on a lighter note...

One Christmas about 60 years ago, Santa brought me a Johnny Reb cannon. It was a Civil-Era looking cannon that came with 6 hard plastic cannon balls that you would place in the muzzle end of the barrel and use your ramrod to push the ball down the barrel on a spring and would cock the trigger. You then would pull the cord to fire this beast and the ball would come blazing out of the barrel and if it hit you, it would sting and leave a welt on your skin. My brother "fired" this cannon at me and the ball hit me so heard on the hear that I saw stars and had to put ice on the huge bump that it left on the side of my head.
My parents asked me if I was OK? I said yes and the war in our hallway resumed! I learned to duck pretty fast after that bonk! Those times were the fun times. Natural selection at its finest!!
I remember those cannons; had one. Could easily hit something (someone) at 30 feet with a pop and leave a mark on metal siding. That cannon, our cork guns, and lever action guns that shot plastic bullets,( and when we could, or could get away with, using our cheap wooden bows and wooden, suction cup tipped arrows) were great playing cowboy and Indians, and war.

Yes, those were some fun times growing up.

Remember the Mighty Moe Howitzer? I had one of those and found that it was just as fun taking the spring mechanism out and just shooting the plastic ball off of it.

 
Remember the Mighty Moe Howitzer? I had one of those and found that it was just as fun taking the spring mechanism out and just shooting the plastic ball off of it.


Never seen or heard of that one. But would have loved to of had one to go with the Johnny Reb cannon.

My brother had some type of a military looking rifle, but I don't remember who made it or what it was called. It was a rifle, had a 45 type pistol attached to the front that could be removed and used separately. It also came with a bayonet, and had a grenade (or 3) that could be shot either from the rifle barrel like the M1 Garand, or from a rod using a pump action on the rifle, I don't remember which, just that it was really cool.
 
Never seen or heard of that one. But would have loved to of had one to go with the Johnny Reb cannon.

My brother had some type of a military looking rifle, but I don't remember who made it or what it was called. It was a rifle, had a 45 type pistol attached to the front that could be removed and used separately. It also came with a bayonet, and had a grenade (or 3) that could be shot either from the rifle barrel like the M1 Garand, or from a rod using a pump action on the rifle, I don't remember which, just that it was really cool.

Was it the Johnny 7 rifle combo...?...I had one

 
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I remember those cannons; had one. Could easily hit something (someone) at 30 feet with a pop and leave a mark on metal siding. That cannon, our cork guns, and lever action guns that shot plastic bullets,( and when we could, or could get away with, using our cheap wooden bows and wooden, suction cup tipped arrows) were great playing cowboy and Indians, and war.

Yes, those were some fun times growing up.

Yep, hard to believe that we deprive kids of those adventures these days. No wonder they grow up woke.
 

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Rattler1 wrote on trperk1's profile.
trperk1, I bought the Kimber Caprivi 375 back in an earlier post. You attached a target with an impressive three rounds touching 100 yards. I took the 2x10 VX5 off and put a VX6 HD Gen 2 1x6x24 Duplex Firedot on the rifle. It's definitely a shooter curious what loads you used for the group. Loving this rifle so fun to shoot. Africa 2026 Mozambique. Buff and PG. Any info appreciated.
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Treemantwo wrote on Jager Waffen74's profile.
Hello:
I’ll take the .375 Whitworth for $1,150 if the deal falls through.
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