Additionally, in Kali you also need a "Firearms Safety Certificate" ($25 bucks), or a current hunting license, to purchase guns. Mine "expired" in June so I had to get a new one (they're good for 5 years-some how Kali firearm safety changes in 5 years), but I picked up a Brazilian 1911, a Para, a .41 mag Henry, and a Russian SKS that need transferred PAX
The fires are mostly under control. but the air is bad.
Good to hear the fires are under control.
You mention 41 mag.
I created a monster several years ago. A friend of one of my boys wanted to shoot with us. He was playing some video game about WWII and one of my kids told him the I had all the stuff he was fooling around with in the game, so he got really excited. I told him that I'd be happy to take him shooting, but I'd need an OK from his parents.
His dad wanted to meet me before he'd say yes. That went pretty well. He asked if he could go along as he had "a couple of guns" that he didn't shoot much.
Turns out that he had a Ruger Blackhawk in 41 mag that he's inherited from his dad. He loved it, but had a really hard time finding ammo locally and wasn't going to order any ammo over the internet, even if he knew how to do that.
He showed up with 30 rounds for the pistol. It was in great shape, and he knew how to shoot it.
As we wrapped up the day, I asked him about reloading for the 41. He had never reloaded anything. He was very curious, but also very hesitant.
We made plans for the next day for him to come over and I'd load some 45 Colt and show him how easy it is to do.
A week later, he wanted to pull the handle himself, so I set up a single stage and walked him through the process for a couple hundred rounds.
By this time, he was wanting to set up for himself. He came by the house and asked me if I thought he could get into loading on a budget. Those of us with kids know how tight money can be at times. We went into the room where I had all my gear and rummaged though my extra stuff. I found him a powder measure, an old balance scale, a hand primer, and a Lee C frame press.
He needed dies, a shell holder, and components. Off we went to Cabelas in search of the needed items.
By the end of the day, we had sourced everything and he'd cleared a spot on his work bench to bolt everything down.
The next Saturday we spent setting him up. I brought a couple of reloading manuals with me and we picked a couple of recipes for him and made about 20 of each for testing. We drove out to our shooting spot and he was smiling from ear to ear as we drove back to his place.
Like most, he had no idea how easy is is to load, and wanted to jump in with both feet.
He had saved every piece of brass he'd ever fired and he was raring to go, so he loaded every bit he could. He only had maybe a hundred pieces of brass plus maybe a half a box of store bought ammo, but he was a really happy camper because he could now shoot his dad's gun as much as he wanted.
Two weeks later he was dropping his son off at me place and asked me to come out to his truck to look at something. He'd found an old wooden ammo crate somewhere and had modified it to be a portable loading station he could take to the range with him. I thought it was pretty clever I eventually found him another couple hundred empty cases from another local shooter that had no intention of ever using it. This guy thought I was some combination of Santa Clause and a saint for helping him out. I thought I was lucky to get rid of some stuff I wasn't gonna use, so I guess it worked out for both of us.
Sorry for the hijack.