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Product Review – Michael’s Custom Holsters Pancake Holster for 1911

Back in December, I bought myself a Remington R1 1911.  I wanted a good holster for it, so I saved up some money and ordered one from Michael’s Custom Holsters.

I really liked the pancake holster he made for my CZ-82, so I asked him to make one for this 5 inch 1911.  It arrived last week, and I’ve been wearing it pretty much every moment I’m not at work since.
The holster is made from very stiff cowhide, and conforms very well both to the gun and my hip.  There are no stitches showing on the outside of the holster, but you can see the very tough stitchwork that holds it together on the back. The 15 degree forward cant that Michael put into it makes for a very comfortable draw, and aids in keeping the gun from either riding too low to easily conceal or too high to keep it out of my ribs.  That being said, it is still a 5 inch 1911, so what made a good cover garment for the CZ doesn’t always work as well with this gun in this holster.  But the way that the holster conforms to my hip made it easy to find things already in my closet that worked very well.
The belt loops are very stiff, but my experience with my other holster of the same model tells me that they will wear in rather quickly.  I am wearing one of the gun belts that Michael sells, and it mates very well with the holster.  
The gun stays in the holster very well.  I tested it out by doing squat thrusts, deep bends, and just carrying it around while working in the yard with the gun unloaded.  It never moved from the holster, but I was still able to do very easy draws.  The holster also didn’t move on the belt at all.  It releases the gun very smoothly and with only a little bit of effort to pull it out.  
As you can see from the pictures, it conceals this full-sized 1911 very well. 
Now you see me…..

Now you don’t 

Again, I chose to get the holster without any pattern or color added to the leather, but Michael can do pretty much anything you ask when it comes to decoration.  I just prefer the way that leather looks as it ages naturally.

A custom leather holster is going to cost more than what you would pay for a mass produced model, but not that much more.  For the additional cost, you get the outstanding customer service, choices in materials and styles, and quality that Michael brings to the game.  I look at the $190 I paid for the holster as money well spent, as I expect to be able to use the holster regularly for several years for both open and discreet carry.
Disclaimer – I received nothing in exchange for doing this review.  I paid for all materials used.  

Why We Win

Like I said on Friday, parts of my area got the hammer dropped on them pretty hard by tornadoes, rain, and now snow.  The towns of Marysville and Henryville, Indiana, and West Liberty, Kentucky, and a lot of other places are hurting right now.  The outpouring of support from Louisville and beyond has been immense.

A friend of ours was caught in the tornado in Henryville when she was on the way to the Catholic church there for a fish fry.  She got to the church basement just as the tornado hit, and has been working there pretty much non-stop since.  She reports that a group of people from Louisville showed up on Saturday to help, and have been doing everything they can.  One of them looked for a place to put the trash and debris they were clearing away from the church and its area, and asked where the dumpsters were.  Her answer was simply “There aren’t any.  They blew away.”  Our friend reports that the lady made a cell-phone call to 1-800-GOT-JUNK, a business that specializes in hauling off stuff and renting dumpsters.  After she explained where she was calling from and what she needed, she was patched through to the top of that companies food chain, and was told to expect dumpsters and trucks by sundown.  By sundown, trucks, dumpsters, and other supplies had arrived in the area.

Another lady in that group noticed that the water wasn’t working and that the toilets had to be hand filled.  She made a call to several of the companies in the area that rent port-a-potties, and on Sunday they started trucking them in.

One of my brother-in-laws is an EMT with one of the local ambulance companies, and he’s been at work pretty much non-stop since Friday morning.  He’s not sharing any of the stories of what he’s been doing, but I know he’s exhausted.  Today he took a break and posted about two programs from Duracell that I want to point out.  First, there’s the “Power Those Who Protect Us” campaign, in which the company donated 18,000,000 batteries to volunteer fire departments around the country.  Some of those batteries are being used in the recovery and relief efforts in Indiana and Kentucky right now.  He also said that the Duracell Power Relief Trailer is also making the rounds in the area. This program allows people in impacted areas to recharge devices, use satellite phones, and use computers to get messages out.

My BIL also reports that the Tide detergent people are helping out with their Loads of Hope program. This effort brings brings a mobile laundry to disaster zones so that those in need have clean clothes.  It’s a sanitation and morale booster, and a lot of us know just how good it feels to put on clean clothes after days spent working in filthy conditions.

I’m sure there are other examples I don’t know specifics about.  My friend in Henryville reports that the basement of that Catholic church is stuffed to the gills with donated relief supplies, and they’re being replaced as fast as they can be given out.  Someone is donating those supplies, and someone is transporting them into the disaster zone.  No-one seems to be advertising their work, so I can’t finger those doing it.

So what’s my point?

We just witnessed a summer where the media splashed scenes of people protesting the evils of large corporations.  Companies were accused of being crooked thieves who did nothing but suck the lifeblood out of communities and the common man.  We were led to believe that capitalism and corporations could never be a force for good.

In these communities, large corporations are giving back to their customers when they need it.  They’re not asking for payment to do it, and other than having their logo on the side of the trucks and the bags they hand out, they’re not asking for people to buy their product.  All they’re doing is making sure that what they can do, they are doing.

Now I ask, where are the Occupy Louisville people?  Are they breaking down their tents, cleaning them up, and donating them to families that need the shelter?  Are they travelling the 30 miles or so from downtown Louisville to help clean up or hand out relief supplies?  I see no evidence of it on the news, and no reports from people I know who are actually working in the disaster zones.

We, as people who believe that even with all of its inherent flaws the market finds a way to do good, need to stress these things when confronted by those who want to tear the system down.  When I see an army of hippies descending on these areas, I will listen more intently to their chants about the evils of capitalism.  When their energy is focused on aiding those truly in need, I will buy that their hearts are in the right place.

Until then, I’m just going to remember the ‘evil’ corporations that opened their pocketbooks and warehouses to help people I know.

Historical Coincidence?

I noted during my lunchtime Internet reading that today is the anniversary of the Boston Massacre.  Since I’m interested in history, I read the linked article.

Something stood out:

Boston’s chief customs officer, Charles Paxton, wrote to Hillsborough, asking for military support because “the Government is as much in the hands of the people as it was in the time of the Stamp Act.” Commodore Samuel Hood responded by sending the fifty-gun warship HMS Romney, which arrived in Boston Harbor in May 1768.

Emphasis mine.

You don’t suppose…..  Nah, couldn’t be.  Even my tinfoil hat isn’t that thick or shiny.

30 Days of Churchill – Day 3

Where my reason, imagination or interest were not engaged, I would not or I could not learn.  — My Early Life, A Roving Commission (1930)

My Take – Turn learning into a game, and it’s easy.   I learned to love reading by being read to.  Math came from games of counting.  Ethics and values came from listening to and reading stories that told a lesson without laying it on too thick.  

Good Morning!

Guess what we woke up to this AM?

Girlie Bear was crying and gnashing her teeth because school wasn’t cancelled.  Boo has been jumping up and down to go out and roll in it.  The dogs got a chance to run around for a bit when I let them out, but they were more than happy to come in and lay down on their blankets.  Of course, I put the snow shovels away before the big storm on Friday so they didn’t turn into flying scythes, but it should melt off as soon as the sun comes up.

I’m not looking forward to the commute, but it’s always funny to watch the locals deal with White Death.  I think this might be the most snow we’ve gotten all winter, so they may be thinking this must be the end of days.

Today’s Earworm

Something tells me I need to just put the headphones on and keep my head down today.

Thoughts on the Weekend

  • I love ceiling fans.  However, we should substitute time on a chain gang for a few years installing them on ceilings that are just barely too tall to reach comfortably.
  • History sometimes rhymes.  After the 1974 tornado outbreak, it snowed.  Friday, it was in the high 70’s and muggy, followed by F3 and F4 tornadoes. Today, it was 40 degrees and snowing.
  • We got lucky and got the shingles for our new roof at 1/3 the price we expected to.  I guess sometimes the stars line up just right.  No, I am not doing my own roof.  I’ve done that enough for one lifetime, thank you very much.
  • Irish Woman and the kids planted 72 broccoli and cauliflower seeds.  Either they’re expecting a lot of seeds to not sprout, or I’m going to be building more garden beds than I expect.
  • I must be doing something right.  Girlie Bear and I watched the first episode of “Band of Brothers” on Friday, and now she wants to watch the rest and read the book.  Heck, this might make a good excuse to buy her her very own Garand.
  • I have the coolest wife in the world.  She asked me what calibers I am low on in the ammunition stockpile and then suggested that the family needs an iPad.
  • You know when you’re in a rural eatery when you hear a mother use the term “slap the stupid out of you” when correcting one of her children and no-one bats an eye.

News Roundup

  • From the “Oh, How Sad” Department – Users of denial of service tools provided by the Anonymous group seem to have gotten more than they bargained for.  Apparently in addition to their tools to fight against the man or something, they also got the Zeus botnet, which can be used to steal their personal data.  Excuse me while I feel absolutely no sympathy.  This is kind of like when I heard that the girl who broke up with me in high school caught a social disease from the guy she hooked up with next.
  • From the “Why would he do that?” Department – John Edwards, pretty boy, philanderer, and accused felon, has asked that the courts not destroy the sex tape he made with his girlfriend while his wife was dieing of cancer.  The girlfriend, who later had a daughter with Mr. Edwards, also while his wife was dieing of cancer, won the tape back from a former business associate in a lawsuit, and the tape is scheduled to be destroyed in the next few weeks.  I’m scratching my head on this one.  Why would you want to have video proof that you were banging the videographer from your campaign staff while your wife was dieing slowly?  Then again, we already know the guy is a total hairball, so a sex tape couldn’t possibly do further damage to his reputation as a husband and human being.  
  • From the “And the Horse You Rode In On” Department – The Department of Education informed schools in New York City that students who enter the military after high school aren’t worth as much as students who go on to college when schools are graded.  I think you can figure out how I feel on this issue.  Let’s leave the emotional issue of patriotism and the value of service to the country aside for the moment.  I’m too tired to rant at the moment, so I’ll try to be rational about this.  I would be curious to see the percentage of students who left high school four years ago, went straight into college, and graduated on-time with a four year degree.  Then let’s see the percentage of students who joined the military straight out of high school, competed their initial and follow on training, and finished their first enlistment successfully.  I wouldn’t be surprised if the successful percentage on the military side wasn’t higher than the college bound group’s successful percentage.  Then we can compare the actual employable skills, level of personal debt, and criminal records of the students who went into college against those of the students who went into the military.  In closing, I’d like to say that the Department of Education can suck the 30+ college credits I got for my military training, above and beyond the college classes I took while in uniform.
  • From the “Qel Surpris” Department – Vladimir Putin is projected to have won the presidential election in Russia.  If you’re surprised by this, I believe there’s a man in Manhattan who would like to sell you a bridge.  Of course, reports of election irregularities are popping up.  To be honest, I have to say to the opposition in Russia that if they want a clean election, they’re going to have to do something with one of the other three boxes before they can expect good results from the ballot box.  In a mark of progress in Russia, it should be noted that the opposition candidates all survived to see election day.
  • From the “Going to Hell on a Scholarship” Department – A pair of thieves in Texas are wanted for stealing cookie money from a group of Girl Scouts and then injuring one of the girls with their getaway car.  I think it would be ironic if, after they are caught and convicted, they are put in a cell with a big Samoan guy who likes to play Tagalong with his Thin Mint, if you know what I mean.

30 Days of Churchill – Day 2

When I am abroad I always make it a rule never to criticize or attack the Government of my country. I make up for lost time when I am at home.  — In the House of Commons (April 18, 1947)

My Take – Politics should stop at the shoreline.  I have no love for people who go abroad to complain about our country or our government, regardless of which party they’re criticizing.

Quote of the Day

At GM’s Hamtramck plant in Detroit . . . I got to get inside a brand new Chevy Volt fresh off the line, even though Secret Service wouldn’t let me drive it. But I liked sitting in it. It was nice. I bet it drives real good. And five years from now when I’m not president anymore, I’ll buy one and drive it myself. – President Barack Obama, 2011

GeneralMotors will suspend Chevrolet Volt production from March 19th to April 23rd in order to bring supply of the plug-in hybrid car in line with demand, according to the Detroit Free Press.   Chevrolet sold 1,023 Volts in February, which up from 603 in January, but far from the 60,000-unit annual output originally planned for when the car was launched in December, 2010. Less than 8,000 Volts were sold in all of 2011. Fox News, 2012