Normal? What’s that?


The Christmas tree at Rancho LawDog is now up. Looks very nice, very stately, yes?

That’s because you haven’t gotten a close look. Those lights aren’t red — they’re pink. And, since Mom was in charge of Operation Decorate the Tree, they’re not what you might think of as … normal.

You know, there are people who go through life completely surrounded by predictability. There are people that you know exactly what’s going to be on their Christmas tree, because their tree is going to be very normal.

I pity those people.

Somewhere, somehow, Mom found:


Pink flamingo Christmas tree lights!!!

How cool is that?! Are you not jealous?!

Merry Christmas, everybody.

LawDog

You’re stealing Baby Jesus?!

Show of paws here: how many people know what a pogonip is?

For the unwary, a pogonip is also called an ice-fog and is basically a thick blanket of winter fog that freezes on contact with anything solid, forming a super-slick rime of ice up to several inches thick.

Okay.

As penance for my brutal assassination of Santa Claus the year before, the Sheriff had graciously allowed me to be volunteered to play the Jolly Olde Elf at the town Christmas pageant.

The suit was a wonder. Even wearing armour and a gun-belt, I still disappeared in the deep, dark depths. This little problem was solved by the addition of several pillows from the trustee cell and three crumpled editions of the Sunday Dallas Morning News. The boots were actually overshoes, which velcro-ed quite nicely over my ropers, and the issue beard was tossed in favour of something dug up by the Chief Dispatcher (who also did the wardrobe for the town theatre group), said dispatcher promptly gluing the beard to my face with some kind of clear adhesive which she assured me would come off quite easily once the performance was over.

Lying heifer.

Anyhoo, I pulled on the supplied mittens, extracted my 22-year-old-Sheltie from under the Dispatch desk (the ladies in the office had given her a Christmas-themed sweater, put bows on her ears and painted her toenails in sparkly red-and-green hues) and drove my cruiser over to the Fire Department.

The night before, our area of West Texas had received one of the rare pogonip fogs, which had rendered the entire area about as slick as a greased hockey rink.

I didn’t realize how slick everything was, until I wallowed out of the cruiser and slammed the door, which sent the cruiser sliding slowly about a foot left … and into the gutter.

*sigh*

Anyhoo, I rode the brand new pumper truck over to the courthouse, did the “Ho, ho, ho” thing, got my lap wore out, everyone exclaimed over my Sheltie and she suffered herself to have many, many pictures taken with various personages…a generally good day.

After the festivities, I discovered that the guys at the FD had been nice enough to pull my cruiser out of the rain gutter…twice.

I plunked the dog into the side seat, shoehorned myself behind the wheel and was gingerly inching my way home, when…

You guessed it.

The radio went off. Burglary in progress at one of the local churches.

I pull up to the church, and mindful of my experience at the Fire Station, I get out of the cruiser, but I don’t close the door.

Parked in front of the church is a pick-up truck, engine still running. Across the street is a little old gentleman with an absolutely huge mustache, holding a cordless phone and giving me the old hairy eyeball.

I immediately assume that the gentleman with the phone is most probably the Reporting Party, and I start to waddle across the street to get more information, when I notice that someone is in the act of walking from the front lawn of the church to the pick-up truck, and the person is carrying one of the figurines from the outdoor Nativity scene. This kind of strikes me as odd, so I holler, “Sheriff’s Office, may I have a word with you?”

The old boy heisting Joseph (or maybe one of the Wise Men – I never was real sure), immediately drops the purloined porcelain and takes off at a high-speed shuffle for the pick-up.

Deciding that I really, really wanted to have a talk with that critter, I also kick into (sorta) high gear for the truck.

He gets there first, snags onto the side mirror, pirouettes a couple of times and goes ass over tin cups onto the street —

— just before my feet abruptly kick out from under me and down I go. God bless the Dallas paper, I couldn’t have been better padded if NASA had given it a try. I roll over and start pushing myself to my feet, when the critter rights himself, glances over at me and starts a high-speed slide/crawl to the curb.

Once on the chapel yard, he finds (somewhat) better traction and abruptly takes off at a dead sprint, me breathing down his neck. At the corner, he pulls a sneaky. Since he hasn’t slowed, I figure we’re for a full sprint down the block, but he puts out an arm, grabs the guy-line for the telephone pole and makes an abrupt right turn. While this is, indeed, a good move, unfortunately it dumps him on his fourth point of contact and the critter slides a good 10 yards down the street.

Not having benefit of the guy-line, I turn right much like a battleship under full steam: I use the entire street and most of the yard across the street just to change direction, said extra room giving the afore-mentioned critter enough time to scramble to his feet and head back the way we came.

Apparently, I was still a bit too close for comfort because the critter ran past his pick-up without even slowing down. Which put him on a direct course for my cruiser. With the drivers side door open.

I could almost see the 25-watt bulb light up over his head as he Got An Idea. Visions of dog-napped Shelties suddenly coursed across my minds eye.

Not to mention the thought of having a fully-equipped Sheriff’s Office cruiser stolen out from under my nose, of course, but priorities and all.

Fortunately, my Sheltie chose that moment to daintily step into the driver seat, fix the approaching critter with a gimlet eye, and utter a short, sharp “Ah’m wee, but Ah’m wickit” bark — thus causing my critter to lock up the brakes, his legs shoot out from under him and he slides under my cruiser, slick as a pin.

My last desperate grab for the Manger Bandit cost me my balance, and I hit the ice, sliding along at full speed, and scrabbling frantically at the ice, because my visions of a dog-napped pooch had been replaced by visions of my over-loaded butt slamming into the cruiser and sliding the whole enchilada into the gutter — crushing my critter along the way.

By the grace of God, I narrowly missed my cruiser and slammed into the gutter — not as bad as it sounds, due to the extensive Santa padding — spun about and there is my critter, staring at from under the cruiser about ten feet away.

“Right then, boyo,” I snarled, “You’re nicked. Let’s go.”

My critter blinked at me in utter incomprehension. “What?”

“You’re under arrest. Let’s go.”

“No” sayeth the critter. Now it was my turn to blink in confusion. “What?” I snappily replied.

The critter turned over and got a couple of good handholds on the undercarriage of my cruiser. “Make me.”

I pushed myself to my feet and stomped over to the cruiser. “You’re under arrest.” I gritted through clenched teeth, “Get out from under there!”

“Work for it, fat man.”

*sigh*

I was digging past umpteen pillows and the Lifestyle section of the Dallas paper trying to lay a paw on my pepper-spray, when my gaze happened to land upon …

… it.

There. In all its glory. Not twenty feet from the front bumper of my cruiser. Left over from the heady Frontier Past of the city:

A horse trough.

I happily, one might even go so far as to say joyously, ambled up to said horse trough, peered over the side — and it was full of water, with only a three-inch thick crust of ice over the top.

I’ll have you know that I was wearing a full Santa Clause beard glued to my face, so anyone who testifies that I was “Grinning like an ape” as the stopper gave way is obviously mistaken.

I ambled back to the cruiser, watching my Very Own Tidal Wave creep down the gutter and said, gently, “Time to come out from under the car.”

“Don’t you have an elf to play with?”

“It would really be in your best interests to come out.”

“What are you going to do? Put coal in my sto — HOOOOoooo WHoooaaaa Ohohoho Haaaa! Haa! Huh-huh-huh!”

I tugged reflectively upon the beard. Yep. Between a combination of Panhandle winter wind and three quarts of glue, it was stuck but good. Under the cruiser the yodelling briefly died down to a series of gasps, but a sudden soprano shriek signaled, I thought, the infiltration of Polar water into the underwear area.

The impromptu yodel-fest died down to noises strongly reminiscent of a rapid-fire castanets, so I cleared my throat gently and remarked, “There’s hot coffee down at the jail, dry clothes and a warm bunk.”

“B-bb-b-bbb-bastard.”

“Or I could come chip you loose when the cold snap breaks. I figure, what? This time next week?”

A dripping, kind of blue-ish, vibrating-a-bit face appeared above the front quarter panel and stared accusingly at me.

“I d-d-didn’t n-n-nknow S-santa Cl-Clause was such-such a s-s-sumbitch.”

“Believe it. Into the back seat, Nanook. Let’s go put you into a nice warm cell.”

LawDog

I Was A Teenage Moonshiner, part one.

Sometime during our early teenage years, Chris, Tole and I over-heard Someone Who Should Have Known Better mention that it was legal to produce 200 gallons of beer or wine per year for personal consumption.

You know what was going to happen next.

Unfortunately, this was sometime before the existence of the World Wide Web, and if you needed to research something — say, the origin of wine or beer — you had to go down to the library and start paging through books.

Normally, I am all for a relaxing day in the library, hunting down stray facts, but after a couple of days, we began to suspect that maybe the Chief (and only) Librarian in Small Town Shi’a Baptist, Texas might have been a bit remiss in the ordering of books that might detail the manufacture of Demon Rum.

So. We had a brain-storming session in the living room, pooled our intellectual resources on the subject of Booze, Production Of; and decided that we probably needed some juice, some yeast, one was probably supposed to go into the other … and then we’d wing it from there.

We pedalled furiously down to the corner store, announced that we were in the middle of an experiment; bought a gallon jug of apple juice and a three-pack of bakers yeast; and pedalled back to the house with our booty.

Once back at our house, we poured a packet of yeast into the apple juice, decided that we had an awful lot of juice, emptied the other two packets in, screwed the lid down good -n- tight and hid the jug in the pantry.

Four days later, during our after-school observation of our proto-booze, we discovered that fermentation produces CO2. A lot of it. CO2 that desperately wants to be somewhere else — and a firmly screwed-down lid doesn’t slow it down much.

The effect following the sudden *POP* of the cap is best described as a Fountain of Fermentation.

Manky apple juice everywhere. Ceiling. Walls. Floor. Shelves. Cans of foodstuffs. Oh, and us.

Two hours of mopping and sponging up apple fermentation in an unventilated itty-bitty little room later, we pedalled — slightly unsteadily — back down to the corner store, announced that we had exp-, expushr-, hexpear-, had a bit of a problem with the thingy and re-stocked our supplies.

A nice gentleman who had been coughing in line behind us insisted that we accept a ride back to the house in the back of his pick-up and, as he dropped us off, mentioned — apropos of nothing — that some experiments needed to breathe — through a tube was best — and that the addition of a quarter cup of sugar was never a bad thing. In some experiments.

Tube, hell. After we dumped the yeast and sugar into the gallon jug of apple juice, we bunged the jug — sans lid — under the kitchen sink. And waited.

After about ten days the bubbling and frothing stopped. In our gallon jug, we had … stuff.

The bottom of the jar looked remarkably like the bottom of a cattle tank. The top looked somewhat like the surface of a peat bog. And in between the two was …

… a thriving colony of sea-monkeys.

Not the sea-monkeys that you saw advertised in the back of comics books at the time. Not Mr. and Mrs. Sea-Monkey and the babies with the crowns and the lunch-pails and the castle in the back-ground.

No. These bore a striking resemblance to the demonic, mutated, sub-aquatic, ninja-SeAL alien sand-fleas that the lying bastards sent you after you mailed them the [deleted] coupon and your hard-earned money THINKING you were going to get Mr. and Mrs. Sea-Monkey!

Errm. Ahem.

We stared at the swimming thingies for a while, and then Chris said, “I don’t think anyone’s going to want to drink this.”

I ventured that maybe if we didn’t tell anyone about the presence of the … only to be interrupted by Tole stating, “We don’t have to tell anyone about them. I think they’re more than capable of announcing that fact on their own.”

“Okay,” sez me, “What if we strain out the scum and algae and thingies?”

“Straining may get the bugs, but do you think they crawl out of the jug to go to the bathroom, or do they do the deed right there?” snarked Chris, Master of the Bad Mental Image.

“Wait, wait, wait,” said Tole, “What if we strain it, then distill what’s left? Purified, right? No sea-monkeys, no sea-monkey leavings.”

Huzzah!

Story to be finished tomorrow. Or sometime.

LawDog

New blogger in town.

One of my brothers from another mother got a look at my ‘blog and decided to leap head-long into Blog World.

I present to you Tole’s Place. Tolewyn is the proud papa of this little sprog I have mentioned earlier, so he’s not a stranger to most of my regular readers.

Tolewyn was one of the first people to actually, you know, speak to the funny-talking red-head who “grew up in them furrin’ countries” some three decades ago.

In that time we have worn off on each other a bit — me, more than him, I believe …

Go by, put your feet on his couch and swipe some of his beer and popcorn.

LawDog

And a merry Christmas to you, too.

Seattle-Tacoma International Airport has apparently hosted Christmas trees in and around its terminals for what I’m guessing are several years now.

Well, until just a little while ago, that is.

An area Rabbi — Elazar Bogomilsky — decided that the Christmas tree display was missing a menorah, and requested that the airport either install one, or allow him to do the installing a couple of weeks ago.

It seems that not only did he not get a response, but no menorah appeared next to the Yuletide trees.

His lawyer — yep, welcome to America — seems to believe that the airport was simply stalling and delaying. The airport says they didn’t have enough time to consult with everyone necessary.

Whatever the reason, Rabbi Bogomilsky did the American thing and had his lawyer threaten the airport with a Federal lawsuit if the menorah didn’t appear.

I’ll give you three guesses as to the reaction by the airport. It was the exact same reaction that everyone else gets when beat about the head and shoulders (metaphorically speaking) with the Civil Rights LawSuit bat: they took down the trees.

Someone whinges that because ‘A’ is up, they should be allowed to put up ‘B’– then the safest legal route is to simply take down ‘A’. No ‘A’, no reason for ‘B’, no reason to lose everything you own to a Fed lawsuit.

Now, Rabbi Bogomilsky is claiming that he didn’t mean for the trees to come down.

What the hell did he expect when he threatened a Federal Civil Rights lawsuit over the sodding thing? Hmm? What?

Is he a naif that he didn’t see this coming?

It is his fault that the trees were taken down, and he should cowboy up and accept the consequences of using the threat of a Federal Civil Rights lawsuit to get his way — no matter how “unintended” the consequences are.

LawDog

Much ado about nothing.

“but no religious Test shall ever be required as a Qualification to any Office or public Trust under the United States.”

–Constitution of the United States, Article VI.

Keith Ellison, Democrat, MN announced earlier that he intends to take his oath of office on a Koran.

Since Mr. Ellison is a Muslim, one would tend to think that this would have been expected.

I should have known better.

*sigh*

As long as the candidate swears to uphold the Constitution, it really shouldn’t matter what book he swears upon, or which deity he swears by. Not only that, but I’m of the belief that things betwixt a man and his deity are not anyone else’s business.

I hear many people — most of whom should know better — claiming that since the United States was founded as a Judeo-Christian nation, candidates are supposed to swear their oath of office upon a Bible.

The state of education in this country brings me to tears. It really does.

I present to you the Constitution of the United States. It is the first word, it is the last word, and it is the only word on the powers, duties and requirements of the Federal Government of the United States. Period.

Show me where the Constitution requires the use of the Christian Bible during the taking of the oath of office.

There are plenty of things to be outraged about. This isn’t one of them.

LawDog

Your very own pocket camel!

One of the things I don’t miss about the Middle East is being the occasional camel cuspidor.

You would not believe how far and how accurately a camel can hork a semi-digested glob of yuck. Or how little provocation a camel requires to begin offensive expectoration. Brr.

Well, some self-defense-minded folks in Switzerland have apparently micro-sized a camel for those folks who — for whatever reason — might be a skosh averse to just shooting opportunistic critters dead.

Kimber of 1911 fame has seen fit to import and distribute these little darlin’s under the name “Guardian Angel”, and there seems to be a stouter version called a “Jet Protector”.

Huh. No imagination. I prefer “Pocket Camel”.

What these little gadgets do is shoot two 90 EmPeeHaitch globs of OC — and in imitation of the wily camel –the user of this little widget is hopefully going to put these 90MPH globs right smack into the face of whichever critter happens to be taking up space downrange.

As seen in the company promo video below:

A Kimber employee volunteered to take a double hit here:

Pocket camels! Isn’t it great living in the future?

Gee Whiz Factor aside, the concept looks interesting. Knowing me, I’ll probably get one just because it is so bloody neat — but — I think I want some thorough in-the-field testing and complete wringing-out before I entrust the lives of kith or kin to one of these doo-dads.

LawDog

Meditations on shooting

In my earlier post, I made mention that a whole bunch of pink .22LR rifles are apparently being given as presents this year.

It is our duty to see that these new shooters enjoy our sport — and continue to enjoy the sport of shooting.

With this in mind, I’d like to do a bit of a riff concerning introducing New Shooters to Shooting.

Ladies and gentlemen, shooting should be fun. Further, I state to you that shooting must — must— be an enjoyable experience for the new shooter.

“Fun” and “enjoyable” are not always the same thing to a beginner as to an old hand.

As an example, I give you my own experience.

My Granda — Mom’s father — was a deacon at the Church of the Sub-MOA. That old gentleman truly delighted in one-hole groups at whatever distance he was shooting at.

When I was gifted with my first rifle — a Remington 552 that I still possess — Granda was the first person to take me shooting. Bear in mind that I may have been ten years old at the time. Although I don’t think so.

He took me to his favorite shooting grounds, thumb-tacked an NRA slow-fire paper target to the back-board, and then we spent the next couple of hours shooting three rounds, walking to the target, walking back to the rifle, shooting three rounds, walking … you get the point.

Once I got used to the crack of the rifle … I was shooting holes I couldn’t see in a paper target … whee. I was bored nigh unto tears.

If I had been left to that kind of shooting, I probably would never have picked up a firearm ever again.

Fortunately, Mom and Dad took me out the next weekend with a brick of .22’s and a sack of empty cat-food cans.

Dad set up a bodged-together two-by-four frame at about seven yards, put three cat-food cans on edge across the top and then came back to the line and we loaded the rifle.

I took aim, squeezed the trigger …

… and the can disappeared!

It was wonderful!

I spent the rest of that afternoon setting up cans and then knocking them back down until I was out of ammunition and light.

From that point on, I was hooked.

Don’t get me wrong: shooting paper targets can be gratifying — if you’re an experienced shooter.

If you’re taking a beginner out, leave the paper at home. Grab something that will instantly reward the new shooter.

Get something that will pop, or fall over, or explode, or disappear. Use targets that do something.

Tuna or cat-fishfood cans are good — and can be reused for about an afternoon. Be sure to pick them up afterwards.

Supermarkets can be cajoled into giving you their manky old fruit. Mealy apples explode quite gratifyingly when hit by a .22LR, as do oranges, grapefruits, etc. And the local critters will probably be rather grateful for the goodies after you depart.

El Cheapo charcoal briquets explode nicely into a puff of black dust, and mass packages of generic candy wafers, lollypops and cookies also explode nicely — and are a bit traditional.

Stay away from glass — nobody wants a shooting afternoon to be ruined by a trip to the ER for stitches. Especially if some other oik broke the bottles that cut you or your children.

Instead, use balloons — filled with water for the tyros.

Many shooting places sell knock-down-reset rimfire targets, and these are a blast to shoot.

Also remember that you are there for the new shooter. Not the other way around. You should not only make the targets fun, you should put them at a good distance. I wouldn’t put a target further than the ten yard berm for any new shooter. Seven yards is probably better.

Yes, I know that you can probably hit that charcoal lump at twenty or thirty yards — but it’s not about you, is it? It’s about your new shooter.

Make sure your new gunnie has good eye and ear protection. I suggest that you use both foam earplugs and earmuffs for your newbie.

If they get tired — pack it in. Don’t force a new shooter past the point of Fun and into Ordeal just for you. If your new shooter gets tired, take them home and then come back, if you’re not done yet.

Make it enjoyable for them, make it an experience they’ll want to enjoy again — and you’ll make a gun person.

Every new shooter you make keeps our gun rights that much safer.

LawDog

Hah!

Spent a bit of today helping Reno find the right present for his daughter.

I’m not exactly sure how old the colleen is, but I’m thinking about 8 or so. I think. Less than ten. I think. I’m sure Reno will chime in and correct me if necessary.

Anyhoo, a while ago Reno bought her a Daisy BB gun so she could have a gun to bring to the range, too.

The little sprite has become pretty darned good with it.

It’s a lever-action jobber, with a horrid BB-gun trigger-pull and this lovely great fibre-optic sight sitting on top of the muzzle. Little Miss has gotten quite good at daubing that orange ball on her target, and then putting a BB-sized hole through it.

I kid thee not, even with a trigger pull that feels a lot like dragging an anchor chain through a box of rocks, she can clean 12-gauge shotgun hulls off of the pistol berm.

So, being the proper Papa that he is, Reno has decided to gift her with a Crickett .22 rifle this year.

These little wonders are absolute jewels. They’re single shot, bolt-action rifles with about an 11-inch length-of-pull, and they are dedicated Kids Rifles.

You work the bolt, insert a cartridge into the chamber and close the bolt. Once that is done, you still have to manually draw back the striker before the rifle will fire.

It also has a integral key lock.

Those who know me, know that I absolutely loathe, despise and hate key locks on firearms …

… except in this case. In the case of a child’s rifle, I find that I don’t have an objection to the key lock.

Of course, since Little Miss is a girly-girl, nothing will do but to get her the Model 225.

Why, you ask?

Because it’s the one with the laminated pink stock. Duh.

I don’t know about anyone else, but I find that to be completely and utterly cool — It’s a dedicated Girl’s First Rifle.

About bloody time!

Apparently, I’m not the only one to think this, because we couldn’t find a Crickett Model 225 at any of the gun stores we called.

Not only that, but each store we talked to informed us that their suppliers were out of the laminated pink ones until after Christmas.

That news gives me the warm fuzzies.

That news tells me that a whole bunch of little girls are getting a rifle for a present.

Mark my words — the future of shooting in America — the future of guns in America — rests on the distaff side of the species.

The future of the Second Amendment in the United States lives or dies based on women. If women come to love the shooting sports as much as men do — then gun control will fail in the United States.

If women never come to appreciate firearms as men do, then no matter what we do — the Second Amendment is doomed.

The fact that suppliers are completely out of pink Dedicated Little Girls Rifles tells me that a whole bunch of little girls are going to be shooting in 2007.

That is nothing but good news for us gunnies.

LawDog