Lovely. Well, the next time I get asked why I carry.....Jorge Albarenga, of 8569 Southlawn Court, was arrested on Wednesday, March 24 in Harrisonburg, VA.
I was talking to a maker from Dayton at the gunshow Saturday. We discussed how the area had changed over the years. I suppose I should have seen it coming.Lovely. Well, the next time I get asked why I carry.....Jorge Albarenga, of 8569 Southlawn Court, was arrested on Wednesday, March 24 in Harrisonburg, VA.
Good answer.Lovely. Well, the next time I get asked why I carry.....Jorge Albarenga, of 8569 Southlawn Court, was arrested on Wednesday, March 24 in Harrisonburg, VA.
A maker in Dayton, you say? Maker of what?AbNo wrote:I was talking to a maker from Dayton at the gunshow Saturday. We discussed how the area had changed over the years. I suppose I should have seen it coming.Lovely. Well, the next time I get asked why I carry.....Jorge Albarenga, of 8569 Southlawn Court, was arrested on Wednesday, March 24 in Harrisonburg, VA.
I blame JMU.Country people have a tendency to be way too anxious to welcome newcomers. That's what we get!
Long rifles although he specialized in silver and tin smithing I think. That was the Southern Longrifle show. If you weren't a rifle maker, you weren't there.peter nap wrote:A maker in Dayton, you say? Maker of what?AbNo wrote:I was talking to a maker from Dayton at the gunshow Saturday. We discussed how the area had changed over the years. I suppose I should have seen it coming.Lovely. Well, the next time I get asked why I carry.....Jorge Albarenga, of 8569 Southlawn Court, was arrested on Wednesday, March 24 in Harrisonburg, VA.
I drive through there at least three times a week, and live just far enough away to avoid the poultry plant smell.
Depending on what it is they make, you might want to PM me his information.
I blame JMU.Country people have a tendency to be way too anxious to welcome newcomers. That's what we get!
Fine then, I'll just take my ball and stay home.Long rifles although he specialized in silver and tin smithing I think. That was the Southern Longrifle show. If you weren't a rifle maker, you weren't there.
A few friends of mine started it a couple of years ago. It gets better each year.peter nap wrote:Fine then, I'll just take my ball and stay home.Long rifles although he specialized in silver and tin smithing I think. That was the Southern Longrifle show. If you weren't a rifle maker, you weren't there.
Kidding. Actually, I looked it up, and it was in Williamsburg, anyway. I don't much care to drive that far.
That's the place.You mean the Rockingham CoOp over on Grace? It's tax season, I've been showing my face around there again. It's where I spend my tax return.
And actually, I have a friend that is into historical dog-locks. If that's anything like what you and your friends work with, I might have to let her know.
In 1993, our family started out on a week's vacation to Panama City Beach in the panhandle of Florida. We spent all of about nine hours there then canceled our resevations because none of us cared for the place. So sometime after 10:00pm, wen headed out on our way to South Carolina and more happy times. After so much driving, we stopped at a rest stop off of route 10 near Tallahassee to take a much needed nap. We pulled around back and all of us went to sleep in the car. I had my Taurus PT92C in my lap just in case. About an hour later, we woke up and continued our journey.When you play the scene in your head of how one day you would have to defend yourself, I never really see myself having to shoot 15 yearolds. I guess if they are throwing their lives away so be it.
Also, I was sent this link: http://www.loyalistarms.freeservers.com/doglokpistl.htmlThat's the place.
I'm not sure what a Dog Lock is but I expect it's close. I build a few flint locks but mostly caplocks. Once in a while I'll build a punt gun or swivel gun.
I'm finishing a New England style half stock for my Grandson now.