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May 31, 2018, 09:41 PM | #26 | |
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Join Date: October 23, 2005
Location: US
Posts: 3,657
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Quote:
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May 31, 2018, 09:58 PM | #27 |
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Join Date: January 2, 2012
Location: Minnesota
Posts: 3,876
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Why wear a holster? Cowmen~ toughs and those ~ punks who thought they were a small towns {misery} only wore belts w/ holsters in three directions.
Wild Bill Hickok wore a classy sash to sport the carry of his Navy 36s. Mr. Hickok surely was known country wide as individual who garnered respect for his shooting abilities. (well until he was nearly blinded by cataracts in both eyes that is.) A cowardly Irish bushwhacking punk got the best of O'l Bill who was paying more attention to his holding Aces & Eights than the vengeful killer positioning himself behind O'l Bill on Aug 2nd 1876. Shame is: O'l Bill won the pot with that hand of cards he had but never got to spend his winnings. I assume the money won went towards Wild Bill's burial. |
June 1, 2018, 08:30 AM | #28 |
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Join Date: October 12, 2012
Location: Wyoming
Posts: 351
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The movie Shane was shot near Jackson Hole Wyoming (north western corner Wyoming)
It is based on the Johnson county wars of 1889 to 1893 In fact most westerns were based on that real life event Another good movie is Tom Horn another real life event from Wyoming If you notice sitting a horse, you want to position the holster so the barrel does not force the butt up into your ribs or just under them. other than that, whatever is most comfortable to you. quickdraw artists today custom fit theirs for a smooth fast draw, And it is sparks from the gunpowder that is popping the balloons at short distances not a bullet |
June 1, 2018, 08:40 AM | #29 |
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Join Date: November 2, 1998
Location: Colorado
Posts: 21,840
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5whiskey - eventually I used the Safariland SS III 070 triple retention holster. Two snaps and a push down to release. I also used keepers (one in front of holster, one behind it) so it was always where I needed it.
I always had guys practice with their holster so it became natural for them to draw from it. I even had range drills where they had to draw with their non-dominant hand. Now, I was flexible enough to draw from behind my back with my non-dominant hand. A lot of guys who didn't use keepers would pull the holster to the front so their non-dominant hand could reach it. Whatever worked. One cop (not one of mine) didn't train enough when he and his partner got into a gunfight. He had a sharp pain in his crotch and figured he was hit. He crawled behind his car, still attempting to draw his firearm to get into the fight. After the fight was over, he found he was not hit after all. He failed to break a snap and so when he tugged on his gun, his keepers kept the holster in place. So, the upward pull resulted in his pants being pulled up into the crotch, causing that pain that convinced him he was hit. Lesson: train with your equipment. Now for cowboys, there wasn't much in the way of gunfights like we saw in the TV Westerns of the '50s-'60s or movies. Guns were tools to them. Certainly there were gunmen and killers (just like today), but it was rarely walk down mainstreet and then draw and shoot.
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