Range Report

Well, I ended up going back to the range a day earlier than planned; this morning. My wife wants to go to the AppleJack Festival in Nebraska City tomorrow. Today after lunch we went to one of the Omaha malls. She bought a bunch of clothes. I bought some stuff for my shotgun, at Dick’s Sporting Goods: a 25 capacity plastic shotshell case – more convenient than digging 5 shells at a time out of the cardboard boxes they come in; a sort of wallet-style shotshell belt pouch that holds 10 shells; and a 12″ by 36″ cleaning mat. I also bought an nice gun bag for my shotgun at Wal-Mart before hitting the range. Shotgun pictures to come.

Before trying out my shotgun for the first time, I fired another 4 mags (48 rounds) through m PT111 again. No problems. My aim is all right. I won’t be winning any competitions anytime soon, but I can hit the body of a man-sized and shaped target.

Shooting the shotgun was fun. I’m glad I got a 20 gauge. It has more than enough recoil: not too much for me to handle or so much that it is no fun to shoot or throws off my aim, but enough to make me a little sore. A 12 gauge would probably be impossible for my wife to manage. As it is, she’ll probably have some trouble with the 20. I’ll have to get her to practice at least a little. I shot 15 shells of Federal Premium Vital Shok #3 buckshot and 10 shells of Remington Express #3 with the 18.5″ barrel. The Federal ammo had a noticeably more pronounced kick. It’s a good deal more expensive too. I seem to have a knack for hitting the upper-left torso of the target every time (from the sternum to the left side and shoulder, and from the upper stomach to the collarbone – good heart and left-lung shots). I’ll try the field barrel and slug barrel later. I think I’ll look for some slugs that can be fired through a smooth bore as well; #3 buckshot will be my primary home defense load but I don’t think it would hurt to have a few slugs on hand for that security barrel as well – perhaps one or two on the stock cuff.

Geoffrey is an Aristotelian-Libertarian political philosopher, writer, editor, and web designer. He is the founder of the Libertarian Fiction Authors Association. His academic work has appeared in Libertarian Papers, the Journal of Libertarian Studies, the Journal of Value Inquiry, and Transformers and Philosophy. He lives in Greenville, NC.