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What Really Happens When You Fire a Gun Underwater?

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“Moscow Rules” or “Situational Awareness”.

  1. Assume nothing.
  2. Never go against your gut.
  3. Everyone is potentially under opposition control.
  4. Do not look back; you are never completely alone.
  5. Go with the flow, blend in.
  6. Vary your pattern and stay within your cover.
  7. Lull them into a sense of complacency.
  8. Do not harass the opposition.
  9. Pick the time and place for action.
  10. Keep your options open.
  11. Russia May Have Ties to Russia | CNN Chyron Parodies | Know Your Meme
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The situational awareness is low with this boat!

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THE ULTIMATE SQUIRREL GUN GREAT DADS, .22 RIFLES, AND THE CIRCLE OF LIFE WRITTEN BY WILL DABBS, MD

I glanced at my buzzing phone between crises at work. There was a kid with an ear infection screaming in Room 2, and the elderly man with chest pain in 3 was very likely having a heart attack. The lady in 4 was sobbing hysterically. Her husband of three decades had moved out the night before, and she had no place else to turn. It was, in short, a fairly typical day at the office.

The message read, “Can I borrow a .22 rifle to chase squirrels? My old hunting buddy and I got access to a nice piece of woods, and we’d like to go walk around a bit. Dad.”

 

Everybody has a father. I am blessed with a dad.

Role Model, Inspiration, Hero

 

My father is an indispensable part of my success today. He and mom sacrificed when I was a kid and loved me even when I was unlovely. He lived the example of the Southern Christian gentleman and showed me what it meant to be a man. I never once heard him curse. If everybody had a dad like mine the planet would be a much more peaceful, respectful and productive place.

Dad was a football star in college and even earned a spread in Sports Illustrated. I take after my mom and apparently didn’t inherit any of that. He could have handily beat up everybody else’s dad. However, short of protecting his family I could not imagine anything provoking him to violence.

He and I split the cost of my first Daisy BB gun when I was 7. He gave me my first .22 rifle and 12-gauge shotgun. He taught me the basics of rifle marksmanship and wing shooting as well as how to talk to turkeys.

By the time I left for college, 13 wild turkeys had fallen to my Browning Auto-5 while hunting at his side. Christmas and Thanksgiving dinners were seldom without one. The musty sweet smell of the Army-issue field jacket he wore on hunting trips when I was a kid is burned indelibly into my memory. He would undoubtedly push back at the characterization, but if I took a clean piece of paper and designed the perfect dad he would look like mine.

Dad already has a splendid .22 rifle—a gorgeous Winchester 63 with a tubular magazine in the stock he got for Christmas when he was a kid. The gun shot straight enough for my mom to use it to clip sprigs of mistletoe out of towering Mississippi Delta oak trees for use as Christmas decorations back in the day. A closely held family secret was my mom was always the best shot in the family.

I borrowed his rifle for an article a couple of years ago, and, oddly, it never found its way back home. Dad could have just admonished me to give him his gun back. Instead, he just asked to scrounge one of mine. That’s the kind of guy he is.

After a literal lifetime spent squeezing triggers for fun and money I have tasted both the good stuff and the bad. However, this time was special. Here was my excuse to build my dad the ultimate Information Age counter-squirrel rifle.

A sound suppressed Ruger 10/22 rifle is the ideal Information Age counter-squirrel weapon. The stainless steel
construction combined with the indestructible carbon fiber stock from Archangel make the gun essentially weatherproof.

Foundation

 

Naturally the chassis is a Ruger 10/22. This classic, simple, ubiquitous self-loading .22 rifle is reliable and customizable unlike anything else on the market. It is also surprisingly inexpensive. Ruger makes so many of them mass production keeps the costs down. Spare parts and aftermarket cool-guy stuff are everywhere. In my dad’s competent hands, the Ruger 10/22 would be pure death to tree-dwelling rodents.

Standard Ruger 10/22 stocks are not bad, but this is for my dad. I want it to be perfect, so I looked to Archangel. Archangel produces a bewildering array of indestructible carbon fiber aftermarket stocks for an equally bewildering array of disparate weapons. For the old standby 10/22, their options run the gamut. They can transform your humble 10/22 into the spitting image of a German HK G36 combat rifle or set you up with a heavy target stock sporting multiple adjustments.

As this rifle was to be toted operationally in the field I opted for the midrange version. This stock incorporates a handy thumbwheel adjustment for length of pull yet remains sufficiently lightweight for easy carry. The stock free floats the barrel for accuracy, is festooned with sling sockets, and also includes a handy carrying compartment for a few spare .22 rounds or some emergency M&M’s.

I mounted glass on the top without a fuss. Neither Dad nor I have quite the visual acuity we once did, and a proper optical sight sure makes it easier to drop rounds on target. All Ruger 10/22 rifles come equipped with a sturdy sight rail, and the receivers are drilled and tapped from the factory.

Magazines range from standard helical feed 10-rounders up to 50-round drums with banana mags of various capacities liberally interspersed. New 10/22 rifles come standard with extended magazine release levers. Modern 10/22 fire control groups and barrel bands are polymer, but you will not wear out these components.

In a timeless tribute to the innate toxicity of testosterone, my dad and his best friend, both well into their 70’s, were recently hanging out at their hunting camp when an armadillo had the poor grace to make an unscheduled appearance. Dad produced his Ruger .22 Magnum revolver and, 6 rounds later, both my dad and his buddy were well and truly deafened. The armadillo, naturally, escaped unscathed. After some vigorous admonishment by his physician son, Dad now keeps a pair of muffs in his pickup truck.

A lifetime’s exposure to gunfire and chainsaws has already taken a toll on Dad’s hearing. You only get so much, and every time you are exposed to excessive noise you lose a little. It is imperative you safeguard every bit of it.

Hearing protection can be tough to manage when in the field hunting, particularly when there are multiple hunters involved. Sound suppressors are the obvious answer. Regrettably, however, civilian ownership requires the same onerous paperwork and $200 transfer tax fully automatic machineguns and grenade launchers might.

Sound suppressors should really be sold over the counter in blister packs at your local Shop-n-Grab. In America you are statistically at greater risk of succumbing to a shark attack or toothpick injury than a criminal assault with a suppressed weapon. (No kidding. I looked it up.) The only place Bad Guys use sound suppressors is on the screen at your local movie theater. However, there is a way to optimize this labyrinthine process.

If you transfer a sound suppressor to yourself as an individual then no one else may legally possess the item. However, if you form a trust it is possible to include more than one person as trustees. Details are available online, and the process is not particularly difficult or expensive. As such, I created a trust for both Dad and me allowing us to share legal possession of a .22 caliber can. The processing time takes about forever, but the resulting convenience makes the wait worthwhile.

The AATS1022 stock from Archangel sports an easily adjustable length of pull to accommodate different shooters.
The stock is functional and lightweight for optimal use in the field.

Practical Tactical

 

The resulting optimized squirrel rifle will easily keep its rounds within a tennis ball out to 50 meters or more in Dad’s capable hands. He used his Winchester 63 to drop swamp rabbits on the run when I was a kid. Dad’s the one who taught me to shoot, after all.

When stoked with subsonic ammo Dad’s squirrel gun is easy on the ears and even allows multiple shots at the same rat. With the can in place the bullet may agitate the squirrel, but the source of the shot is all but impossible to ascertain. The rifle is lightweight enough to tote long distances, and the Archangel stock allows the gun to be adjusted to fit your particular anatomy. While not just dirt cheap, this rig still remains within the means of most American shooters.

Solutions
There is indeed a great deal wrong with our nation today. Among our many resplendent social ills, one of our greatest shortcomings is how few American men these days are signing up to be good old-fashioned dads. The job is grueling and the pay sucks, but the unfiltered adoration from a job well done makes up for the suffering.

Dad invested his life in me. As a result, I understood the value of hard work, discipline, good citizenship, and character in a world rapidly becoming bereft of same. Everybody has a father. Lamentably, fewer modern Americans have a real dad. Dad, enjoy your new rifle. The tree rats won’t stand a chance.

Archangel
43 North 48th Avenue
Phoenix, AZ 85043
(800) 438-2547
https://promagindustries.com/archangel/

Sturm, Ruger & Co.
411 Sunapee Street
Newport, NH 03773
(336) 949-5200
https://www.ruger.com/

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Fieldcraft

“Funniest” negligent discharge ever

https://youtu.be/xdjx7pjJeAc

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Fieldcraft Gear & Stuff

How To Use A Speedloader

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Tips and Tactics for DIY Hunting and Fishing in Hawaii by ARAM VON BENEDIKT

photo-1.jpg (1)

There are few places on earth more enchanting than the isles of Hawaii. Most people think of Hawaii in terms of beautiful, well-groomed resorts, turquoise water, extravagant gift shops and Shave Ice. Not me. I think of Hawaii in terms of hunting abundant game through almost-impenetrable jungle, sheer cliffs plunging to the sea, guava fruit hanging ripe along steep mountain trails and kaleidoscope schools of fish just out of reach of my three-prong spear. And Shave Ice.

Hawaii is a relatively unknown sportsman’s paradise. Truth be known, there is more hunting opportunity to be found along the jungles and cliffs of the islands than in most of the mainland states.

Author poses with a downed billy, Hawaiian mountains in the background.


DIY in Hawaii
In my opinion, the finest opportunities for the do-it-yourself hunter in Hawaii are found in backcountry settings, meaning you’ll have to hike to access them. Most of the islands offer public lands that anyone can hunt. Those lands are often surrounded by private property, but there are usually trailheads that offer access. An experienced mountain hunter can rapidly get into good hunting, but don’t make the mistake of expecting the hunting to be easy.

My first hunt on the islands was a fast-and-light excursion into the cliffs after wild goats. I stuffed a sleeping bag, some water and my takedown recurve bow into my pack, and climbed through the cactus and thornbush on the dry side of the island toward the base of a cliff.

I had only 24 hours to hunt. A thousand feet above the sea I found goats, stalked the band for several hours and finally placed an arrow through a young billy. I watched him tip over dead, but his last kick sent him sliding over a cliff. Fortunately, I was able to find my way down to him and got some photos as the sun set across the sea far below. I quartered the goat out, hung the meat in a tree and slept the night on the mountain before packing out to the trailhead, 22 hours after I’d headed up. It was awesome.

Hunter with a skyward rifle pressed to his thight stands, looking out over a cliff


Seasons and Species
None of the big-game species found on the islands are indigenous. They have no natural predators, and some of the species proliferate so effectively they become problematic to the island habitat. As a result, seasons are long and limits incredibly generous. Huntable species vary from one island to another. If I’m not mistaken, pigs and goats can be hunted on almost all the islands, with mouflon sheep, axis, whitetail and Colombian blacktail deer huntable on select islands. Often the limit is one or two animals of each species per day. While you shouldn’t expect to fill those limits due to tough terrain, smart wildlife and dense vegetation, it’s still awesome to go hunting with “tags” in your pocket for multiple deer, goats and hogs every day. (No tags are needed in most areas, though you must have a license.)

Season dates are usually long, lasting months on end. Often there are several days (usually, but not always, Tuesday through Thursday) that are closed to hunting every week. Rules and regulations can be extensive and confusing, and vary from island to island and unit to unit, so be sure you study them well.

Hunting and Fishing Licenses
Obtaining a hunting license in Hawaii is not difficult, but you must plan ahead. Your stateside Hunter’s Education certificate is valid in Hawaii, but must be approved before you can buy a license. This can take three weeks or more. Paperwork and details are available online, but don’t fail to submit it at least a month prior to your trip. Island time is pretty awesome unless you’re waiting on something important like a hunting license. Have your approval letter in hand well before your trip, then you can walk into any game office and purchase your license on the spot. If you’ll be bowhunting, you may need an extra certificate. Everything should cost you right around $100. As of my last visit, no fishing license was required to fish from the beach with rod or spear, but be sure and check the regulations for the island you’re on.

Hawaiian DFG Kiosk


Checking In
Each hunting area on the islands features a check-in station. These vary from a simple kiosk, where you open a lid and sign in, to more elaborate stations offering maps, information and sign-in portals. In my experience, the local hunters take this process seriously, which inspires me to take it seriously, as well. After your hunt, you’re required to sign out and report any game harvested.

Rifle or Bow
One of my toughest dilemmas when planning a hunt to Hawaii is whether to hunt with bow or rifle. A bow requires no paperwork or permitting, while using a rifle requires you to undergo a significant permitting process, including being fingerprinted and registering the rifle at the police station within five days of arrival. You must have an address where the rifle will be kept, and it’s supposed to stay at that address unless at the range or hunting.

Another thought-provoking element that should influence your decision is the fact that many of the good local hunters consider 40 yards to be a rather long shot at either deer or hogs. Most are closer due to the dense jungle vegetation, somewhat equalizing the effective range of bow and rifle.

Hunter with pack and rifle looks into camera, with cliffs in the background.

That said, on a recent hunt to the islands, I passed up shots at five deer at distances greater than 250 yards. They were across a canyon, and while I was confident I could harvest them cleanly, I was not confident I could cross the canyon and recover them. Deer on that particular island are plentiful, but extremely hard to find and harvest—indeed they seem to be the Holy Grail of game there. I left my perch on the ridge exuberant at just seeing a deer, let alone five—the knowledge that I could have killed them was icing on the cake. I just needed to find a way across that canyon.

Most, if not all of the islands have archery-only units offering better access and more liberal hunting dates. It is my opinion that, all things considered, you’re usually better off hunting Hawaii with a bow than a rifle. You’ll simply experience more and better opportunity.

Hunter sits cross-legged by a tree, and glasses a nearby ridgeline from the top of a cliff.


Respect the Locals
There is a strong hunting tradition among the islanders, and in my opinion, it’s important to recognize and respect that. After all, those folks live and hunt there, often depending on the hunting for meat and recreation. You’re the visitor, so try to find ways and places to hunt that don’t intrude. It’s the ethical thing to do, and it may keep you out of a confrontation that’s not likely to end in your favor.

Wild Hawaiian berries and plants.

Ropes, Crampons and Taking the Shot
On my last trip (the same one where I passed up the five deer), I hunted my way down a giant ridge that hung above the sea like some primeval monster. I was looking for goats, and I found them. Several big billy goats strutted around, checking females and hunting breakfast in the sunshine of a beautiful Hawaiian morning. They were within easy range of my rifle and I spent hours shadowing them, watching my crosshairs on their ribs. The problem was, the cliffs they were living in were steep enough to scare an eagle, and there was no way I could access a goat had I shot one.

Some Hawaiian goat territory is not so steep and dangerous, but much of it is. You’ve got to be careful, especially when hunting solo, as I was. Next time I climb the ancient volcanic ridges of the islands hunting goat, I plan to have a set of strap-on crampons for my shoes, and several hundred feet of climbing rope. That way, if I shoot a goat, I’ll have the right tools with which to recover it.

The terrain on the islands—especially when hunting goats—can be extreme. Be prepared to pass up shots at animals you can’t ethically and safely recover. There will be some, even when you have crampons and climbing ropes. A goat or a deer is not worth risking a fall to your death, even in the most enchanting place on earth.

Boy with a fishing rod on a Hawaiian beach stands silhouetted against the setting sun.


Coolers and Meat Care
One of the biggest challenges to hunting on the islands is keeping your meat safe after the harvest. Humidity and heat are a constant challenge. I use a YETI cooler full of ice, and bury my meat in the ice as soon as I get it to the truck. The YETI is super tough and keeps the meat and ice cold for a good long time.

Fish with spears protruding


Fishing the Reefs
Thousands of colorful and tasty fish cruise inside the reefs that ring the islands. You can catch them with a little piece of raw shrimp on a hook cast into a channel or pocket in the reef, or spear them while snorkeling with a traditional three-prong Hawaiian spear. The locals set giant poles rigged with big hooks cast far out into the channels, with a bell to wake them if a big fish or shark strikes during the night. Fishing from the shore does not require a license, and you can pick up a basic rod and reel or a three-prong spear for $50 at the local Ace Hardware store. There are minimum-length requirements for the fish you’re allowed to spear, so study the regs before you snorkel into the blue yonder with your three-prong. Fish look bigger underwater than they actually are, so make sure they’re big enough before loosing your spear.

Two young girls enjoying shave ice, one throwing up the traditional Hawaiian, hang loose hand signal.


“Relax, This Ain’t the Mainland”
It’s one of my favorite sayings on the islands. Life and attitude are different there; being on time is not real critical, drivers are very courteous (even in heavy traffic) and people are not as tense and stressed. I love the feeling.

Being able to hike and eat guava fruit and thimbleberries picked fresh along the mountain trail is pretty awesome, too. Hunting through dense jungle, stalking along towering green cliffs draped with waterfalls and listening to the surf as the sun sets over the sea all combine to make the islands one of my favorite places on earth to hunt.

And of course, there are the sandy beaches, the snorkeling, surfing and the Shave Ice. Always the Shave Ice.

Categories
All About Guns Fieldcraft

Tips and Tactics for DIY Hunting and Fishing in Hawaii by ARAM VON BENEDIKT

photo-1.jpg (1)

There are few places on earth more enchanting than the isles of Hawaii. Most people think of Hawaii in terms of beautiful, well-groomed resorts, turquoise water, extravagant gift shops and Shave Ice. Not me. I think of Hawaii in terms of hunting abundant game through almost-impenetrable jungle, sheer cliffs plunging to the sea, guava fruit hanging ripe along steep mountain trails and kaleidoscope schools of fish just out of reach of my three-prong spear. And Shave Ice.

Hawaii is a relatively unknown sportsman’s paradise. Truth be known, there is more hunting opportunity to be found along the jungles and cliffs of the islands than in most of the mainland states.

Author poses with a downed billy, Hawaiian mountains in the background.


DIY in Hawaii
In my opinion, the finest opportunities for the do-it-yourself hunter in Hawaii are found in backcountry settings, meaning you’ll have to hike to access them. Most of the islands offer public lands that anyone can hunt. Those lands are often surrounded by private property, but there are usually trailheads that offer access. An experienced mountain hunter can rapidly get into good hunting, but don’t make the mistake of expecting the hunting to be easy.

My first hunt on the islands was a fast-and-light excursion into the cliffs after wild goats. I stuffed a sleeping bag, some water and my takedown recurve bow into my pack, and climbed through the cactus and thornbush on the dry side of the island toward the base of a cliff. I had only 24 hours to hunt. A thousand feet above the sea I found goats, stalked the band for several hours and finally placed an arrow through a young billy. I watched him tip over dead, but his last kick sent him sliding over a cliff. Fortunately, I was able to find my way down to him and got some photos as the sun set across the sea far below. I quartered the goat out, hung the meat in a tree and slept the night on the mountain before packing out to the trailhead, 22 hours after I’d headed up. It was awesome.

Hunter with a skyward rifle pressed to his thight stands, looking out over a cliff


Seasons and Species
None of the big-game species found on the islands are indigenous. They have no natural predators, and some of the species proliferate so effectively they become problematic to the island habitat. As a result, seasons are long and limits incredibly generous. Huntable species vary from one island to another. If I’m not mistaken, pigs and goats can be hunted on almost all the islands, with mouflon sheep, axis, whitetail and Colombian blacktail deer huntable on select islands. Often the limit is one or two animals of each species per day. While you shouldn’t expect to fill those limits due to tough terrain, smart wildlife and dense vegetation, it’s still awesome to go hunting with “tags” in your pocket for multiple deer, goats and hogs every day. (No tags are needed in most areas, though you must have a license.)

Season dates are usually long, lasting months on end. Often there are several days (usually, but not always, Tuesday through Thursday) that are closed to hunting every week. Rules and regulations can be extensive and confusing, and vary from island to island and unit to unit, so be sure you study them well.

Hunting and Fishing Licenses
Obtaining a hunting license in Hawaii is not difficult, but you must plan ahead. Your stateside Hunter’s Education certificate is valid in Hawaii, but must be approved before you can buy a license. This can take three weeks or more. Paperwork and details are available online, but don’t fail to submit it at least a month prior to your trip. Island time is pretty awesome unless you’re waiting on something important like a hunting license. Have your approval letter in hand well before your trip, then you can walk into any game office and purchase your license on the spot. If you’ll be bowhunting, you may need an extra certificate. Everything should cost you right around $100. As of my last visit, no fishing license was required to fish from the beach with rod or spear, but be sure and check the regulations for the island you’re on.

Hawaiian DFG Kiosk


Checking In
Each hunting area on the islands features a check-in station. These vary from a simple kiosk, where you open a lid and sign in, to more elaborate stations offering maps, information and sign-in portals. In my experience, the local hunters take this process seriously, which inspires me to take it seriously, as well. After your hunt, you’re required to sign out and report any game harvested.

Rifle or Bow
One of my toughest dilemmas when planning a hunt to Hawaii is whether to hunt with bow or rifle. A bow requires no paperwork or permitting, while using a rifle requires you to undergo a significant permitting process, including being fingerprinted and registering the rifle at the police station within five days of arrival. You must have an address where the rifle will be kept, and it’s supposed to stay at that address unless at the range or hunting.

Another thought-provoking element that should influence your decision is the fact that many of the good local hunters consider 40 yards to be a rather long shot at either deer or hogs. Most are closer due to the dense jungle vegetation, somewhat equalizing the effective range of bow and rifle.

Hunter with pack and rifle looks into camera, with cliffs in the background.

That said, on a recent hunt to the islands, I passed up shots at five deer at distances greater than 250 yards. They were across a canyon, and while I was confident I could harvest them cleanly, I was not confident I could cross the canyon and recover them. Deer on that particular island are plentiful, but extremely hard to find and harvest—indeed they seem to be the Holy Grail of game there. I left my perch on the ridge exuberant at just seeing a deer, let alone five—the knowledge that I could have killed them was icing on the cake. I just needed to find a way across that canyon.

Most, if not all of the islands have archery-only units offering better access and more liberal hunting dates. It is my opinion that, all things considered, you’re usually better off hunting Hawaii with a bow than a rifle. You’ll simply experience more and better opportunity.

Hunter sits cross-legged by a tree, and glasses a nearby ridgeline from the top of a cliff.


Respect the Locals
There is a strong hunting tradition among the islanders, and in my opinion, it’s important to recognize and respect that. After all, those folks live and hunt there, often depending on the hunting for meat and recreation. You’re the visitor, so try to find ways and places to hunt that don’t intrude. It’s the ethical thing to do, and it may keep you out of a confrontation that’s not likely to end in your favor.

Wild Hawaiian berries and plants.

Ropes, Crampons and Taking the Shot
On my last trip (the same one where I passed up the five deer), I hunted my way down a giant ridge that hung above the sea like some primeval monster. I was looking for goats, and I found them. Several big billy goats strutted around, checking females and hunting breakfast in the sunshine of a beautiful Hawaiian morning. They were within easy range of my rifle and I spent hours shadowing them, watching my crosshairs on their ribs. The problem was, the cliffs they were living in were steep enough to scare an eagle, and there was no way I could access a goat had I shot one.

Some Hawaiian goat territory is not so steep and dangerous, but much of it is. You’ve got to be careful, especially when hunting solo, as I was. Next time I climb the ancient volcanic ridges of the islands hunting goat, I plan to have a set of strap-on crampons for my shoes, and several hundred feet of climbing rope. That way, if I shoot a goat, I’ll have the right tools with which to recover it.

The terrain on the islands—especially when hunting goats—can be extreme. Be prepared to pass up shots at animals you can’t ethically and safely recover. There will be some, even when you have crampons and climbing ropes. A goat or a deer is not worth risking a fall to your death, even in the most enchanting place on earth.

Boy with a fishing rod on a Hawaiian beach stands silhouetted against the setting sun.


Coolers and Meat Care
One of the biggest challenges to hunting on the islands is keeping your meat safe after the harvest. Humidity and heat are a constant challenge. I use a YETI cooler full of ice, and bury my meat in the ice as soon as I get it to the truck. The YETI is super tough and keeps the meat and ice cold for a good long time.

Fish with spears protruding


Fishing the Reefs
Thousands of colorful and tasty fish cruise inside the reefs that ring the islands. You can catch them with a little piece of raw shrimp on a hook cast into a channel or pocket in the reef, or spear them while snorkeling with a traditional three-prong Hawaiian spear. The locals set giant poles rigged with big hooks cast far out into the channels, with a bell to wake them if a big fish or shark strikes during the night. Fishing from the shore does not require a license, and you can pick up a basic rod and reel or a three-prong spear for $50 at the local Ace Hardware store. There are minimum-length requirements for the fish you’re allowed to spear, so study the regs before you snorkel into the blue yonder with your three-prong. Fish look bigger underwater than they actually are, so make sure they’re big enough before loosing your spear.

Two young girls enjoying shave ice, one throwing up the traditional Hawaiian, hang loose hand signal.


“Relax, This Ain’t the Mainland”
It’s one of my favorite sayings on the islands. Life and attitude are different there; being on time is not real critical, drivers are very courteous (even in heavy traffic) and people are not as tense and stressed. I love the feeling.

Being able to hike and eat guava fruit and thimbleberries picked fresh along the mountain trail is pretty awesome, too. Hunting through dense jungle, stalking along towering green cliffs draped with waterfalls and listening to the surf as the sun sets over the sea all combine to make the islands one of my favorite places on earth to hunt.

And of course, there are the sandy beaches, the snorkeling, surfing and the Shave Ice. Always the Shave Ice.

Categories
All About Guns Fieldcraft

Cooper’s Color Code | You’re Doing it Wrong by Aaron Haskins

Col. Cooper's Color Code is frequently misinterpreted and taken to be a "Situational Awareness" mnemonic; this is fundamentally incorrect.

Col. Cooper’s Color Code (the “Cooper Color Code”) — you’re very likely doing it wrong. There’s a possibility this article will slaughter a few sacred cows. It is certain to cause some ass pain. That’s okay, though. What we want to do, more than anything else is to get engaged professionals talking whether they agree with the author’s contention or not. Know why? Because discussion, disagreement, and civil discourse are where learning occurs.

If you’re going to teach Cooper’s Colors, don’t teach it as advocating a mythical and unattainable concept of situational awareness. Teach it as the man intended: mental preparation for the decision to press the trigger.

Situational Awareness & Your Mind: Rethinking Cooper’s Color Code

At some point in the 1970s, Jeff Cooper created what is often called the Color Code. When he originally thought it up, and as he taught it, his purpose was to describe a shooter’s “…capacity…to cross the psychological barrier that inhibits [the] ability to take deadly action,” i.e., his or her mental preparation to press the trigger on a live target.[1]

The “situational awareness” interpretation of the Color Code is fundamentally flawed.

Cooper’s Color Code: Mistranslated and Misunderstood

In Cooper’s original intent, one could scale from Condition White, in which one is completely unprepared for combat, to Condition Red, in which one is psychologically committed to combat, regardless of whether the fight has actually begun or not. Essentially, he recognized many people must mentally gear up for violence, and his code traced that progression to help the mental switch.

That is not, however, how Cooper’s Colors are generally used in the modern firearms training world.

Instead, they have been reinterpreted as shorthand to describe an individual’s “situational awareness.”  Per this interpretation, the one most commonly cited in blogs and articles across the firearms community, an individual in Condition White is relaxed and unaware of what is happening around them. In Condition Yellow they’re in a state of “relaxed awareness”—not specifically paying attention to anything, but generally aware of what’s going on around them. In Condition Orange, they’re focused and specifically paying attention to something they’ve identified as a potential threat. And in Condition Red they’ve identified a threat and are completely focused on it, ready to respond to anything it does. It’s a simple, easy-to-remember system.

Unfortunately, whereas Cooper’s original Color Code is an effective tool to help ramp up to a mental state suited for combat, the “situational awareness” version so commonly used today is essentially useless and misleading. It fundamentally misunderstands how the brain scans for and responds to threats, and thus can harm shooters by leading them astray during training and development of their situational awareness skills.

The deliberate mind is lazy and cannot multitask.

Cognition and Reaction | the Duality of Grey Matter

Cognitive psychologists and decision scientists often model the brain as operating on two related but very different systems.[2] In this dual-system model of cognition, System 1 may be thought of as the “automatic” mind and System 2 as the “deliberate” mind. The automatic mind runs the vast majority of what you do. It multitasks and makes decisions very quickly without you ever consciously thinking about them. The deliberate mind, on the other hand, only deals with one thing at a time, and does so much more slowly than the automatic mind. This distinction is critical to understanding decision making because each system does so via different processes.

The deliberate mind uses what is sometimes called “analytical” decision making, in which it assesses the situation and evaluates multiple options to choose the best one.[3] The automatic mind, however, uses intuitive decision making, in which it only evaluates a single choice based on the available information, assesses its suitability by running a mental simulation, and either implements it or discards it (in which case it begins assessing the next potential choice). We all like to think we’re primarily analytical, assessing all our options and making the best possible choices.  But the truth is we aren’t. The deliberate mind is lazy—it takes extra blood flow to the brain to make analytical decisions. And, more importantly, it literally can only focus on one thing at a time.  The deliberate mind cannot multitask—when it tries to do so, it just shifts attention from task to task to task and does none of them well. So it shifts as much work as possible to the automatic brain.

To see how this works, think about when you first learned to drive a car. The first time you sat behind the wheel, you were trying to pay attention to everything: your hands on the wheel, the speedometer, your side and rear-view mirrors, the road in front of you, your blind spots, all the vehicles and pedestrians and obstacles around you, etc. And you weren’t doing any of it well. That’s because when you first learn a task, your deliberate mind is in charge, and its efforts to do everything at once lead you it doing everything badly. But the automatic mind learns through repetition. So you practiced, and after a few times driving, you began to relax. You kept your eyes primarily on the road in front of you, occasionally automatically scanning your mirrors and blind spots to update your picture of the situation around you, but then returning to the road. You learned to talk to passengers and listen to the radio without pulling your attention away from the road and becoming a danger to yourself or others. This is because as you learned, your deliberate brain began passing tasks off to your automatic brain, freeing itself up to pay attention to other things, like that audiobook you’ve been listening to for the past six hours, or the beautiful scenery along the highway.

This lack of paying deliberate attention to everything all the time doesn’t mean you’ve lost your ability to react to danger. To understand why let’s look at how the automatic mind processes information and makes decisions.

Never be in Condition White” is an effectively meaningless phrase.

Your Script: Recognition-Primed Decision Making

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Information about the world around us reaches our brain through our five senses, and the brain then must process and decide based on this data.[4] Because the automatic mind is always on and always processing, it responds to this information first, and only activates the deliberate mind if it deems it necessary. It does so by a process that intuition researcher Gary Klein calls Recognition-Primed Decision Making, or pattern recognition. Essentially, the brain has a massive repertoire of stored patterns, and the automatic mind compares the information it receives from the senses to this pattern library.  The brain also has a store of heuristics (which Klein calls “action scripts”)—simple automatic algorithms of decision-making designed to lead to “good enough” results in most situations, if not the best possible outcome for any specific case.[5]

When the automatic mind matches the information it’s receiving from the senses to one of the patterns stored in its library, it applies an appropriate heuristic. This is what’s commonly called intuition or a “gut feeling.” Generally, the automatic brain does not weigh its options. Rather, it picks a good fit choice, imagines the outcome, and if it doesn’t identify a problem, it executes. Only if its mental simulation reveals a potential problem does it discard the initial heuristic and move on to the next choice. This is intuitive decision making in a nutshell. It happens very rapidly, often completely unconsciously, and most of the time achieve very good results.

The deliberate mind doesn’t even enter the decision-making process unless the automatic mind first notes a problem. My colleagues and I informally refer to this as the “risk monitor,” the process by which the automatic mind, in the process of matching sensory information to stored patterns, identifies either a known risk pattern or an unknown situation and triggers the deliberate mind to begin focusing on the problem and analyzing its potential courses of action. Of course, the automatic mind operates much faster than the deliberate mind, so it is often applying the appropriate action script (heuristic) even as the deliberate mind begins assessing the situation. To illustrate this, let’s return to our driving example.

You’re now an experienced driver, and on the highway, you’re comfortable letting your automatic mind deal with the task of actually driving and the myriad sub-tasks that actually involves. And you’re most likely comfortably driving 5-10 miles per hour over the speed limit. But the instant you recognize the shape of a potential police car up ahead by the side of the road, what happens? If you’re like most people, your attention shifts from wherever it was before and you begin focusing on the car to see if it is, in fact, the police—because your automatic mind matched that pattern of information to the known risk of a potential speeding ticket. And yet, while you’re assessing and deciding the best course of action, your foot probably shifted from the gas to the brakes, because while the slow deliberate mind is still spinning up and figuring out what to do, the fast automatic mind already applied the appropriate action script to ensure you’re under the speed limit and reduce the risk of a ticket, just in case it’s a cop. Beyond that, the deliberate mind takes control and decides whether to maintain your (new) current speed, slow down even more, or what.

“So that’s interesting and all,” you may be thinking to yourself,[6] “but how is it relevant to self-defense?” It’s fairly simple: knowing how the brain processes information and makes decisions means we now know the key to effective threat identification and taking the appropriate immediate action. Such action, whether it’s ducking for cover, drawing and firing, running away, or any other response lies in the automatic mind. That’s the part of your mind that is always active, always scanning, always comparing what it sees to known patterns to identify the appropriate response.

So, much loved as they are in the firearms community, what this means is that the situational awareness interpretation of Cooper’s Colors can only describe the deliberate mind’s level of attention to a given potential problem. But given that the deliberate mind can only pay attention to one thing at a time, and takes significant energy to focus, the adage (and occasional admonishment) to “Never be in Condition White” is effectively meaningless.

We’re almost always in “Condition White,” because the deliberate mind is busy focusing on the task at hand and not scanning for threats

It is all but impossible to actively scan for threats while talking on the phone or finding a debit card in a wallet at the ATM, or doing any of the thousands of tasks our deliberate minds must focus on throughout the day. Trying to do both at once just makes us ineffective at both, just as trying to pay attention to everything makes us bad drivers. To expect otherwise is unrealistic and potentially dangerous.

Training should focus on the ability to capture relevant information, identify potential threats, and respond heuristically.

Condition Fight

Instead of this unhelpful misinterpretation of Cooper’s Colors, then, I suggest that we in the firearms and self-defense community begin moving away from a useless “constant vigilance” philosophy and focus instead on training shooters to let the automatic mind shoulder the burden of identifying and responding to threats.

We don’t respond properly to threats when:

a) we don’t perceive the relevant information because our sensors are directed elsewhere;

b) our brains don’t interpret that information correctly to alert us to the threat; or

c) our brains don’t immediately know the appropriate action script or heuristic with which to respond to an identified threat.

This is what “Condition Yellow” is really talking about.

Thus, training should focus both on building habits that increase the likelihood of the sensors capturing relevant information, and then on building known patterns and action scripts in the automatic mind to correctly identify and respond to potential threats. The former is as simple as ensuring we aren’t walking around staring at our phones with headphones in, oblivious to the world around us. We need to ensure our sensors can capture the relevant information around us, which is what “Condition Yellow” is really talking about.

Without the next steps, without making sure the mind can put the pieces together and respond appropriately, looking and listening does nothing for us. And that aspect is much more difficult, and generally overlooked by those talking about “mindset” and “awareness.” Violent encounters often occur much too quickly for the deliberate mind ever to react and make conscious decisions, so we must set ourselves up for success by training our automatic minds to spot threats and apply the appropriate heuristic for that situation.

What does that look like? Well, as mentioned, the automatic mind learns through repetition and practice. Taking a class on indicators of violent intent is great, but it does absolutely nothing to build those patterns into the automatic mind’s library of stored threat patterns. Repetitive scenario training and simulations are probably your best bet for safe and effective training (which is no more a new concept than is stress inoculation). It’s time-consuming and resource-intensive, but the military uses such training to great effect to make threat identification and response almost instinctive. When a Soldier hears an explosion in a combat zone, the hundreds or thousands of similar times he or she’s been through that scenario in training means he or she’s unlikely to freeze in indecision. The automatic mind already knows what to do: take cover, identify the source, and continue as the situation dictates.

Athletes, law enforcement officers, pilots, and many others working in fields that require the ability to instantly react to changing circumstances at a rate much faster than the deliberate brain can respond all use variations of scenario practice and repetition to build that automaticity. It works, and it works well.

Action scripts must be built before-hand.

Cooper’s Color Code: Codify It

If you don’t have the time and resources for high-quality resource training, there are other options. The goal is just to build the patterns and responses into the automatic mind, which can be done visually. After you’ve taken that class on threat indicators, watch lots of videos of violent attacks (which can be found on YouTube) and practice spotting those indicators in real situations.

See if you can figure out who and where and how the attack will happen before it does. Then reinforce that with visualization: run through mental scenarios where you see and respond to specific indicators as appropriate. Build those action scripts, and attach them to sensory patterns, so you’re not having to stop and think your way through every decision when action and reaction are being measured against each other when every tenth of a second counts.

This is critical:

If you’ve never even imagined doing something, you cannot do it.

The brain has no mental simulation to judge against during its intuitive decision-making process. With the exceptions of basic instinctive heuristics like fight/flight/freeze, an action script will literally not even appear as an option to your automatic mind unless you build it beforehand. Visualization implants the script in the brain, and repeated visualization means the automatic mind is more likely to draw upon it as a first or second choice option when it identifies the associated sensory pattern. If you can’t do scenario practice, you must do visualization practice.

The instant you stop to think is the instant you’ve lost.

As You See So Shall You Compete

These same principles can be applied to competitive shooting, as well as defensive situations.

Many high-level competitors visualize each stage before running it. All they’re doing is prepping the automatic mind, so their deliberate mind is free to focus on deliberate decisions in response to potential unexpected and changing conditions. The time saved in decision making, by ensuring the automatic mind already knows which targets to shoot and in what order, adds up over the course of a stage and a match. New competitors hesitate because they don’t have the sensory patterns and action scripts mastered that allow them to flow through a course. Experienced competitors just execute.

Many top-level competitors, in any form of competition from shooting to martial arts to ball sports, will tell you that the instant you stop to think is the instant you’ve lost. Whether you’re playing for a title, or prize money, or the higher stakes of life and death, the mechanics of decision making remain the same. But to take advantage of them, you have to do more than give lip service to a vague concept like “situational awareness” or “vigilance.” You have to set yourself up for success by training your automatic mind.

Col. Cooper himself fought gains the ineffective (incorrect) reinterpretation of his Code.

Cooper’s Color Code Correct

An interesting note: this mental preparation of the automatic mind before the fight kicks off is pretty much exactly what Cooper intended with his original version of the Color Code. He focused on the psychological difficulty of the decision to kill, but the principles of decision making apply exactly as I’ve described. Col. Cooper spent decades combatting the ineffective reinterpretation of his Code so commonly heard today, because “constant vigilance” just doesn’t work. If you’re going to teach Cooper’s Colors, don’t teach it as advocating a mythical and unattainable concept of situational awareness. Teach it as the man intended: mental preparation for the decision to press the trigger. A tool to set your automatic mind up for success.

 

Cooper's Color Code for situation awareness and threat awareness has been distorted and misunderstood over the years.

Acknowledgements: A number of firearms, martial arts, and self-defense industry professionals and other subject matter experts reviewed this article for clarity and accuracy prior to publication. In no particular order, the author would especially like to thank Claude Werner (The Tactical Professor), Jon Hauptman (PHLster), Morgan Atwood (BFE Labs), James Quigg (Fight IQ), Benn Coren (Environmental Testing & Inspection), Keith Finch (GAT Marketing), Brandon Foat (Minnesota Sword Club), Rob Reed, Stephen Bell, and Will Morgan, among others, for their input and feedback during the writing and editing process.

[1] Jeff Cooper, “Commentaries,” Vol. 12, No. 5.

[2] This model is discussed in many books and articles, including works by Sloman (1996), Stanovich (1999), and Hogarth (2001), but is most well-known from Daniel Kahneman’s book, “Thinking, Fast and Slow” (2011).  The now-standard “System 1 and System 2” terminology itself originated in Stanovich and West (2000), but for clarity’s sake I have chosen to use the informal terminology of “automatic mind” and “deliberate mind” to refer to the exact same System 1 and System 2, respectively.  This model of cognition has been widely applied in fields ranging from social psychology to behavioral economics.

[3] Well, sometimes.  The deliberate mind sometimes uses the same intuitive decision-making process as the automatic mind, too.  It’s a bit weird and confusing, but it’s also not terribly relevant to our purposes here.

[4] A disclaimer: I am not a cognitive neuroscientist, neurologist, or neurophysiologist.  While it is my understanding that there *is* neuroscientific evidence to back up this model of cognition, from Paul Glimcher and others in the cross-disciplinary field of neuroeconomics, I will leave that examination to subject matter experts and constrain my comments to my own areas of expertise.  Therefore, I will not attempt to describe the specific mechanisms in the nervous system by which information reaches the brain and the various parts of the brain itself that sort through this information and make decisions, and will comment only on how this is applied in terms of cognitive psychology and applied decision science.

[5] These heuristics are built up through experience, by trial and error and practice over one’s lifetime.  Some basic heuristics even appear to be hardwired into our brains through evolutionary processes, such as fight/flight/freeze responses to potential danger.

Categories
Fieldcraft

What We Plan For Sheriff Jim reminds us that wishing and hopeful thinking should not be part of your self-defense plan. by SHERIFF JIM WILSON

Sheriff Jim Wilson

There is a saying among those who hunt dangerous game that we don’t plan for when everything goes right, we plan for when everything goes wrong. Thus, we carry guns of suitable and substantial caliber. And, we generally hunt with a guide, or partner, similarly armed just to throw some of the advantage in our own direction. The hunter can easily become the hunted when dealing with the likes of cape buffalo, Kodiak bear or elephant, just to name three of the tough ones.

The armed citizen should be able to easily identify with that statement, too. Of course, the hunter at least knows that he is going hunting, while the armed citizen may become a target without ever knowing it. All the more reason to be ready when Murphy’s Law goes into effect.

For years, one of the largest of the American bears on the record books (a polar bear as I recall) was taken by a native trapper with a .22 rifle. Yet, I am pleased to report, this did not cause all of the would-be bear hunters to rush out and purchase .22 rifles.

By contrast, however, I see quite a number of armed citizens packing small, lightweight guns in very light calibers. Occasionally someone will inform us that more people have been killed by the .22 rimfire than any other caliber. The only problem is that our mission is to stop an attack as quickly as possible; death, should it occur, is only a byproduct of the need to protect ourselves from death or serious bodily injury. The fact that a bad guy dies later, even two or three days later, does nothing to cause an immediate cessation to violence.

If those popgun calibers were so effective we might see our police and military armed with them. One should plan for when everything goes wrong, therefore I’ll stick with a minimum of 9mm/.38 Special and suggest that you do the same unless you have some physical impairment that prohibits it.

Along these same lines, another thing that bothers me are those who choose to carry a pistol with an empty chamber. I will freely admit that, when everything goes right, one can draw, chamber a round and get off a shot in a surprisingly short time period. The problem is that it’s a criminal attack and things rarely go right when people are trying to kill you. The empty-chamber assumption relies on the belief that you’ll have time to chamber a round (you probably won’t) and that you will have the use of both of your hands (you might not). If semi-automatics with loaded chambers really make a person nervous, I suggest they get a good DA revolver.

The armed citizen who is serious about personal defense should take the time, periodically, to examine their choice of gear and defensive tactics. There is a big difference between planning for when everything goes right and dealing with the reality that everything has gone wrong. Which camp do you fall into?