WELCOME TO GRAMP'S TOOLSHE

WELCOME TO GRAMP'S TOOLSHED







Guns, Dungeons&Dragons, Catholic, Libertarian, booklover, weird sense of humor, and lifelong soldier.






Friday, April 7, 2017

Weapons Corner

Lately I have been looking at Smith and Wesson a lot more.  

I am turning into a bit of a Glock and S&W guy.  

I do have one Springfield Armory, and I have my eyes set on buying two more of them (the XD-S 9mm 4 inch barrel, and the XD Mod 2 9mm 5 inch barrel).

I also have one Ruger, and would like to start buying Americans and at least one SR-22.

I like Walther, and I definitely plan on getting one of their Creeds.

H&K's are nice, but they are just too expensive at this point to seriously consider them.

FN's are pretty much in the same boat, but I do occasionally see a good deal float by, and if I can, I will try to snatch a few up.  

Colts are practically nonexistent these days, and the only really new thing that they have come up with anytime lately is the Cobra.  I would like one of those, but they aren't hitting the market and it doesn't look like they are going to be around for long.  Even when they show up, they are way too expensive and sell out immediately.

I do still have a few Taurus's and one Kel Tec.  I am not quite sure what to do about those.  I keep on thinking that I should sell them so that I could use that money to buy a couple of really good weapons.  Then, the more I think about it, the more I kind of think that I should never sell and keep everything out of desire to love guns, sentimentalism for my original purchases,

I like CZ, and I would really like to someday get a CZ85 and possibly even a P-07.  They are pretty affordable, but just not quite high enough on my list yet.

SIG Sauer's are awesome, but the decocking lever on most of them don't work with left handers like me.  I do want to get one of the 320's though since I love the modular concept, and it was selected as the Army's new sidearm.

Speaking of which, the Beretta's are pretty interesting.  I do want to get an M9 since that was the pistol for the duration of my military career.  The Storm's are cool pistols with the rotating barrel and the pistol caliber carbines look like they would be perfect for home defense.


















Thursday, April 6, 2017

First Aid

I had my first aid class with Tara, Jenny, and Amy today.   It was pretty cool.   The instructor was hilarious and kept us all entertained and interested.  

We had lunch at the BBQ placed called Lillies that Sara used to love because it was right next to her work.   The class was at the St. Cloud Work Force Center.  

Jenny told me that when Michele was young she went to a Christian summer camp and was playing baseball, and a dude pushed her off the base, so she turned around and jacked him in the jaw, and knocked out one of his teeth!!!!

I am going to give her so much grief about this!!!  

Turkies and Cops

Yesterday I saw two things that kind of surprised me.

I saw three squad cars and an ambulance staging themselves to conduct and assault on one of my neighbors.  Not too surprising, but it is kind of unusual for my neighborhood to get this scrappy this soon after the snow melts.  It was just yesterday on 05APR17.  The snow only melted about two weeks ago.  Well, who knows.  The neighborhood is changing.  It seems like it is getting better with the fancy law firm moving in where the bowling alley used to be, and Microbiologics expanding and buying up half their block.  On the other hand, my new neighbors are loud, drunk, and loud, and we did have those problems with the sex slavery and the shooting last year, so I suppose it is still up in the air.

The other thing that I saw that really surprised me was a wild turkey!!!

I can't believe it!!!  I was out smoking on the deck and it was in my back yard.  As I tried to pull my phone out to get a picture, it ran across the street into Linda's yard and went behind her house.

Not sure what that turkey was doing right in the middle if a town with a population of almost 70,000 right now.   She must have been really really lost!!!!

Tuesday, April 4, 2017

20 Year Anniversary

Twenty years ago on 04APR1997.

Good old Meghan.

Weird that I remember these sorts of things.

First CL Facebook friend

Ben Murphy friended me last night.

Been about over a year now that I have been going to CL and finally friended one.

Not sure if this is a good thing or a bad thing.

I suppose only time will tell.

First Ant in the house

Last night, 03apr17 i found the first ant in the house.

Seems like it shouldn't be for another few months.

Can't be a good sign.

Sunday, April 2, 2017

AWM #1

Last Friday, 31MAR17, I posted a link to an event that Julie Borowski is having here in Minnesota.  


Mount Purgatory - Toni Aceto

Climbing "Mount Purgatory" during Lent
"By the time Dante exits the Inferno, he is shaken, not only with regard to the sins of others, but by the effects of sin on his own soul. With the fear of the Inferno in mind, he enters Purgatory.
It is here that he begins to encounter sinners who are on their way to heaven, and it is here that Dante cannot look away from his own sinfulness. An angel with a sword approaches Dante and marks his forehead with seven P’s (peccatum - sins) for each of the seven deadly sins - Lust, Gluttony, Avarice, Sloth, Wrath, Envy, Pride. By acknowledging this in his poem, Dante is declaring that he is guilty of all seven types of sin. He isn’t just pointing the finger at others as one might suggest by reading the Inferno, he is pointing the finger directly at himself. He is telling the world of his own time and for the last 700 years, that he is guilty of all the same sins as those he witnessed in hell. It can be likened to standing up in an AA meeting and acknowledging your addiction. Upon this declaration, Dante must climb a shocking set of stairs that carry him through the experience of penance. The first step is gleaming white and reflective - this step has a mirror-like quality of reflecting one’s soul, not body. Dante sees everything he has ever done. He experiences true regret and remorse for the ways in which he has hurt others. This sorrowfulness is part of his ascent to the next step - it is a rough, crumbling, broken step which symbolizes the soul’s contrition. Dante feels the full force of his sorrow for his sins. On the third step, the blood-red step, Dante is reminded of Christ’s suffering for our salvation. Though Jesus died on the cross for our sins, it is our response to this redemptive suffering that turns our hearts to God and toward heaven. As Dante atones for each of his sins, the angel removes one of the P’s from his forehead. At the end of his penitential journey, Dante must pass through a wall of fire to be purged from the effects of sins; he then passes through the waters symbolizing the cleansing waters of Baptism so that he may enter Paradise on Easter morning - the day of the Resurrection. He is finally prepared to present himself before the Divine.
The Lenten season is much like Dante’s journey through Purgatory. If we enter into this penitential season with the goal of the resurrection in mind, we can follow in Dante’s carefully detailed footsteps. We know that our sins have wounded us or others. If we are honest with ourselves we can see our sinfulness in the shiny mirror that reflects our soul by taking a careful look at the areas where our behavior has caused us or others pain and suffering. In our deepest desire to make amends we scale the crumbling step of remorse and regret for our actions. In Dante’s case, he broke down and cried bitterly. And finally, on the last blood-red step we accept Christ’s passion and death as our final step to salvation. We follow Christ to the cross, we receive his absolution through the sacrament of Reconciliation, and we make a resolution to avoid these sins in the future. Earth, temptation, and life being what it is, this process is not necessarily a one-shot deal - we experience it time and again. That is the beauty of Lent and the wonderful opportunities the sacraments afford us each time we turn away from sin and turn toward God.
Dante’s journey through Purgatory is a mindful lesson in humility, virtue, and love. It’s not about fire and damnation - it’s about the grace that leads us to eternal life. Reading Dante’s Purgatorio during Lent can be an eye-opening experience. Dante’s tangible atonement for sins transcended our human experience. It went beyond abstinence and fasting for two of the forty days. The requirement of penitential Purgatorio is a powerful reminder of our journey toward heaven. On Earth, there is much to distract us from our heavenly goal, but in purgatory there are no distractions - the souls are completely focused on becoming saints. Dante’s Purgatorio is a profound lesson in saint-building. It is worth reading during Lent, but even moreso, it is worth the experience" : from "Catholic 365", link follows: