original poster said, when carrying, be polite, be professional, have a plan. All good advice. Texas has Constitutional Carry; you can carry either open or concealed. I have no problems with those the wish to advertise that they are armed. Me, I want it to be a total surprise when I have to pull my weapon on some gremlin. I always have a plan, but I think that it was Mile Tyson that said, 'Everybody has a plan until you get smacked in the mouth.'Very funny, I pack because I am expected to as owner of my custom gun shop! Thanks for the laugh.
There usually isn't much need to carry while at home either, but I do. even as peaceful and relatively low crime as where I live in Texas, there are still home-break-ins. Carry my NAA .22 in my pocket my 1911 & .44C&B are easily accessible. Paranoid? NAH! Just cautious.Dark, I am always polite, as we tend to be in small Prescott, And I carry concealed when not in cowboy garb,
when I wear my SASS rig. Usually I have a Commander in an IWB. I am not a "tactical Tommy" churl.
Actually there is not much need to carry in Prescott at all, as we have almost zero crime. Because most people are packing, men and women. I just do because I am a California refugee, AZ resident for 11 years.
Keep smiling'!
Sounds like a wise course of action.Robert Heinlein said an armed society is a polite society. Manners are good when one may have to back up his acts with his life. Worked in feudal Japan. Not so much so in the inner cities of America.
That said, the first element of my plan is to avoid places and times where and when aggravation, grief and trouble are common.
Read a lot of Heinlein over the years. Which book was this in? Plus saw basically the same saying in The Probability Broach and The Weapon Shops of Isher. Been many years, can't remember the authors of either.Sounds like a wise course of action.
Enter your email address to join: