• Archives

  • Topics

  • Meta

  • The Boogeyman - Working Vacation
  • Coming Home
  • Via Serica

Thought for the Day

Today’s Earworm

Just got Girlie Bear off to JROTC camp.  This kept going through my mind.

 

Either she’s not listening, or I need to speak up

I was reiterating to Girlie Bear that she was to go nowhere at JROTC camp without her battle buddy.  For those of you who are unfamiliar with the term, a ‘battle buddy’ is a fellow soldier, usually of the same sex and approximate rank, who you look out for and who looks out for you.  Normally where one battle buddy goes, the other goes too.

Anyway, we move on to other subjects, and she sits there quietly for a while.  After a few moments, she asks “Dad, what is a ‘battle bunny’?”

Apparently my darling girl has let me go through a conversation or two without understanding what I was saying and thought that I was talking about a mythical creature, with a scar on one of his floppy ears where a bullet went through it in Fallujah.  His grizzled fur was once soft, but has coarsened over  decades of combat and harsh conditions. He has a chip in his front teeth where he defended his platoon leader against a knife wielding NVA sapper at Khe Sang in ’68.  He is a hard bunny, but he is fair, and he always looks out for his fellow warriors.  A nobler or more loyal comrade than the battle bunny cannot be found in the animal kingdom.

After Irish Woman and I stopped laughing, I explained myself and all was well.

News Roundup

  • From the “R is for Retribution” Department – The courts in China have been instructed to be ruthless when it comes to punishing those who are convicted of molesting children.  For example, a school principal has been sentenced to die for a string of abuses against his young students.  I don’t agree with the government of the PRC very often, but in this case I’m a booster.  Hurting kids should bring some pretty horrific consequences.
  • From the “R is for Retention” Department – A grandmother and a child at Disneyworld in Florida found what I would call a “bonus” when they discovered a loaded handgun on the seat of a ride.  Apparently, the owner of the gun didn’t realize that Disney World is a victim disarmament zone / criminal’s happy hunting ground, and lost track of the gun during the ride.  Ladies and gentlemen, this is why we buy good holsters and make damn sure that the thing can keep hold of your firearm during whatever activity you’re about to do.  No-one wants to be “that guy” when a kid finds a free gun and gets hurt.
  • From the “R is for Reprehensible” Department – Eight people were arrested recently when a brawl broke out at a kindergarten graduation in Cleveland.  Apparently two members of the upright citizens brigade pulled out a pipe and a hammer, which is just the spice this story needed to move it from the “WTF?” category to the “Whiskey Tango Foxtrot!” category.  There’s nothing like showing little Johnny how adults deal with their problems like reenacting the Nika riots for his graduation.
  • From the “R is for Recall” Department – Gun rights activists in Colorado have turned in twice as many signatures as necessary to kickstart the recall election of state Senate President Morse.  Morse, who was instrumental in the passing of Colorado’s new gun laws, has vowed to fight the effort and will not be stepping down.  Apparently this is the first time a politician in Colorado has been recalled.  I guess this is what happens when your constituents say one thing and you do another.  Morse plans to thoroughly vet each and every one of the more than 16,000 signatures and contest the recall effort’s tactics in getting the signatures.  I wish him luck, but I’m off now to make popcorn.  This is going to be good.
  • From the “R is for Reptile” Department – A man in Ohio has been charged with animal cruelty after an underfed alligator was found in his basement.  Apparently in addition to underfeeding the creature, he had taken video of people taunting it and posted it to Facebook.  The animal is being sent to a Florida preserve.  Here’s hoping that this miscreant gets to spend a few years somewhere dark and dank to make up for this.
  • From the “R is for RINO” Department – Governor Chris Christie of New Jersey has found himself in a bit of a pickle after Senator Frank Lautenberg died of pneumonia this week.  You see, Christie, a Republican, now gets to appoint someone to replace Lautenberg.  If he chooses a member of his own party, he risks angering the Democratic majority in his state that he needs to govern and possibly gain re-election.  If he appoints a Democrat, he risks outrage from the Republicans as he considers a run for president in 2016.  Personally, I don’t care.  Christie has been a waste of a good (R) for years, and anyone he appoints is going to just as horrid as he is or worse.
  • From the “R is for Ridiculous” Department – Police in Florida used an electric stun gun to corral an escaped llama recently after the vicious beast spit at them.  I guess it’s OK to escape your pen and run the streets, but if you question their authoritah, you’re going to ride the lightning.
  • From the “R is for Reprobate” Department – Former president Bill Clinton has been reported to have exchanged his support of President Obama in 2012 for President Obama’s support of Hillary Clinton in 2016, and allegedly called President Obama “amateur” and “incompetent”.   Wow, never thought I’d agree with Bill Clinton on anything.  Going to have to mark the calendar.

 

Blogs Roundup

Officer Smith talks about the phrase that pays when talking to the police.  Seriously, who thinks that impotently threatening a police officer’s job is going to get you anywhere?  If you’ve got a legitimate beef, that’s what lawyers are for.  Otherwise, keep your trap shut.

I may be using the new term that Christina’s daughter has introduced.  It just…. fits.

Weer’d discusses the next probable step in the demonization and dehumanization of gunowners.

Keads points us to a raffle to raise fund for the family of a Kentucky lawman who was ambushed and killed recently.  I’m in.  You know what to do.

I’m a miserly kind of guy.  Why didn’t I think of this?

The Big Guy gives me something new to put on my resume “Volunteer Remedial Driving Instructor”

Sean discusses how not to teach gun safety and usage, and how hard it can sometimes be to look at a bad situation and absent yourself from it.  I hope he and his brother went somewhere and did some safe shooting after that.

Today’s Earworm

It’s my first day back to work from a week off.  This just felt appropriate.

 

10 Years On

It was about 4:30 or 4:45 on a Tuesday morning.  Irish Woman and I were sound asleep when my phone rang.  I didn’t get to it in time, so it flipped over to voicemail just as my hand hit it.  Clearing my head and vision, I saw that my ex had called.  “What could she possibly want at this hour?” was the only thought in my head as I hit the redial button.  After a few rings, it picked up, but it wasn’t my ex on the line.

“Hello?” said a deep male voice.

“Yes?  This is my ex-wife’s phone, and she called me.  Who is this?”  I answered.

“Sir, I’m XXXX.  I’m an EMT with the Zoneton fire department, and I just took this phone from my patient.”

I was immediately wide awake.

“What’s going on?”  I asked.  In the background, I recognized the voice of my ex yelling and arguing with someone.  Irish Woman noticed the change in the tone of my voice, and sat up, giving me a questioning look.

“Sir, it appears that your wife and the children have been hurt in a fire.  She asked us to call you and tell you what is going on.”

“My God.  Where are the children?  How are they?”

“They just left here in another ambulance.  They’re on their way to the burn unit at Kosair.  We are just getting rolling with their mother.  She’s going to University.”

In the background, I heard my ex yelling even louder, demanding that the children be brought to University Hospital to be with her.

I thanked the gentleman and ended the call, promising to be at Kosair Children’s Hospital as soon as I could.  I explained what was going on to Irish Woman, who was already getting dressed.  She’d heard me use the words “children” and “My God”, and was already two steps ahead of me.  On our way out, I grabbed two stuffed animals for the kids, a Twinkle doll that Girlie Bear loved to sleep with and a Beanie Baby that Little Bear had named “Daniel Striped Tiger”.

I honestly can’t remember much about the drive to the hospital.  As we got to the emergency department at the children’s hospital downtown, there was already someone waiting to escort us back to the kids.  They were in a treatment room that was as close to chaos as you can have and still see people doing their job.  Girlie Bear was being taken care of by two nurses, while it took two nurses just to hold Little Bear down.   She was pretty much in shock, and hardly flinched as they worked on her, while he was thrashing from the pain and fear.  I motioned Irish Woman over to Girlie Bear, knowing that she’d be the best at soothing her.  I headed over to the head of the bed that Little Bear was lying on, and tried to help hold him steady and calm him down.

As I talked to my son and tried to calm him, I glanced down at the foot of the bed.  Nurses were soaking gauze in cold saline, then applying it to the burned soles of his feet.  As I watched, one of them gently peeled back an old set of gauze, taking with it patches of soot and skin.  Each application of cold gauze brought Little Bear a small moment of peace, but only for a moment before he cried out from the pain.

Irish Woman and I swapped places several times.  The kids were still being worked on, but were clutching those stuffed animals that I brought and the teddy bears that the hospital chaplain had brought down with her*.  As hard as the shrieks from Little Bear were to get through, the silence and far off expression on Girlie Bear’s face were worse.

After about an hour, my ex’s mother came in.  She hadn’t been over to the other hospital to check on her daughter, but wanted to see what was going on with the kids.  I guess you can say that the point in our relationship where we went from “I leave you alone, you leave me alone” to outright hostility was the moment when, as I came out into the hall to let her know how things were going, she demanded that I check the kids out of the children’s hospital and send them to University to be with their mother, and also demanded that the children be sent home with her once they were discharged.  I am truly proud of myself in that I didn’t even raise my voice as I replied that the kids were staying exactly where they were, that we would discuss what would happen after they were discharged once I had some idea how long they would be in the hospital, and that since she didn’t have anything better to do for the kids than to harass me, then maybe she should find her way over to University and take care of her daughter.  I later found out that she had taken the opportunity of Irish Woman slipping out to make a couple of phone calls to try to pressure Irish Woman into getting me to do as she wanted.

Eventually, what could be done for the kids in the emergency room had been done, and they were transferred up to the burn ward.  By then, the kids were extremely medicated.  Girlie Bear went to sleep on the way up, and didn’t wake up fully for three days.  Little Bear surprised us by getting hyper.  He was stoned, and wasn’t making a heck of a lot of sense when he tried to talk to us, but he was bouncing off the bed rails.  We settled into our room, where we would spend the next few weeks trying to entertain the kids between dressing changes and debridements.

Both children had second and third degree burns on the entire soles of both feet, with more damage between their toes.  I had one doctor remark that it was a good thing that we allowed them to run around barefoot so much, as the callouses had provided at least a little protection for the softer skin underneath.  In addition to that, Little Bear had a bad second degree burn on his arm, and both kids had small dime sized burns on their faces and shoulders.

What had happened was that one of the wall sockets in my ex’s living room had shorted out during the night, and the fire had burned its way up inside the wall to the attic space of her apartment building and spread laterally from there.  Basically, the building burned from the roof down.  My ex lived on the top  floor of the building, and it was one of those where the stairs and landing are on the outside of the building.  This complex had metal mesh stairs and landings encased in plastic, and to get to ground level, you had to walk down about 50 feet of landing to then go down six flights of steps.

Someone saw the fire from the street and immediately started shouting and beating on doors.  My ex heard someone pounding at the door, realized that the house was on fire,  grabbed the kids, and ran.  The small burns on the childrens’ heads and shoulders came from pieces of burning ceiling falling onto them as they made their way out.  By the time my ex got out of her apartment and out onto the landing, the plastic that the metal landing and stairs were covered in was on fire, and as she ran across it, it burned her feet.  Her legs came out from under her, and she dropped both kids onto the hot metal and plastic.  This caused the burns on the bottoms of their feet.  Her fall burned not only her feet, but also the length of both legs up to the small of her back and on her arms.  The burn on Little Bear’s arm probably happened when he was trying to get down the stairs to safety and rubbed up against the railing.

Luckily, they were the only people hurt in the fire.  The fire marshal later found that the cause of the fire was someone putting improper fixtures on aluminum wiring.  I didn’t know this at the time, but a lot of the buildings built in the 1970’s or so have aluminum wiring due to the difference in cost, and in this particular instance whoever had refurbished the building hadn’t used the proper, but more expensive, light fixtures and power outlets that are necessary with aluminum.  The fire marshal, along with the fire chief and the principal of the kids’ school, came by that afternoon to check on them, and I have rarely seen anyone as angry as that fire marshal was.  He didn’t give me any details then, but I later read his report, and found that the same complex had had an electrical fire a year or so before, but no-one had corrected the issue.

That night, once Irish Woman had gone home and the kids were in a deep, opiate-induced sleep, I fell apart.  I’d kept it together for 18 hours, and once the lights were out and everyone else was either unconscious or gone, it was safe.  I pretty much rolled up in a ball and cried for quite some time.  The silent prayers I’d been saying all day were whispered.  I thanked whoever was listening for the lives of my kids, for the men and women who had saved them, and for the hospital that was only a few minutes away.  I prayed for their recovery and for the strength that both Irish Woman and I would need to help the kids get through this.  I eventually drifted off into what was both a deep sleep of exhaustion, but also one of the lightest sleeps I’ve ever had.  I woke up rested in the morning, but I also woke up several times in the night at the slightest change in their sounds.

We spent the next month in that little room.  Girlie Bear came around to being herself after a few days, and outside of when he was getting worked on by the nurses, Little Bear was his normal, chipper self.  We’d eat, read books, color, watch movies, and wait for the next round of wound cleaning, and new bandages.  Through all this, Irish Woman was my rock.  We weren’t married yet, and truth be told up until that morning I’d have given even odds on us staying together for the long haul.  The way that she was there for my kids and me through that whole ordeal showed me just how special she was and how undeservedly fortunate I was to have her as a friend and love.

We got through it.  After a few weeks, the kids went home to our house, and we continued their care there.  I got pretty good at changing dressings and spreading silvadene onto their burns.  The kids were restricted from walking and sunlight, and had been cooped up in the hospital for weeks.  We did what we could to entertain them, and having our libraries of books and movies available was a godsend.

Eventually, the kids healed.  We had to let them gradually start walking again, but it was another month before they could wear shoes.  Their mother got out of the hospital and stayed with friends until she could get back on her feet.  After a few months, everything was back to normal, or almost so.  The kids both woke up in the night for months, crying and screaming about the fire, and Girlie Bear still has the occasional nightmare.  I guess they’ll always have nocturnal memories bubble up every so often.  Both kids’ burns scarred them pretty badly, but the worst of it is on the bottom of their feet, and they report no long term ill effects there.   Little Bear has a patch on his arm that is the only part of his body that doesn’t turn brown as a nut in the summer, and every so often I’ll notice a couple of the small burns standing out against darker skin.

I look back now and, as I have for 10 years now, realize how lucky we got that morning.  The fire chief was pretty much convinced that, if not for the actions of that random guy on his way to work who saw the fire and ran to help, my children would be dead.  As I drove to the hospital that morning, I was imagining just how bad it was, and I will always be grateful that instead of picking out little coffins for them that week, I picked out several sets of pajamas for them to wear in the hospital.  Instead of two graves to talk to, I have two wonderful children.  Yes, they have lived through some things that no person should, but they’re also vibrant, loving, beautiful young people, and for that, I am eternally grateful.

 

Thoughts on the Weekend

  • The pickets for the long fence are up.  All that’s left now is to build and hang the gate, and then I’m off to build the short fence.
    • We’ll stain the fence this fall.
  • I guess summer is here. I have mosquito and chigger bites.
  • Girlie Bear and I discussed appropriate behavior with the opposite sex while at JROTC camp yesterday.
    • I explained that she was to always be with her battle buddy, and never to be alone with a boy.
    • She thinks I’m overreacting, since they’re going to be supervised and they’re cadets, not normal boys.
    • I remarked that I remember what it was like to be a teenage soldier and repeated that she is to never be alone with a boy at JROTC camp.
  • Knob Creek is adding onto their main building.
    • For those who’ve been there, the addition pretty much extends the building out to the big pole barn.
  • You know, there is a stereotype about the people who go to shooting ranges, but today I’m pretty sure that stereotype was blown.
    • There were white men of all ages and backgrounds and women present.  I heard a lot of Kentucky twangs, but also New Jersey/New York, Minnesota, and I think Virginia accents, as well as Spanish, Japanese, and Arabic.  There were experienced shooters and beginners.  There were young ladies there shooting for the first time and retired grandpas just spending an afternoon shooting the breeze and the targets.
    • Yeah, we’re a monolithic white male redneck block of consumers.
  • Note to self – Buy  Boresnake for the AR.
  • Just when I was finishing up at the range, enjoying the last afternoon of a glorious week of vacation from work,  the window in the driver’s side door of the truck fell off the track and into the bottom of the door, right there in the range parking lot.
    • Of course there were big dark clouds overhead.  Why do you ask?
    • Of course I didn’t have the necessary type of screwdriver in the truck so that I could fix it right then and there.  Why do you ask?
    • Thankfully, it didn’t rain on the way home or during the hour it took for me to ‘fix’ it in our driveway.
    • It actually was pretty easy to fix, or at least fix so that it doesn’t rain in my truck.  I’ll have to look at how much some replacement parts cost and plan accordingly.

Range Report

After talking guns with my brothers-in-law last night, I got the itch to go out and do some shooting.  A quick check with Irish Woman confirmed that we had no real plans for this afternoon, so off to range I went.

Knob Creek is still doing a brisk business in selling range time, ammunition, and firearms.  There was no wait for a shooting position on the main firing line today, but there weren’t any tables that were empty for long.  As I signed into the range, I noticed that they had brass cased 5.56 FMJ from several manufacturers priced at anywhere from $1.00 to $1.50 a round, and brass case 7.62×39 FMJ for about $1.50 a round*.  They also had a lot of .22 LR and other calibers available, but are still limiting purchases to 100 rounds of each caliber per customer per day.  (They won’t fall for the “I’ll have 100 rounds of .223 and 100 rounds of 5.56, please” trick.)

Conditions were pretty close to perfect.  Warm, but not hot enough to sweat, with a slight breeze going from right to left on the range.  The range wasn’t dry as a bone, but neither was it a swamp from all the rain has hit us over the past few days.

I started off zero-ing the Mojo MicroClick sights put on the Mosin-Nagant, and practicing with the Timney trigger.  Yes, I put $200 worth of sights and trigger into a rifle that I paid $76 for, but until Savage starts putting out a rifle that fires the 7.62x54r bullet, I’m going to make the 91/30 the best rifle I can.

I chased zero for a while, but got decent groups at 100 yards.  The shots that are at the center of the target are from my last couple of three round groups.

1934 Mosin Nagant 1891/30, Mojo MicroClick Sights, Timney Trigger, 147 grain Bulgarian Light Ball FMJ, 100 yards

Next I zeroed the AR-15 carbine.  I recently purchased a used Trijicon reflex, and this was my first experience shooting a reflex-type sight.  I must say, I’m hooked.  The ease of shooting with it is amazing.  One thought, though:  The 4.5 MOA dot on the reflex sight was pretty much as big as the center of the target at 100 yards.  I started out adjusting the sight so that the dot was just over the top of the front sight blade on the iron sights, which got me on paper (I need to put a riser under the rear sight on the iron sights.  I have the front sight cranked up all the way, and I still have to use a six o’clock sight picture with them).  Adjusting the reflex sight was pretty easy once I fired a few familiarization rounds.  Point of aim was point of impact at 100 yards.

Federal 55 grain FMJ, York Arms lower with PSA lower parts kit, CMMG 18 inch upper, Trijicon Reflex sight, 100 yards

I finished up putting a few magazines of TulAmmo FMJ through my CZ-82.  I didn’t put up a pistol target this time, so I was just plinking at some soda bottles someone else had left on the 25 yard berm.  I was connecting with the aimed-at bottle about half the time, but I was close enough to move it with kicked-up dirt on the other shots.  I love that little pistol.

I’m still not Dead Eye Dick with either the Mosin or the AR, but I’m improving, at least in the “sit on the firing line and punch holes in paper” type of shooting.  Either one is shooting minute of varmint or deer at 100 yards, and now that ammunition isn’t rare and outrageously expensive, I can justify more trips to the range.  Hopefully with practice I’ll be punching out center target every time.

And let’s be honest, when your view looks like this, it’s never a bad day.

Knob Creek main firing line, also known as “My Happy Place”

 

*edited to correct price.  After reading the original text, which had a much lower cost per round, I realized that KCR was selling 20 round boxes, not 50 round boxes, which of course brought up the cost per round.

Today’s Earworm

Sometimes, you just have to let your geek flag fly.