Lead us not into temptation.

Topic by Swimcat

Swimcat

Home Forums MGTOW Central Lead us not into temptation.

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This topic contains 100 replies, has 24 voices, and was last updated by Vajra Varaha  Vajra Varaha 2 months, 1 week ago.

Viewing 20 posts - 81 through 100 (of 101 total)
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  • #916572
    +1
    Colin Combover in a Coma
    Colin Combover in a Coma
    Participant
    5066

    The final straw for me was hearing from another that she is fleecing a man who I shall call a provider(enabler?). Took £600 from his bank account. That could’ve been me.

    The father of a friend of mine lost over £60,000 to a crack whore. She emptied his bank account, and stole his pension and credit cards. She passed his cards and PIN number around the hive.
    Vermin.

    I both empathise and sympathise.
    They are silver-tongued, always droning on about how they want to get out of the life.
    As with all women, they love the drama.

    #916579
    +1
    Hermit
    Hermit
    Participant

    Hermit -$0.18 a round! That is ridiculously cheap. Is it imported from some former eastern block country?Why do you shoot an AK 47 anyway? I get it as an assault rifle -less recoil than a full length 7.62, lighter ammunition, (honestly who needs precision and range in an assault rifle, when the ability to point and shoot easily is more important) and a simple rugged rifle. But as a civilian rifle? Don’t the trade offs that make it such a great military rifle make it a poor civilian rifle (you don’t see many people out hunting with them or winning any shooting matches). Or do you shoot practical rifle disciplines?Or do you keep one because you are scared of Colin visiting?

    What have you got waiting for me, a Rocket Launcher?

    I wish. I’d love to have one of those……….and a place to shoot it.

    The evil in women’s hearts leaves them no moral bounds as to inhibit them from descending to the lowest levels of darkness to acquire their self entitled desires.

    #916583
    +1
    Colin Combover in a Coma
    Colin Combover in a Coma
    Participant
    5066

    Hermit -$0.18 a round! That is ridiculously cheap. Is it imported from some former eastern block country?Why do you shoot an AK 47 anyway? I get it as an assault rifle -less recoil than a full length 7.62, lighter ammunition, (honestly who needs precision and range in an assault rifle, when the ability to point and shoot easily is more important) and a simple rugged rifle. But as a civilian rifle? Don’t the trade offs that make it such a great military rifle make it a poor civilian rifle (you don’t see many people out hunting with them or winning any shooting matches). Or do you shoot practical rifle disciplines?Or do you keep one because you are scared of Colin visiting?

    What have you got waiting for me, a Rocket Launcher?

    I wish. I’d love to have one of those……….and a place to shoot it.

    I was talking to Mr Branch, you dribbling old f*ck.

    It appears Mr Branch is finally ready for sublimity…..hence the Rocket Launcher quote you orrible old goat.

    #916589
    +1
    Hermit
    Hermit
    Participant

    Hermit -$0.18 a round! That is ridiculously cheap. Is it imported from some former eastern block country?Why do you shoot an AK 47 anyway? I get it as an assault rifle -less recoil than a full length 7.62, lighter ammunition, (honestly who needs precision and range in an assault rifle, when the ability to point and shoot easily is more important) and a simple rugged rifle. But as a civilian rifle? Don’t the trade offs that make it such a great military rifle make it a poor civilian rifle (you don’t see many people out hunting with them or winning any shooting matches). Or do you shoot practical rifle disciplines?Or do you keep one because you are scared of Colin visiting?

    What have you got waiting for me, a Rocket Launcher?

    I wish. I’d love to have one of those……….and a place to shoot it.

    I was talking to Mr Branch, you dribbling old f*ck.
    It appears Mr Branch is finally ready for sublimity…..hence the Rocket Launcher quote you orrible old goat.

    I don’t care. I still really want a rocket launcher.

    The evil in women’s hearts leaves them no moral bounds as to inhibit them from descending to the lowest levels of darkness to acquire their self entitled desires.

    #916590
    Colin Combover in a Coma
    Colin Combover in a Coma
    Participant
    5066

    Hermit -$0.18 a round! That is ridiculously cheap. Is it imported from some former eastern block country?Why do you shoot an AK 47 anyway? I get it as an assault rifle -less recoil than a full length 7.62, lighter ammunition, (honestly who needs precision and range in an assault rifle, when the ability to point and shoot easily is more important) and a simple rugged rifle. But as a civilian rifle? Don’t the trade offs that make it such a great military rifle make it a poor civilian rifle (you don’t see many people out hunting with them or winning any shooting matches). Or do you shoot practical rifle disciplines?Or do you keep one because you are scared of Colin visiting?

    What have you got waiting for me, a Rocket Launcher?

    I wish. I’d love to have one of those……….and a place to shoot it.

    I was talking to Mr Branch, you dribbling old f*ck.It appears Mr Branch is finally ready for sublimity…..hence the Rocket Launcher quote you orrible old goat.

    I don’t care. I still really want a rocket launcher.

    I’ll fackin buy for ya then.

    What’s your address?

    #916592
    +1
    Hermit
    Hermit
    Participant

    Hermit -$0.18 a round! That is ridiculously cheap. Is it imported from some former eastern block country?Why do you shoot an AK 47 anyway? I get it as an assault rifle -less recoil than a full length 7.62, lighter ammunition, (honestly who needs precision and range in an assault rifle, when the ability to point and shoot easily is more important) and a simple rugged rifle. But as a civilian rifle? Don’t the trade offs that make it such a great military rifle make it a poor civilian rifle (you don’t see many people out hunting with them or winning any shooting matches). Or do you shoot practical rifle disciplines?Or do you keep one because you are scared of Colin visiting?

    What have you got waiting for me, a Rocket Launcher?

    I wish. I’d love to have one of those……….and a place to shoot it.

    I was talking to Mr Branch, you dribbling old f*ck.It appears Mr Branch is finally ready for sublimity…..hence the Rocket Launcher quote you orrible old goat.

    I don’t care. I still really want a rocket launcher.

    I’ll fackin buy for ya then.
    What’s your address?

    123 kiss my ass lane, suck my sack, Kansas

    The evil in women’s hearts leaves them no moral bounds as to inhibit them from descending to the lowest levels of darkness to acquire their self entitled desires.

    #916595
    +2
    Colin Combover in a Coma
    Colin Combover in a Coma
    Participant
    5066

    Hermit -$0.18 a round! That is ridiculously cheap. Is it imported from some former eastern block country?Why do you shoot an AK 47 anyway? I get it as an assault rifle -less recoil than a full length 7.62, lighter ammunition, (honestly who needs precision and range in an assault rifle, when the ability to point and shoot easily is more important) and a simple rugged rifle. But as a civilian rifle? Don’t the trade offs that make it such a great military rifle make it a poor civilian rifle (you don’t see many people out hunting with them or winning any shooting matches). Or do you shoot practical rifle disciplines?Or do you keep one because you are scared of Colin visiting?

    What have you got waiting for me, a Rocket Launcher?

    I wish. I’d love to have one of those……….and a place to shoot it.

    I was talking to Mr Branch, you dribbling old f*ck.It appears Mr Branch is finally ready for sublimity…..hence the Rocket Launcher quote you orrible old goat.

    I don’t care. I still really want a rocket launcher.

    I’ll fackin buy for ya then.What’s your address?

    123 kiss my ass lane, suck my sack, Kansas[/quote

    It’s on it’s way matey!

    #916596
    +2
    Branched off
    Branched off
    Participant
    10927

    Its been years since I shot a rocket launcher Colin -Carl Gustav 88 mill with HEAT round sure made a big bang on impact. (Even more impressive was my mate who shot his own webbing to bits with the back blast). I have a big old ten gague Colin. I could make up some 00 shells for you, if you ask nicely, though personally I prefer a 30 cal rifle with modern ammunition that certainly costs well over 10 times that of hermit’s per round but I like to tune the terminal performance and so I am happy to pay for the best components. Like Hermit says its all about the bullet construction, its impact velocity and the target’s make up, once you get the bullet there. The best bullet is the one thing people skimp on most often, yet even the most expensive bullet possible is still likely to be less than the fuel to drive to your hunt, even if you hunt in the next village.

    When it comes to war versus hunting weapons, I think it depended on how wealthy you were but people have always liked the best tools for the job. I have an old muzzle loading war rifle and its a great clunky squaddie proof thing in 0.577, while the gentlemans’ hunting equivalents were a lot lighter and more accurate. I also have a small collection of spears and in most cases, they are quite specific to job -mail busting bodkins, leaf shaped general purpose ones and small very pointy vicious looking barbed hunting darts, long spears for desert warriors, medium length ones for savanna warriors… When it comes to archery the difference between a war bow and a hunting bow was huge -a war bow is a big item of artillery. You only train to hit a large cloth spread on the ground at distance. Just get a beefy british bloke to yard on it and send a bodkin pointed arrow 200 yards through a posh French ponce on a horse (any one in the charge will do) and you are a winner. A hunting bow will have a much lower draw weight (deer do not wear plate mail and once the arrow has passed through the animal any extra power was a waste of the aim you need for a heart and lung shot). It will be shorter to fit around vegetation. The arrow will be a broad head which would be useless on armour. So I think there was always a choice so long as you were not poor and then it did tend to be army surplus when it came to rifles anyway.

    A woman is like fire -fun to play with, can warm you through and cook your food, needs constant feeding, can burn you and consume all you own

    #916604
    +1
    Hermit
    Hermit
    Participant

    Its been years since I shot a rocket launcher Colin -Carl Gustav 88 mill with HEAT round sure made a big bang on impact. (Even more impressive was my mate who shot his own webbing to bits with the back blast). I have a big old ten gague Colin. I could make up some 00 shells for you, if you ask nicely, though personally I prefer a 30 cal rifle with modern ammunition that certainly costs well over 10 times that of hermit’s per round but I like to tune the terminal performance and so I am happy to pay for the best components. Like Hermit says its all about the bullet construction, its impact velocity and the target’s make up, once you get the bullet there. The best bullet is the one thing people skimp on most often, yet even the most expensive bullet possible is still likely to be less than the fuel to drive to your hunt, even if you hunt in the next village.
    When it comes to war versus hunting weapons, I think it depended on how wealthy you were but people have always liked the best tools for the job. I have an old muzzle loading war rifle and its a great clunky squaddie proof thing in 0.577, while the gentlemans’ hunting equivalents were a lot lighter and more accurate. I also have a small collection of spears and in most cases, they are quite specific to job -mail busting bodkins, leaf shaped general purpose ones and small very pointy vicious looking barbed hunting darts, long spears for desert warriors, medium length ones for savanna warriors… When it comes to archery the difference between a war bow and a hunting bow was huge -a war bow is a big item of artillery. You only train to hit a large cloth spread on the ground at distance. Just get a beefy british bloke to yard on it and send a bodkin pointed arrow 200 yards through a posh French ponce on a horse (any one in the charge will do) and you are a winner. A hunting bow will have a much lower draw weight (deer do not wear plate mail and once the arrow has passed through the animal any extra power was a waste of the aim you need for a heart and lung shot). It will be shorter to fit around vegetation. The arrow will be a broad head which would be useless on armour. So I think there was always a choice so long as you were not poor and then it did tend to be army surplus when it came to rifles anyway.

    Don’t know anything about bows. Was considering getting a compound bow, but then thought about a nice cross bow. Was close to getting one of those, but too much money for what I consider to be a very close range weapon. Maybe one of these days, but it’s way down on my list.

    The evil in women’s hearts leaves them no moral bounds as to inhibit them from descending to the lowest levels of darkness to acquire their self entitled desires.

    #916606
    +1
    Colin Combover in a Coma
    Colin Combover in a Coma
    Participant
    5066

    Its been years since I shot a rocket launcher Colin -Carl Gustav 88 mill with HEAT round sure made a big bang on impact. (Even more impressive was my mate who shot his own webbing to bits with the back blast). I have a big old ten gague Colin. I could make up some 00 shells for you, if you ask nicely, though personally I prefer a 30 cal rifle with modern ammunition that certainly costs well over 10 times that of hermit’s per round but I like to tune the terminal performance and so I am happy to pay for the best components. Like Hermit says its all about the bullet construction, its impact velocity and the target’s make up, once you get the bullet there. The best bullet is the one thing people skimp on most often, yet even the most expensive bullet possible is still likely to be less than the fuel to drive to your hunt, even if you hunt in the next village.
    When it comes to war versus hunting weapons, I think it depended on how wealthy you were but people have always liked the best tools for the job. I have an old muzzle loading war rifle and its a great clunky squaddie proof thing in 0.577, while the gentlemans’ hunting equivalents were a lot lighter and more accurate. I also have a small collection of spears and in most cases, they are quite specific to job -mail busting bodkins, leaf shaped general purpose ones and small very pointy vicious looking barbed hunting darts, long spears for desert warriors, medium length ones for savanna warriors… When it comes to archery the difference between a war bow and a hunting bow was huge -a war bow is a big item of artillery. You only train to hit a large cloth spread on the ground at distance. Just get a beefy british bloke to yard on it and send a bodkin pointed arrow 200 yards through a posh French ponce on a horse (any one in the charge will do) and you are a winner. A hunting bow will have a much lower draw weight (deer do not wear plate mail and once the arrow has passed through the animal any extra power was a waste of the aim you need for a heart and lung shot). It will be shorter to fit around vegetation. The arrow will be a broad head which would be useless on armour. So I think there was always a choice so long as you were not poor and then it did tend to be army surplus when it came to rifles anyway.

    My weapon of choice is whatever my ancestors(Swedish) used.
    All this exciting talk of weapons will cause Worm to have a heart attack. I bet his is in his element!

    Mickey has forwarded your email. I will send you one tomorrow.

    #916607
    +1
    Colin Combover in a Coma
    Colin Combover in a Coma
    Participant
    5066

    Its been years since I shot a rocket launcher Colin -Carl Gustav 88 mill with HEAT round sure made a big bang on impact. (Even more impressive was my mate who shot his own webbing to bits with the back blast). I have a big old ten gague Colin. I could make up some 00 shells for you, if you ask nicely, though personally I prefer a 30 cal rifle with modern ammunition that certainly costs well over 10 times that of hermit’s per round but I like to tune the terminal performance and so I am happy to pay for the best components. Like Hermit says its all about the bullet construction, its impact velocity and the target’s make up, once you get the bullet there. The best bullet is the one thing people skimp on most often, yet even the most expensive bullet possible is still likely to be less than the fuel to drive to your hunt, even if you hunt in the next village.When it comes to war versus hunting weapons, I think it depended on how wealthy you were but people have always liked the best tools for the job. I have an old muzzle loading war rifle and its a great clunky squaddie proof thing in 0.577, while the gentlemans’ hunting equivalents were a lot lighter and more accurate. I also have a small collection of spears and in most cases, they are quite specific to job -mail busting bodkins, leaf shaped general purpose ones and small very pointy vicious looking barbed hunting darts, long spears for desert warriors, medium length ones for savanna warriors… When it comes to archery the difference between a war bow and a hunting bow was huge -a war bow is a big item of artillery. You only train to hit a large cloth spread on the ground at distance. Just get a beefy british bloke to yard on it and send a bodkin pointed arrow 200 yards through a posh French ponce on a horse (any one in the charge will do) and you are a winner. A hunting bow will have a much lower draw weight (deer do not wear plate mail and once the arrow has passed through the animal any extra power was a waste of the aim you need for a heart and lung shot). It will be shorter to fit around vegetation. The arrow will be a broad head which would be useless on armour. So I think there was always a choice so long as you were not poor and then it did tend to be army surplus when it came to rifles anyway.

    Don’t know anything about bows. Was considering getting a compound bow, but then thought about a nice cross bow. Was close to getting one of those, but too much money for what I consider to be a very close range weapon. Maybe one of these days, but it’s way down on my list.

    Listen to me.
    The only bow you’re going to get is a rainbow. F*g!

    #916612
    Hermit
    Hermit
    Participant

    Its been years since I shot a rocket launcher Colin -Carl Gustav 88 mill with HEAT round sure made a big bang on impact. (Even more impressive was my mate who shot his own webbing to bits with the back blast). I have a big old ten gague Colin. I could make up some 00 shells for you, if you ask nicely, though personally I prefer a 30 cal rifle with modern ammunition that certainly costs well over 10 times that of hermit’s per round but I like to tune the terminal performance and so I am happy to pay for the best components. Like Hermit says its all about the bullet construction, its impact velocity and the target’s make up, once you get the bullet there. The best bullet is the one thing people skimp on most often, yet even the most expensive bullet possible is still likely to be less than the fuel to drive to your hunt, even if you hunt in the next village.When it comes to war versus hunting weapons, I think it depended on how wealthy you were but people have always liked the best tools for the job. I have an old muzzle loading war rifle and its a great clunky squaddie proof thing in 0.577, while the gentlemans’ hunting equivalents were a lot lighter and more accurate. I also have a small collection of spears and in most cases, they are quite specific to job -mail busting bodkins, leaf shaped general purpose ones and small very pointy vicious looking barbed hunting darts, long spears for desert warriors, medium length ones for savanna warriors… When it comes to archery the difference between a war bow and a hunting bow was huge -a war bow is a big item of artillery. You only train to hit a large cloth spread on the ground at distance. Just get a beefy british bloke to yard on it and send a bodkin pointed arrow 200 yards through a posh French ponce on a horse (any one in the charge will do) and you are a winner. A hunting bow will have a much lower draw weight (deer do not wear plate mail and once the arrow has passed through the animal any extra power was a waste of the aim you need for a heart and lung shot). It will be shorter to fit around vegetation. The arrow will be a broad head which would be useless on armour. So I think there was always a choice so long as you were not poor and then it did tend to be army surplus when it came to rifles anyway.

    My weapon of choice is whatever my ancestors(Swedish) used.All this exciting talk of weapons will cause Worm to have a heart attack. I bet his is in his element!
    Mickey has forwarded your email. I will send you one tomorrow.

    My element indeed, but only when it comes to the weapons and optical sights that I own or have owned.

    The evil in women’s hearts leaves them no moral bounds as to inhibit them from descending to the lowest levels of darkness to acquire their self entitled desires.

    #916617
    Hermit
    Hermit
    Participant

    Its been years since I shot a rocket launcher Colin -Carl Gustav 88 mill with HEAT round sure made a big bang on impact. (Even more impressive was my mate who shot his own webbing to bits with the back blast). I have a big old ten gague Colin. I could make up some 00 shells for you, if you ask nicely, though personally I prefer a 30 cal rifle with modern ammunition that certainly costs well over 10 times that of hermit’s per round but I like to tune the terminal performance and so I am happy to pay for the best components. Like Hermit says its all about the bullet construction, its impact velocity and the target’s make up, once you get the bullet there. The best bullet is the one thing people skimp on most often, yet even the most expensive bullet possible is still likely to be less than the fuel to drive to your hunt, even if you hunt in the next village.When it comes to war versus hunting weapons, I think it depended on how wealthy you were but people have always liked the best tools for the job. I have an old muzzle loading war rifle and its a great clunky squaddie proof thing in 0.577, while the gentlemans’ hunting equivalents were a lot lighter and more accurate. I also have a small collection of spears and in most cases, they are quite specific to job -mail busting bodkins, leaf shaped general purpose ones and small very pointy vicious looking barbed hunting darts, long spears for desert warriors, medium length ones for savanna warriors… When it comes to archery the difference between a war bow and a hunting bow was huge -a war bow is a big item of artillery. You only train to hit a large cloth spread on the ground at distance. Just get a beefy british bloke to yard on it and send a bodkin pointed arrow 200 yards through a posh French ponce on a horse (any one in the charge will do) and you are a winner. A hunting bow will have a much lower draw weight (deer do not wear plate mail and once the arrow has passed through the animal any extra power was a waste of the aim you need for a heart and lung shot). It will be shorter to fit around vegetation. The arrow will be a broad head which would be useless on armour. So I think there was always a choice so long as you were not poor and then it did tend to be army surplus when it came to rifles anyway.

    Don’t know anything about bows. Was considering getting a compound bow, but then thought about a nice cross bow. Was close to getting one of those, but too much money for what I consider to be a very close range weapon. Maybe one of these days, but it’s way down on my list.

    Listen to me.The only bow you’re going to get is a rainbow. F*g!

    LOL The freak who insists on posting phag poems on a men’s website calling me a phag, me, a guy who admits that he finds it difficult to turn down sex with women. Even if you’re not a queer, you’re much closer than I’ll ever be.

    The evil in women’s hearts leaves them no moral bounds as to inhibit them from descending to the lowest levels of darkness to acquire their self entitled desires.

    #916622
    +1
    Branched off
    Branched off
    Participant
    10927

    I haven’t got any Swedish arms Colin. Husquavarna used to make guns before bikes, chainsaws and sewing machines and you can still pick them up. Also the Swedes have a long tradition of being a bit different in their military calibres, different but it works.

    I do have a very nice axe by Gransfors Brucks. Not a weapon but a tool, however they do also make some weapon like ones for Nordic axe throwing events, if that floats your boat. I would recommend anyone outdoor buying a Gransfors Brucks axe of some sort. They are hand made and the steel is the awesome Uddeholm steel, so you have the best of tradition and modern. Its the only axe I own that you can put a razor edge on with ease (and it really is easy too). The carbon tool steel is that perfect balance of hard enough to hold the edge but will slide off under a hone (unlike the terrible stainless high end “survival” knives out there). It just flicks through wood. One of my all time favourite hand tools.

    A woman is like fire -fun to play with, can warm you through and cook your food, needs constant feeding, can burn you and consume all you own

    #916624
    +2
    SpiderHerder
    SpiderHerder
    Participant
    3758

    Must be a bit weird meeting someone in the woods with an AK. lol

    #916632
    Colin Combover in a Coma
    Colin Combover in a Coma
    Participant
    5066

    Its been years since I shot a rocket launcher Colin -Carl Gustav 88 mill with HEAT round sure made a big bang on impact. (Even more impressive was my mate who shot his own webbing to bits with the back blast). I have a big old ten gague Colin. I could make up some 00 shells for you, if you ask nicely, though personally I prefer a 30 cal rifle with modern ammunition that certainly costs well over 10 times that of hermit’s per round but I like to tune the terminal performance and so I am happy to pay for the best components. Like Hermit says its all about the bullet construction, its impact velocity and the target’s make up, once you get the bullet there. The best bullet is the one thing people skimp on most often, yet even the most expensive bullet possible is still likely to be less than the fuel to drive to your hunt, even if you hunt in the next village.When it comes to war versus hunting weapons, I think it depended on how wealthy you were but people have always liked the best tools for the job. I have an old muzzle loading war rifle and its a great clunky squaddie proof thing in 0.577, while the gentlemans’ hunting equivalents were a lot lighter and more accurate. I also have a small collection of spears and in most cases, they are quite specific to job -mail busting bodkins, leaf shaped general purpose ones and small very pointy vicious looking barbed hunting darts, long spears for desert warriors, medium length ones for savanna warriors… When it comes to archery the difference between a war bow and a hunting bow was huge -a war bow is a big item of artillery. You only train to hit a large cloth spread on the ground at distance. Just get a beefy british bloke to yard on it and send a bodkin pointed arrow 200 yards through a posh French ponce on a horse (any one in the charge will do) and you are a winner. A hunting bow will have a much lower draw weight (deer do not wear plate mail and once the arrow has passed through the animal any extra power was a waste of the aim you need for a heart and lung shot). It will be shorter to fit around vegetation. The arrow will be a broad head which would be useless on armour. So I think there was always a choice so long as you were not poor and then it did tend to be army surplus when it came to rifles anyway.

    Don’t know anything about bows. Was considering getting a compound bow, but then thought about a nice cross bow. Was close to getting one of those, but too much money for what I consider to be a very close range weapon. Maybe one of these days, but it’s way down on my list.

    Listen to me.The only bow you’re going to get is a rainbow. F*g!

    LOL The freak who insists on posting phag poems on a men’s website calling me a phag, me, a guy who admits that he finds it difficult to turn down sex with women. Even if you’re not a queer, you’re much closer than I’ll ever be.

    You’re a strange one.
    Just for you, I will compose some more for your return.

    #916633
    Colin Combover in a Coma
    Colin Combover in a Coma
    Participant
    5066

    I haven’t got any Swedish arms Colin. Husquavarna used to make guns before bikes, chainsaws and sewing machines and you can still pick them up. Also the Swedes have a long tradition of being a bit different in their military calibres, different but it works.
    I do have a very nice axe by Gransfors Brucks. Not a weapon but a tool, however they do also make some weapon like ones for Nordic axe throwing events, if that floats your boat. I would recommend anyone outdoor buying a Gransfors Brucks axe of some sort. They are hand made and the steel is the awesome Uddeholm steel, so you have the best of tradition and modern. Its the only axe I own that you can put a razor edge on with ease (and it really is easy too). The carbon tool steel is that perfect balance of hard enough to hold the edge but will slide off under a hone (unlike the terrible stainless high end “survival” knives out there). It just flicks through wood. One of my all time favourite hand tools.

    What are you planning on bringing when we meet?

    #916636
    +2
    Branched off
    Branched off
    Participant
    10927

    I haven’t got any Swedish arms Colin. Husquavarna used to make guns before bikes, chainsaws and sewing machines and you can still pick them up. Also the Swedes have a long tradition of being a bit different in their military calibres, different but it works.I do have a very nice axe by Gransfors Brucks. Not a weapon but a tool, however they do also make some weapon like ones for Nordic axe throwing events, if that floats your boat. I would recommend anyone outdoor buying a Gransfors Brucks axe of some sort. They are hand made and the steel is the awesome Uddeholm steel, so you have the best of tradition and modern. Its the only axe I own that you can put a razor edge on with ease (and it really is easy too). The carbon tool steel is that perfect balance of hard enough to hold the edge but will slide off under a hone (unlike the terrible stainless high end “survival” knives out there). It just flicks through wood. One of my all time favourite hand tools.

    What are you planning on bringing when we meet?

    A smile I hope

    A woman is like fire -fun to play with, can warm you through and cook your food, needs constant feeding, can burn you and consume all you own

    #916644
    +1
    Hermit
    Hermit
    Participant

    I haven’t got any Swedish arms Colin. Husquavarna used to make guns before bikes, chainsaws and sewing machines and you can still pick them up. Also the Swedes have a long tradition of being a bit different in their military calibres, different but it works.I do have a very nice axe by Gransfors Brucks. Not a weapon but a tool, however they do also make some weapon like ones for Nordic axe throwing events, if that floats your boat. I would recommend anyone outdoor buying a Gransfors Brucks axe of some sort. They are hand made and the steel is the awesome Uddeholm steel, so you have the best of tradition and modern. Its the only axe I own that you can put a razor edge on with ease (and it really is easy too). The carbon tool steel is that perfect balance of hard enough to hold the edge but will slide off under a hone (unlike the terrible stainless high end “survival” knives out there). It just flicks through wood. One of my all time favourite hand tools.

    What are you planning on bringing when we meet?

    A smile I hope

    Which will immediately transform into a look of horror upon seeing what the freak looks like.

    The evil in women’s hearts leaves them no moral bounds as to inhibit them from descending to the lowest levels of darkness to acquire their self entitled desires.

    #916645
    Colin Combover in a Coma
    Colin Combover in a Coma
    Participant
    5066

    I haven’t got any Swedish arms Colin. Husquavarna used to make guns before bikes, chainsaws and sewing machines and you can still pick them up. Also the Swedes have a long tradition of being a bit different in their military calibres, different but it works.I do have a very nice axe by Gransfors Brucks. Not a weapon but a tool, however they do also make some weapon like ones for Nordic axe throwing events, if that floats your boat. I would recommend anyone outdoor buying a Gransfors Brucks axe of some sort. They are hand made and the steel is the awesome Uddeholm steel, so you have the best of tradition and modern. Its the only axe I own that you can put a razor edge on with ease (and it really is easy too). The carbon tool steel is that perfect balance of hard enough to hold the edge but will slide off under a hone (unlike the terrible stainless high end “survival” knives out there). It just flicks through wood. One of my all time favourite hand tools.

    What are you planning on bringing when we meet?

    A smile I hope

    Which will immediately transform into a look of horror upon seeing what the freak looks like.

    Still better looking than you Aunt Heppie.

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