Wednesday, July 31, 2013

What Do These Have in Common?

20 of the above. UT-15 Urban Tactical AR's with quad rail features (empty)

The carbon body of a American made 2007 Shelby Mustang Funny Car.

A full grown trophy pronghorn antelope.What do they all have in common?

They all weigh about 140 pounds.

The amount of sugar the average American consumes in 1 year.
 
In the interest of health, HOTR is going to post a recipe that has. . . . . more sugar than you can possibly imagine. You don't really need it, but you really want it. 

I'll be honest, outside of my post gun range Mr. Squishee drink I don't do much sugar, I'm hypoglycemic, not uncommon in the Irish, and don't do well with too much carbs (but if add enough bacon to the waffle plate I'm OK).

On the other hand, my team members LOVE these and other such super sweet things I make for them(think of crossing hummingbirds with Special Forces-  that's my guys).

Home on the Range Candy Bar Brownies, a dark chocolate brownie topped with sweetened condensed milk, chopped dark chocolate Mounds and toasted almonds and then baked (recipe in the comments)
click to enlarge photos

Go on, have one. . . then fire up the Shelby, grab one of your AR's and race an antelope on the way to the gun range.

It's only American

Sunday, July 28, 2013

Sunday Pistols and Pancakes - Guess that Firearm

Reader Glenn K. got it right (though many of you were oh, so close).  The Range firearm is a Harrington and Richardson Hammerless .38 S+W. 

It was manufactured sometime prior to 1904 I believe, given the caliber and very low serial number and like all first models of the H & R Hammerless, both large and small frames, it was manufactured for black powder cartridge pressures (a give away for that being it doesn't have the caliber stamped on the side of the barrel and there are no horizontal notches on the side of the cylinder).

It has not been fired, but it's nice to see a little bit of history someplace other than  gathering dust somewhere.
Look!  A Squirrel!

Now for the Sunday pancake (I've been living on gerbil pellets, dehydrated gruel and dried pine cones all week out in the field so I'm going to have pancakes two days in a row.  But for my friend out West (the other) Brighid, this one's for you.
"Sourdough" Silver Dollars

Sourdough taste without the sourdough starter (serves 2-3). They're bite sized, tall and light as a feather (and no blueberries as those got made into individual ramekins of cobbler last night).

Mix well in a medium bowl:
1 cup flour
1 tsp. baking powder
1/2 tsp salt
1/2 tsp baking soda
2 Tablespoons plus a pinch granulated sugar.
make a "well" in the center of the dry ingredients.
In a small  bowl thoroughly whisk
3/4 cup plus 1/2 teaspoon plain kefir (fermented milk found in the yogurt section)
1 large egg at room temperature
1/2 teaspoons Mexican vanilla
2 Tablespoons melted unsalted butter.

Pour the wet ingredients into the dry all at once, stirring JUST til  flour is combined (batter will be thick with lumps and bumps). Let sit while you heat up the pan. Fill a 1/4 cup measure up a bit more than half full with batter and drop to cook on slightly oiled cast iron griddle (batter will be quick thick but will thin out some as it cooks).

Then get back to organizing the rest of your weekend.
I'll be back tomorrow with some tales from the Range clan and a post on the growing and gathering of a plant that all preppers should have in their flowerbed.
 - Brigid

Saturday, July 27, 2013

Saturday Range Living

Just another boring Saturday at the Range.

The morning started early, up before most of the neighborhood, the sun just starting to hit the windows, coffee brewing in the kitchen.  I like such mornings, no one cares if I have "shop hair" and there is no schedule.
 
The bat phone is turned off, I have no obligations, Dad and Big Bro are snug and safe for a few more weeks til I can get out again, Big Bro's son and daughter in law, both nurses, close by. The day is mine to do as I please, while Barkley waits for breakfast or a lost mailman to wander into the dining room.
I love Saturdays. For it usually means 3 things.

Firearms (part of this complete Saturday).
 
We'll see if anyone can guess this pistol, but a couple of generations ago, you could buy this from a Sears Catalog for about $3. This sat under the counter at a Ma and Pa retail store in the Midwest for generations, in case of a robbery.  It's older than anyone in my family, and deserved a little more than to be "buy back"somewhere or scrap.

Then it's time for a little shop time before brunch.

Don't forget the safety equipment

 
I can't hear you, but you can't see me. ha!

It's all part of the Second part of a Complete Saturday -Fun (aka: Tools)

The back of the Range kitchen has an area that's just cheap metal shelves. It's about the size where a Hoosier Cabinet might work. I'm apparently a lousy Hoosier as I'd never heard of one until Partner in Grime showed me some pictures.  Cool!  Hoosier cabinets are named for a cabinet produced by a New Castle, Ind manufacturer around the turn of the century. Sitting on casters, it can be moved for cleaning or cleaned for moving.
 
I was really wanting this but I think the Hoosier cabinet would be a little more practical
The typical Hoosier cabinet consists of three parts. The base section usually has one large compartment with a slide out shelf and several drawers to one side. The top portion is shallower and has several smaller compartments with doors, with one of the larger lower compartments having a roll-top or tambour or additional drawers.

The top and the bottom are joined by a pair of metal channels which serve as the guide for a sliding counter top which typically has pair of shallow drawers affixed to its underside
In addition to the traditional accessory feature of the Hoosier cabinet, what I really like about it is the combination flour-bin/sifter, a tin hopper that could be used without having to remove it from the cabinet. A similar sugar bin was also common. So, have any of you seen one/used one?
 
With as much baking as I like to do, that might work! My storage AND counter space are currently minimal.  I'd want mine to be in white to match the rest of the cabinets. But yes. There's certainly the supplies and tools around here to give it a try.

Like these. I heard guys seriously like that top one.
Until cabinet time, there's still the free Bassett Craigslist sofa, ready to be refinished and re-upholstered (in some nice black microsuede fabric that's on order). The mattress will come out if possible, slats and/or drawers put in its to support the cushions and provide some storage space.
But right now, I'm starting to get hungry. 

For it's time for the third and last part of this complete Saturday  - Food.

Time for Saturday Morning Pancakes. This morning, a tweak to the World's Fluffiest Pancakes recipe.

Use lemon juice instead of the apple cider vinegar, add an additional dash of vanilla, a good pinch of Nutmeg and a couple handfuls of fresh picked blueberries.
It's probably good that I can make a decent pancake.
Because it's come to my attention that what guys really dig is the Wonder BRA.

Thursday, July 25, 2013

This Might Go Nicely With My Lego Tardis

 You don't need anyone to tell you you're a Dr. Who fan.  (It's those little signs)
 
This isn't Dr. Who, but will definately place you in geek category.

A LEGO set of the Back to the Future DeLorean which was recently on display Comic-Con and will go on sale Aug. 1.
The set comes with LEGO mini-figure versions of Marty McFly and Doc Brown, while the time machine includes details like the Flux Capacitor, a time display tile, and the Mr. Fusion Home Energy Reactor.
photo from PCmag.com
 
I think this would be pretty neat, for the kids, or the kid in YOU.

Tuesday, July 23, 2013

Home Security on a Budget

Sure those home security signs are a deterrent, but a home security system is expensive.

Noticing there's a spike in residential burglaries? Planning on being out for the day?  There's the budget minded HOTR Home Security System. 

You just need some very large men's boots, giant dog bowls, some big bones or chews, some gun magazines. .

and maybe a sign.

Thursday, July 18, 2013

Shotgun Games

Several people have asked where I got the break action shotgun cribbage board.  It's a story that started in 1945, a few short months after World War II ended and ended with a modern day craftsman in Wisconsin.

My parents, best friends since 6th grade and high school sweethearts, were married as soon as Dad got back from his service in the 8th Air Force in  England.  Both of them were huge cribbage players, even taking a custom made wooden board with them on their honeymoon to British Columbia.  Dad still has that board, and though his eyes mist up sometimes when he holds it, he still enjoys beating his visiting nurse and we kids at a rousing hand. 

 His mind, on some days wanders, he'll call me by my nieces name if he's tired, and he sometimes hesitates in his thoughts, just  normal aging.  But deal six cards into his hand and, at 93,  he can add up numerical combinations of 15, pairs and straights, faster than a calculator.
But outside of the occasional game at Dad's house, I never played.  Until I taught my best friend how to one snowy weekend, and the game was on.

But I wanted a board that was special, not to replace Mom and Dad's, but simply to continue the tradition.  And I found this, hand crafted from the nicest fellow I know up in Wisconsin who sells them on Etsy.

  (click for the link)

The board is made out of Maple and finished with 3 coats of Polyurethane. The pegs are hand made  1/8" brass rod shaped, polished and coated with 3 layers of lacquer. Pegs are stored where the shell would go. A magnet keeps the barrel latched up when closed, so the pieces stay secure.
John has got two of them made up and available right now if you click on his link above, as well as some other unique ones.  I've bought more than one for family or friends (including the violin one which was truly beautiful).  They were  delivered promptly and look even better than the pictures show.  It was well worth the price for something hand crafted that will last more than one generation.  John also followed up to make sure I got the order, and was happy with it, a personal touch often lacking in most commercial transactions.

We've played a hundred games on it already and I am still amazed by how beautiful it is, in form and function, how well the pieces fit and how much fun it is.

Even when I get beavered skunked.

Tuesday, July 16, 2013

Magpul Precision Rifle/Sniper Stock - a Range Review

The Magpul PRS (Precision Rifle/Sniper)

In one sentence.  - perfect cheek weld.

But for those that would like more detail:

If you are looking for a drop in, precision-adjustable butt stock for  AR rifles with A1/A2 fixed stocks I'd not hesitate to recommend this one based on my experience with one I purchased 2 years ago.  There are a lot of different accessories for the AR15 series firearms, and though I wasn't wanting to put together "frankengun", I did want a stock that had a means of adjusting the length of stuck as well as comb height for the perfect alignment of my site choice, which was an EOTech.

Every shooter is physically built differently, male or female.  I'm as tall as many guys, but my arm length doesn't compare and my shoulders show my more delicate bone structure.  So adding something like the Magpul PRS is well worth it if you have other than normal length arms, neck or sighting requirements.  Compared to the A2 stock, the PRS can shorten LOP (length of pull) by .25" or extend it by .75" as well as provide three-quarters of an inch of comb height adjustment.(the height so that when you plant your cheek onto the stock, your eye is lined up just where it needs to be to line up with the reticle.)

I couldn't say that this was intended for "close quarters" use, but for "sniper style" range practice for proficiency, this is an excellent addition.
I've used Magpul products for other tactical rifles and found their products are high quality and do what they are advertised to, so I didn't hesitate to spend the money for this.  Sure, there's cheaper stocks, but beware, the cheap knock off stuff (and Santa - don't even think of adding Hong Kong AirSoft stuff to my list).

Aesthetics - there's no getting around it, this just looks cool, and it's built like a tank, with aluminum butt-plate and alloy steel adjustment shafts that will withstand a lot of impact abuse (all aluminum components finished with MIL-A-8625F, Type III, Class 2 hard anodizing).  But looking good and being strong will only get you so far, it's got to FUNCTION well as designed.  The unit will fit most AR/M-4 designs and I've personally used one on a Bushmaster as well as my Wilson Combat Tactical AR-15 (otherwise known as "Vera"), which is what is pictured here.
Installation - My Mom could have put this on here. Actually my Mom was the Sheriff, she could put it on here, hunt down the bad guys, take it off and go home and make the perfect pot roast. My Mom is probably not the best example. But plain and simple, it WAS simple.

I have the gunsmithing skills of Barney Fife and I could do it. The hardest part was removing the OLD stock  As a direct replacement for an A1 or A2 fixed stock, you simply loosen a couple of screws on the Magpul and slide it over the existing buffer housing, pop off the rubber recoil pad to put the screw back into the end of the buffer housing and there you are!
However, if you are fitting to a carbine with a collapsible stock, it  will require a rifle-length receiver extension tube, rifle buffer and spring (not included). If your weapon has a short, 6 position style butt stock currently installed there's a DPMS buffer extension kit  that's priced pretty good as it is available with 3 parts including an extra buffer spring (buying separately can add up). Check around, Midway, others, for pricing and options. There's contact info at the Magpul website  (www.magpul.com) as well,i f you have questions as to what will work before you spend any money.

Adjustments -  The adjustments are machined aluminum a knobs with positive-locking click detents so they stay where you wanted them to under recoil as well as allow tool free adjustments by simply rotating the knobs. In my early days of small plane flying there was one manufacturer that replaced their airplane engine control knobs with these brightly colored plastic knobs. We'd say "Acme Aircraft, now with deluxe C.P.S." (cheap plastic S&#t). When one of those broke off in my hand at full throttle, I was less than impressed.  So  I'm NOT a big fan of cheap plastic anything when it comes to something that may or may not keep my alive.
The black, hardened, solid steel adjustment shafts of the PRS are finished with a ferritic nitrocarburizing process.  In layman's terms, they're strong and even better, they stay where you put them, the cheek riser clearing the charging handle even when fully extended.  But they are still very easy to reset for another shooter without The Incredible Hulk hand strength.

The rubber butt pad offers a good firm feel and placement, not uncomfortable in the slightest. But it is  still secure enough prevent slippage for optimum accuracy even with modular gear or body armor (though do pay attention to wearing white body armor after Labor day, a fashion faux pas).
Optional Accessories - include the PRS Extended Rubber Butt-Pad, 0.80". 

I'm sorry, but I can't read "Butt Padd" without thinking of those Frederick's of Hollywood ads which were in the women's magazines when I was a kid,  which is just wrong.
So, if you're worried about pancake butt on your AR you can get that optional PRS Extended Rubber Butt-Pad, 0.80" which adds  0.50 in. LOP and 0.07 lb. vs. standard pad. (Note: Butt-pads are only for use with PRS AR15/M16 and PRS AR10/SR25 models.)  Either will give you a very stable platform.

There's also Front/Rear - 1.25" aluminum sling loops (left-right reversible).  For myself, I think I'd just add a good quality monopad to the provided bottom Picatinny-type rail to it.  Whatever you do, you're going to see some good off the bench groupings.
So, if you are looking for a precise piece of machinery, something for the right sight picture for your AR style firearms with optics, go check out the PRS stock, it's just what the doctor ordered, especially in .223.

Specifications (from Magpul. NOT the Home on the Range W.A.G. Testing Laboratory)
  • PRS AR15/M16 Stock
    • Weight: 1.68 lb.
    • Weight, w/rifle receiver extension: 1.90 lb.
    • Length, Max: 10.45-11.45"
    • LOP Adjustment: ~39 Clicks (0.026"/click)
    • LOP Adjustment Range: 1.00"
    • LOP, Min: ~13.3"
    • LOP, Max: ~14.3"
    • Cheek Height Adjustment: ~29 Clicks (0.026"/click)
    • Cheek Height Adjustment Range: 0.75" 

There Be Dragons - Memories of an Airplane



I'll be the protector of your heart.
The front lines of your guardian angels
 - Lifetime, Steve Moakler

 Battles have been fought in the air from the first day a small dove dived down from the talons of a hawk.  Man was not far behind.

In watching a movie about the dog fights of WWI, the battle was not much different than any sporting event played on a field, the field being simply three dimensional. They would  swing and soar and dive, maneuvering their craft with the unmistakable prodigal swagger that is their testament, over shattered roads and islands of tilled earth, desolate above the destruction which they carried.

A man's death was much less about firepower than simply the consequence of being bettered in a  fair contest with someone much like themselves.  Those that survived held court, not as enemies, but as gentlemen heroes, remembering those dogfights as the best of that which was otherwise, insensible and ceaseless battalions of time

The few that came home, did so to lives that were fixed by gravity and obligation, growing thicker and quieter, raising a glass of amber liquid up in the evening, finding that being dead while still breathing was a lot less peaceful than they expected.  But most didn't survive, their legacy among the tumbled ruins of war, the movement of lips as names were read, a photograph of a pretty girl that had already begun to fade.

WWII changed the playing field.  The technological development in aviation alone, let alone the dynamics of warfare, changed the face of the skies forever. The war went beyond a threat so very far away, from individual battles over foreign farm fields. Freedom, as we knew it, was in danger, and men took to the skies in droves, to do what they could to maintain that, a generation of men who dealt with that threat, that danger, by maintaining perpetual, intimate contact with it.  Unlike the pilots of WWI, many of them came back to live and play with airplanes, the transportation industry booming in the post war economy, general aviation becoming something more than a rich man's sport.

There are few of those airmen left now, their stories sometimes chronicled, more often, lost. But  many of the machines still fly, maintained and flown by men and women who, though they may not have even flown in war time, have that preternatural capacity for achievement that many earth bound mortals lack.
My Dad was part of the 8th Air Force, barely out of his teens.  Though not a pilot, he came home with pictures and stories of those years there, metaphors of daring, chronicles of  speed, that to my mind, would always have the indisputable stamp of the heroic on them. My Uncles as well, were in the Air Force, one of them coming back to be an engineer for Boeing,  his office filled with drawings that to us, were as mythical as dragons, esoteric shining shapes from which fire roared as the heavens shook.

It was not then, unexpected, that I came home one day as a teen and said "I'm going to learn how to fly" which was met with about the same level of support as "I'm going to shave my head and join the Hare Krishnas"  I can't blame Dad, with redhead children he'd seen his share of wild ideas, most of which we abandoned before we actually blew anything up.
The fact that I only had a minimum wage job slinging submarine sandwiches didn't deter me.  I got a job at the local airport pumping gas and washing aircraft for minimum wage perhaps, but able to get my lessons at a discount, sometimes trading a wash or wax for a couple hours of instruction from the CFI/owner.  Dad said, thinking he was out of earshot,  "she won't  last the week".  After the first couple of days of driving around that big fuel truck, hauling hose and climbing ladders out in the bitter cold, I was likely to agree with him but for proving him wrong.   For such are challenges both external and internal, hot and cold, fatigue and muscle pain, the miscalculations that can cost you, not just your job, but your life.

Still, the old Cessna  I was learning in  paled against those craft of of those old stories, bearing  in my adventuresome mind, all the excitement of a draft horse. So, I'd go to air shows, finger tracing the outline of a cowl, taking in the scent of kerosene that bears with it some primordial fragrance of dinosaurs fighting to the death.   I'd not touch that which wasn't mine, I'd ask questions, and I'd simply sit and listen to those stories that fueled my dream. When a couple biplanes showed up to live on the field where I worked, the fascination grew, even as some around me said  "you're a girl, you'll never make it in that profession" or "you're going to just get yourself killed"
But I do not think of such craft by any means as being a threat to me when operated with logic and calm, any more than I think I'm limited by what I can do based on the plumbing God gave me, or anything other than my mind.  Rather, it's the measure of that which I have proven that I can do, of what I can achieve. Some of those early airplanes might have been small but what they brought to me can't be destroyed.

Earthbound we have limitations as varied as our lives. As pilots, life is simpler, as our will is freer; our lives, however different, are truer and more defined. No matter what we cherish in life, we cherish it more; home, friends, the smell of fresh tilled earth from a mile up, the heady gulp of pristine, crisp air that clears both our lungs and our heads.

For like sport shooters, hunters or other people for whom life involves the complexity of hand and will, even when we pilots aren't flying we tend to hover around the airport, like moths to a flame, just showing up to have a cup of coffee and grasp the collective knowledge of those that have gone before us, taking in the stories, the tall tales, the wisdom. The knowledge that is passed on, from veteran to youngster, from instructor to student is partly a flame, the warmth of recognition of what we recognize in each other, the pulse of blood within the hand that reaches out and offers to share the knowledge and wonder.
So it was in those early days, where in odd moments and at odd times, with no prior planning, a bunch of pilots showed up at the airfield to just sit and trade stories, waiting for the clouds to clear. I was the youngest person there, it seems that the yearning for such a plane as the Stearman grows with maturing, sprouting as you discover what is in you that means something. Like any other passion, flying biplanes is a passion often accompanied by a preference for that which surrounds its winged form, which in its absence still speaks fondly of it, in hallowed tones and animated stories. So these pilots, during those hours when they were tethered to the ground, delighted in the society of biplane pilots, sharing tall tales of landings gone awry, until the darkening earth bit into the rim of the sun, and the hangar all went to shadow.

You know how some young teens are smitten with horses, the feel of power and strength beneath them. I didn't want a horse.  I wanted a Stearman. Why would you want to ride my friend Flicka when you can ride the Yellow Peril?  It's big and it's got more horsepower than you'll know what to do with and feeling the rush of air coming back from that huge prop in your face like some silent explosion is as exhilarating as anything you will ever feel. Yet it is most defiantly a craft that speaks to you with a purposed and ponderous voice that demands that you listen to it, not so much with silence but with respect.
Many a day was spent whiling away an hour, little excursions of self discovery, edged with moments of "&*#*! you've got it!."  It's a flying that few experience any more, and myself find a rarer and rarer opportunity.  She's the toughest airplane built; aloft, you'll pass out before you break anything off, but on the ground she's as capricious as a mare who's never been broken and you quickly learn that she has to be flown until the moment she's tied down. With the help of a good instructor, I learned patience; to sense the mood of the wind before it knocked on my windshield, the curve of a farm field and the lay of a grass runway.


There's something about a biplane; you'll freeze in her, you'll sweat like a sumo wrestler in her, dodge seagulls, balloons and summer rainclouds in her. There's no glass, no electronic warning systems, no autopilot; simply a pure seat of a pants adventure that hearkens back to simpler times in far away farm fields. There's the wind in your hair, the sound of insects whirring in the fields and then a quiet night with a glass of amber liquid, not as  mourning for what is lost but as communion with what remains.
But it was time to move on, a slot far away to go learn how to fly the big and the bulky, to take up the mantle of doing something with my life that was behind the safety of a small town, a history without effort. I wasn't sure how I would do with a life of structure, rules and "I have to dress like everyone else?" but it was time to grow up and look at the horizon as more than my playground.

Before I left, I go up in the Steaman one more time. In that moment I can pretend to be a fighter pilot, dodging sunbeams and sparrows out high above a farmer's field, smiling at the feel of its power and the response to my controls, the craft, for this one perfect moment in time, an extension of both my hands and my will. As the stick comes back, the sun hits my eyes, a flash, a glare, this moment, not the steady flame of everyday existence, but that one bright flash of a struck match, that burns so much stronger than valor or fear, if only for this moment.
As the wheels chirp upon the pavement, shadows bow before a wavering sun, the chill in the air an intractable summons of fall, cast upon summer skies. This was going to be my last such flight for a long time.  I pull my leather  bomber jacket around me, but not because I am chilled.

As I leave that little hangar where I earned my wings, I look at the wall, at the photos of old pilots and old war birds from generations ago. Even as those men stand there silently, they swagger just a little, leaning against those mighty forms of man's imagination, looking not into the camera, but somewhere beyond, looking not quite of this earth, but rather like some ancient Norse gods, glimpsed for just a moment as the sun breaks through the clouds, then disappearing forever with the clap of thunder.

I give a quiet little salute and shut the hangar door to darkness.
 - Brigid