OP
Anonymous Poster
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- Joined
- Sep 27, 2005
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That's the way I remember it. Everybody I knew had at least one gun in Texas. Even if it was just an old relic handed down from generation to generation and was no longer used. It was still mounted over the door or the fireplace.
One thing I miss about Texas was the rifle racks. Everybody had rifle racks in the back windows of their pickups. In case a cow needed to be put down, or a mercy killing of a mangled deer/dog needed to be performed at the side of the highway. It was not uncommon in rural areas to drive down the highway and see a man in firing stance putting a wounded animal out of it's misery.
My grandmother, visiting from Ohio, was alarmed. Said she felt like she was in the middle of the civil war, drawing attention to something that to me had long since gone unoticed and unremarked upon. It didn't worry me. For some reason it reassured me. I guess it's because it was what I was used to. Everybody I knew owned guns and used them apporpriately. Kids were trained to use them safely for appropriate purposes, such as hunting or some of the above mentioned uses.
One thing I miss about Texas was the rifle racks. Everybody had rifle racks in the back windows of their pickups. In case a cow needed to be put down, or a mercy killing of a mangled deer/dog needed to be performed at the side of the highway. It was not uncommon in rural areas to drive down the highway and see a man in firing stance putting a wounded animal out of it's misery.
My grandmother, visiting from Ohio, was alarmed. Said she felt like she was in the middle of the civil war, drawing attention to something that to me had long since gone unoticed and unremarked upon. It didn't worry me. For some reason it reassured me. I guess it's because it was what I was used to. Everybody I knew owned guns and used them apporpriately. Kids were trained to use them safely for appropriate purposes, such as hunting or some of the above mentioned uses.