Welcome to my channel. I am North Carolina born and raised, and proud of it. I want to explore all that the Carolinas region has to offer. I hope you will join me as I check out historical sights; classic motorcycles; car shows; air shows; festivals; firearms; and all the cool stuff in between. The great states of North and South Carolina have an abundance of great places to check out. I will try to reply to your comments as often as I can, but please remember that this is not a full time gig. Enjoy! Edit: This "pandemic" has forced some adjustments to my original vision for this channel. Hopefully it won't be too long before more and more cool events are back on my schedule.
Good video. I own a Browning Buckmark with a bull barrel, and a Ruger 22/45 Mark 4. Both guns are accurate and fun to shoot. However, as far as maintainability, the Ruger runs circles around the Buckmark. One button and the entire top receiver comes off. No parts dropping or falling off. Not long ago I had to take the Browning apart, forgetting why. I thought it would be straightforward, but after an hour of struggling, I resorted to RU-vid looking at videos like yours; and I still struggled. I would take it apart again, but I would do so while watching your video as I break it down.
Happen to have a store or eBay site where you sell what you find? Unfortunately I’m unable to get places like this but enjoy the videos of your hunting.
In my younger years I enjoyed going to various landowners and having permission to dig for arrows. Back in the 50's and 60's most landowners did not require you to stop and let them know you were there. I remember the Reed ranch. He would open the gate in the early morning and close it at night. It was near Coryell Creek. Amazing finds and that site covered 2 acres. Corner tangs, spear points 7 to 10 inches in length with ears.Flint knives and broad heads. Too many to mention. Most of these finds were perfect. Lying there for thousands of years. I don't use the term Native Americans because science have proven there were no humans on the North American Continent. New evidence suggests that the first humans came from across the land bridg (Bering Strait) 23k years ago.
Not sure. Her niece was running it the past few years but I believe she is the back up girl now. Whether it's still in the family or not, I'm not sure. It was a bummer to see it repainted but then again nothing lasts forever. Thanks for watching!
Dude. That big piece of quartzite he found was absolute a hafted hatchet blade. Not a mortar. 100%. You’re the one who isn’t learned on Mississippian tool technology, and how they got away from putting grooves in their tools. The small piece of quartz was a hafted pecking stone. He absolutely was finding artifacts, but didn’t know what they were. Not his fault.
This is awesome mate, a big thank you for sharing. It's great to get a bit of a bo-peep outback where it's all happening and so many cool machines we don't always get to see🙃
I was certainly heart broken to find after way more years than I would have guessed guys in 2021 were still painting really sweet cars with the Trendy satin black BS tired weary old tore up look . I can't figure ..
TY, ballistol has served generations of shooters (including mine) and it plays well with leather and wood. Love the 22 frontier and its long barreled one, both still get play even though know I got a DD AR I remember my older cousin came back from the army with knowledge of CLP, and pops getting fussed when cans of it started showing up. Then my older brother went off in the same army and came back with this otis cable with screw in at the end for eye hole jag or brushes used in rods . . . thought it was a game changer until mom said the chamber wouldn't pass dad inspection but the barrel was clean.
I bought a 1953 Chevy and the plan was to turn it into a gasser, until i checked it out completely. I bought it for $600.00 dollars delivered and it is almost rust free. I was able to start it in 30 min and it had sat since 1973 when somebody replaced the starter and reversed the wires. I would love to find one that is pretty rusted so i wont be torn about cutting into it and turn the one i have into a highway cruser tow veh.
Chopper therapy. Great to see Paul Cox still turning out quality rides and Billy lane's Blue Bike still looking great after all these years! Hard to pick a favorite but the Dan Toce Indian and the Donny Loos knuckle did it for me.
Just bought a new buckmark , with the slide barely movable . From qa comment you made un your last video I realized the back top screw was too tight , and appeared To be loctited in place .After breaking it loose the slide works fine. Thanks for the helpful vidro