SIGforum
A long time ago

This topic can be found at:
https://sigforum.com/eve/forums/a/tpc/f/9666031561/m/2941041411

September 10, 2012, 09:50 PM
MRBTX
A long time ago
July 84- 21 yrs old, practically married (26 yrs now), just got hired as a rodman on a survey crew. Stayed broke, but never went hungry. Those were simple times compared to now. Helped me grow up a lot.
December 29, 2012, 11:42 PM
Tommydogg
1984, I requested and was granted a split tour to the precom unit for the USS Iowa BB61. Had some awsome fun times on that old battlewagon!


___________________________
"I Get It Now"

Beth Greene
March 03, 2013, 12:46 AM
George85019
I would have been 31 in 1984, "ah but I was so much older then, I'm younger than that now" Bob Dylan


NO SIGnature
May 10, 2013, 03:49 PM
deankal
I'm late to the game here, but this thread really brought me some nostalgia. I was about halfway through college, and living the frat life large. I always tell my nieces and nephews how their generation missed out. This was the best years of my life; lotsa pretty girls, pre-aids, plentiful party materials, great music.



Now I'm old, boring, and pissed off about gun control.
May 25, 2013, 06:31 PM
Let's Go Rangers
1984 - "I lost my virginity and fell in love." Was doing the Jersey Shore thing back in those days. As my friend said, regarding Obama's re-election, "The country, like ourselves, peaked in the 80's."
July 05, 2013, 12:46 AM
midwest guy
Stumbled across this late, I have hundreds of Kodachrome 64 slides I am going to have to convert to digital. Thanks for the great photo Para, MG
July 29, 2013, 07:37 PM
Cam
Great picture! Some guns are like records. They can make you remember special times and places.
August 20, 2013, 11:20 AM
Udo
Fifty one years ago at TPI. I'm lower right with my personal 52B


August 20, 2013, 07:33 PM
kr350psd
I have #020406.


October 03, 2013, 05:02 PM
ikor1
34 years old and about 1/4 way through my career as a cop...and proud of it :-)


Run Fast, Bite Hard!
November 02, 2013, 12:23 PM
justjoe
quote:
So much of what you see people doing today is so "artsy."
Seems so "self aware.


And as a result the ordinary things-- which are seen to be extraordinary when you photograph them-- are lost in the shuffle. In the earliest days of photography, the photograph itself was so extraordinary that they almost didn't care what they photographed. The photograph transformed it. So we have great photos of street scenes with blurred horses and dogs, families sitting in rows in front of their homes, that kind of thing.

And Para's shot: Kids with the new rifle, shooting along the railroad tracks. The 1/500 shutter speed catches the just-ejected shell.

The photo doesn't call attention to itself, like, say, and Edward Weston photograph of a pepper, so we look "past" any artsiness of the photo itself right through to the moment being photographed. Which all of us who love shooting identify with and appreciate. A hot, semi-boring summer afternoon brought to sudden life and excitement for a couple of kids by the new rifle. And just the spot to let fly some rounds.

Cool.


______________________________________________________

"You get much farther with a kind word and a gun than with a kind word alone."
November 10, 2013, 05:36 PM
Butch 2340
This seems like so long ago. Frown





******************************************************************************
Never shoot a large caliber man with a small caliber bullet . . .



January 28, 2014, 01:16 AM
vemon
20 years ago ..
State border of USSR.

http://fotki.yandex.ru/users/venom-72/view/1003778/
February 27, 2014, 12:55 PM
SHOOTLUKE
Great Pic, you must have a lot of good memories. I grew up on over crowded Long Island,NY. we went shootin' too ( on the low down)...back in the 70's we were taking our 22 rifles to school via the school bus and had rifle teams as part of JV & V sports. all good stuff.
March 08, 2014, 06:52 PM
lyman
quote:
Originally posted by MRBTX:
July 84- 21 yrs old, practically married (26 yrs now), just got hired as a rodman on a survey crew. Stayed broke, but never went hungry. Those were simple times compared to now. Helped me grow up a lot.


I was almost 21, (sept),

journeyman meat cutter,
full time college too,
binge drinking and party hardy on weekend nights, sweat it out (in a cold room) the next day!!

parents had split, so I kept a Sendra AR-15 and a SA M1A (034xxx)in the trunk of my Celica with an ammo can of ammo for each, (still have the rifles, converted to NFA before 5/86, wish I still had the celica)


saw a lot of good concerts that year as well,
(black flag, Dead Kennedys, Talking Heads, and Costello 2 nights back to back)
all slowed down, and that was a good thing the next year when I met my (now)wife



https://www.chesterfieldarmament.com/

May 16, 2014, 08:31 AM
ejr
1984 I spent a month in Kenya traveling around and trying not to get dysentery! Ate some really weird stuff, saw all kinds of wild game, traded trinkets with Masi Warriors, there was somewhere in the plains of Africa a Masi man wearing a Bronx Zoo t shirt and that was my fault. Had a great time brought back like 1000 pictures, I did get dysentery after all, snorkeled in the Indian Ocean and stood on the equator. Good times.

Ed
September 15, 2014, 09:57 PM
ds1962
I used to live in Sulphur in 1966 and 1985.


GOD/Israel, family, 2nd amendment rights: in that order.
Tennessee -ELOHIM IS MY GOD!

January 15, 2015, 03:13 PM
xcrunner
quote:
The box of slides is marked July 1984.


.....AND AMMO WAS ABOUT $3.00 A BOX, $5.00 FOR A BOX OF 50!!
April 03, 2015, 11:52 AM
Huzrjim
Circa 1980. My best friend and I getting ready to rabbit hunt with his great beagle, Blue. We both got our limit of 5 rabbits that day. I'm on the left.




P228 KD Date Code
P938 Scorpion
April 08, 2015, 11:09 AM
MikeinNC
In 1984 I was 14...

Still lived in Tampa and one year away from moving to the mountains in NC...wow that was a change!

I remember spending the summers at my pop-pops and shooting his Remington 22 at everything...good times



"Violence, naked force, has settled more issues in history than has any other factor.” Robert A. Heinlein

“You may beat me, but you will never win.” sigmonkey-2020

“A single round of buckshot to the torso almost always results in an immediate change of behavior.” Chris Baker