Eye injuries from flintlock?

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Some people should stay home and hide under the bed, a meteorite may fall on you and the rest of us will have to support you the rest of your life.

The sky is falling, the sky is falling, it hit me on the head...
 
Agreed, a fine distinction but if you agree to abide by the range rules why would you never go back if they are enforced?
If that's the meaning that came across then I didn't make myself clear. Rules need to be enforced with a certain amount of common sense, judgment and flexibility if warranted. A range with a culture of absolute to-the-letter rules enforcement with never any leeway for occasional situations is a culture I wouldn't fit in very well.
 
The closest I have come to an "injury" firing my Charleville replica is getting a few hot grains of powder on my shooting hand. And I believe I did overfill the pan just a bit...

I'm sure we have all had that happen? Looking at my hand right after, no injury I could see. But I DID feel it for a moment.
 
I run with scissors and everything. I am a fully formed and mature adult. If you believe someone is doing something that could cause danger to someone else I don't have a problem with it. If you think you are going to pretend to be another adult's parent, with your limited experience, limited education, and hysterical fears, you have another thing coming and my retort would certainly earn me a vacation from MLF.

I get it when an RSO has to do it as part of their job (comes with the territory). It's the self-appointed kind, who are usually the least experienced and most ignorant who frost me. You know who you are.

I wear glasses and typically wear eye-pro. I do not wear it when shooting a scoped rifle unless I'm made to, and then I look over the top.
 
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