That polish army video clip.......Oh well i suppose the world can put that down to another "friendly fire incident".
How many of these "friendly fire incidents" within the New Zealand military and New Zealand police don't come out via the media to the NZ public?
It takes 43 muscle's to frown and 17 to smile, but only 3 for proper trigger pull.
What more do we need? If we are above ground and breathing the rest is up to us!
Rule 1: Treat every firearm as loaded
Rule 2: Always point firearms in a safe direction
Rule 3: Load a firearm only when ready to fire
Rule 4: Identify your target beyond all doubt
Rule 5: Check your firing zone
Rule 6: Store firearms and ammunition safely
Rule 7: Avoid alcohol and drugs when handling firearms
@johnd that is shithouse alright
Only used that walking around shooting when I am hanging onto the rifle.
This is true but a blank point blank in the back of your swede still not a good day.
Just back from a few days in the bush with a few other guys, 2 x Model 7's, 1 Montana, 2 T3's, 1 howa. some observations:
1. The shitty thing about Tikka is the need to put the safety to fire to extract a round.
2. Montana - 3 position wing safety seems really useful and safe - way better than Tikka.
3. when hunting in pairs only the front person would chamber a round once in the zone, and most were using combination of half bolt/safety.
4. Only 2 guys would carefully check there was no round in their chamber, others trusted their memory etc. I'm one of the 2 as I've seen it where someone chambers a round but does not close the bolt - thereby the round is not extracted when pulling bolt back.... I'm thinking to take a chamber flag for each person in next time....
5. Guys in 50's and older - all had eyesight not as good as it once was - but all realised that and were taking measures to help with target ID, mainly binos, also glasses, getting eyes lasered etc. All seemed to realise that despite decades of experience - mis-identification COULD happen to them and were very wary of it - which is great and the right attitude.
6. Firearm safety was discussed every day - also very cool. No-one was too cool to talk about different ideas and own up to their errors.
I guess thats what I look for - people realising that it could happen to them if they are not careful, I would not hunt with anyone who was adamant that they could never make a mistake. The upside is that everyone was very very conscious of the issues.
All resolved by the simple rule of "Do not point a firearm, loaded or otherwise, at something you do not intend to destroy."
See a lot of weekend warriors who claim to be "professional deer managers" running round with a Harris bipod and heavy moderator stuck on the end of their rifle, combined with a sling carried across the shoulder with muzzle up, and the rifle makes a slow but steady progression rearward, usually towards the head of the poor sod who is paying the person in question over £100 an outing on the promise of being allowed to shoot a deer. Usually with a live round in the chamber...
This is why I don't pay for stalking, and why I prefer going it alone!
Does not matter how many positions your rifle has for being 'safe' ( I prefer 2, either 'On' or 'Not quite On', like a light switch), good firearms manners and handling needs to be ingrained and no special technique like half bolt/ half cock/ decocked bolt is going to save you from a fuckup. Just remove the possibility for the fuckup in the first place!
Totally agree with you, we do all make mistakes with gun handling and should expect to make mistakes and have layers of safety measures that prevent an accident. Your No.4 may be the cause of more accidents than anything else. I like to do a physical chamber check with the little finger ( learnt this in NZDF TF) and not trust visual checks
May have already said it but Mrs Finnwolf and I check each other’s rifle to confirm they are indeed ’empty’ at the end of a hunt.
And I ask her to confirm her safety is on after considering a shot/having a shot. (Semi-auto)
‘Many of my bullets have died in vain’
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