Sunday, 16 February 2014
Tuesday, 11 February 2014
GUNS
NOTE: PISTOL HANGING ON BEDHEAD. READY FOR ACTION.LORNESLEIGH. LATE 1960'S. |
I want to say upfront. I’m not a gun enthusiast myself
but I can see a place for a firearm. In the Australian bush especially there’s
definitely a need to carry a firearm whether it be a pistol or rifle.
You never
know when you’ll have to put down livestock that are in pain or unable to walk.
There may be the need to shoot dingoes who attack and kill the cattle. Wild
cattle known as shrubbers will also be shot as they can’t be mustered and will
definitely kill a human if approached.
It may sound cruel and unnecessary to some, but cattle are
your livelihood and they have to be protected. A firearm will be carried these
days in four wheel drive ( RV) but in the old days, they were carried on a
horse. I remember my dad, carrying a pump action Remington rifle in the car
which he called the dingo gun. When riding a horse, my father carried a pistol
and my grandfather Bell, had a lever action Winchester in a holster attached to
his saddle.
Yes, I almost forgot, a gun may even save your life in
the bush. Apart from rampaging shrubbers coming out of the bush at you, there
are snakes and just before I was born in the late fifties, the rivers on our
cattle stations were full of crocodiles. My dad shot the last one when I was a
baby. Apparently. But that’s another blog. I have to add,native animals such as kangaroos
were not considered as animals to shoot by my family.
Horses, cattle and the land are the building blocks of my
family’s dna but my father and his brother were the gun nuts for want of a
better term. Between them their gun collection probably could have outfitted a large
partisan group who wanted to take on the Nazis. Their collection comprised many
types of firearms, ranging from conventional rifles, shotguns and pistols to a
World War One machine gun that had once been mounted on an aircraft. I remember
that was stored under a bed. As you do.
Yes, there was the Martini Henry that had been used by
the English in the Zulu War. It took bullets made of wrapped brass with a lead
bullet and when fired, enveloped the area in a white cloud. You had to look under the cloud to see if you
had hit the target. There were many military rifles from several countries; British, American, Italian, Japanese and German. It’s all worth another blog.
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