I shot my air gun today - literately

Today I pulled the Airwolf out for charging. There was an AirForce Condor in the bag also which I thought had a slow leak the last time I shot it, probably a year ago. I wondered if air had all leaked out so I cocked it and thought I checked for pellet and fired. It was loaded and I shot the Airwolf in the grip. What dumb ass thing to do. I was lucky only the gun was damaged - it could have been a real mess. While I called myself checking the breech, evidently I didn't or didn't do it right. 

I'm just posting to remind all to not be like the guy who shot his own gun. Air guns are dangerous. 

I'm not going to repair the Airwolf - I w
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ant the scar there to remind me how stupid I was. 
 
At least you weren't the guy who put his finger right in front of the barrel to check if air was coming out! (I'm kinda joking, but I'm sure it's had to have happened to someone somewhere. I hate to admit, but I popped myself right in the finger tip with a 1.6J airsoft gun which still had one 0.30gram bb still in the chamber. Didn't break skin, but what a blood blister and I couldn't touch it to anything for a good month. Never again - it could be a very costly mistake.)

There is a grim news article if you search for it, takes place in upper England or maybe Scotland. Story is a grandfather accidentally shot his grandson in the stomach with a springer. Something bizarre like he told the kid to get over it and walked away. The kid died and the grandfather was sent to jail for murder. There's also some really strange internal family drama going on at the same time.

Thank you for the reminder. Shoot safe all!


 
There's also some really strange internal family drama going on at the same time.

Always is. 

Thanks for the self-deprecating heads-up, marcor. We all need to be alert always, extreme and unlikely as that sounds, or we face the consequences.

I usually pride myself on safety, but I've wandered in front of the wrong end of my barrel too many times lately. It's pretty humbling when you catch yourself, and chilling to think of how many times you might not.
 
Quick safety tip- flash a light (got a cellphone?) in the chamber and look at the end of the barrel from the side.

If the light appears from the muzzle, good on you,

If not, there is something in there (could be a spider, but why chance it).

BTW- 

In California Hunter Safety, the definition of a gun's safety is that it is a mechanical device that can AND WILL fail. Don't know how many times I've been swept by guns "on Safe" or "unloaded".

Getting off of my soap box, won't mention the times when I've had accidental discharges :)