Isn't it obvious....you bought some of those inferno rounds![ROFL1]
if you haven't seen the video, google it. the onion inferno bullets. or the flesh shredding ones!
I've seen that video...awesome!
+1 this.
I was about to post the same thing but figured I needed to read the entire thread before posting for once.
As much as I believe in our right (and responsibility) to shoot, I also think we need to be responsible and take every precaution to avoid becoming the problem. While most of us would take extra measures to avoid starting a fire with their shooting activities, those folks who never police their targets, brass, shotgun hulls, etc. and who love to shoot up trees versus real targets don't put one thought into the possibility that their actions could spark another raging fire in these particularly dry conditions.
A temporary ban makes sense - just so long as they don't turn it into a permanent shooting ban.
No one feeling sorry for themselves here. I was jokingly making a point on how campfires and shooting go hand in hand with camping in Colorado, or at leaste they always have for me and my family. If you noticed a couple posts later I made it a point to say I would never risk starting a fire in my wonderful state. My mother is staying with me because she is on evac herself.
I would also have to agree. I don't mind a limitation while it is so hot and dry and hundreds upon hundreds of more people working in the wilderness with their equipment to try and control them...
However, I again agree that libs and anti-gun people will use whatever they can to limit our rights.
Thanks to mother nature, shooting at national forest is a no go for now.
I won't even bring a laptop [battery] that has 0.001% chance of causing a fire at a national forest.
I once saw a fire at the Boulder Rifle Club, INSIDE, during one of the matches. Somehow, a pile of dry leaves caught fire and flared up high and quick! Something must of ricocheted out of the traps.