oldfishboat wrote:
Marin be carefull , some will have zero issue, some will make it like you are the worst person on the planet. Ya a big halibit can and will given the chance screw up a great fishing trip. But till ya seen that up close and personal your only thoughts on fire arms be ?
Well, the gun thing really belongs in OTDE but since it started here and is sort of related to boats I will magnify the error by answering your question here.
In Alaska a (legal) firearm is part of the required survival equipment list for flights into remote country.* In BC it was not required but it was recommended.* I don't know if Canada's position has changed on that or not.* But I believe a person's attitude toward firearms will be based on what they picked up during their "formative" years.* Not unlike your young friends from the city who weren't sure what to make of an axe.
I have no fascination for firearms, and I have no inherent fear of them.* I don't regard them as dangerous, or any more dangerous than a lawn mower or a chain saw.* I certainly have no problem with people owning them if they want to.* I attribute my ambivalent attitude toward them to my exposure to them at a fairly early age.* I grew up in Hawaii and at that time ROTC was required for all sophomore and junior boys in high school.* Our "officers" were seniors and that was voluntary.* Every public high school in the state, and the larger private schools like Punahou and Kamehameha had this same curriculum.* The only way to get out of it was with a doctor's letter saying you were physically unable to participate.
Each boy was assigned an M1 Garand rifle for the school year. * At my high school they were kept in an armory room under the bleachers at the football field. The firing pins had been removed but otherwise it was a regular issue rifle.* It was our responsibility to keep our assigned rifle in perfect condition for the year.* Every Wednesday we wore our uniforms to school and had drill after school for an hour.* We learned the manual of arms, we learned how to march and maneuver, and so on.* During the week we had ROTC class and PE on alternate days.
Viet Nam was cranking up and and Hawaii was a very "military" state.* At that time, the number one driver of the state's economy was the military. The Army, Navy, Marines, and Air Force had huge and very active bases all over the island of Oahu and being in the military was a respected profession in the eyes of the civilian residents of the state, unlike what was going on with regards to Viet Nam on the mainland.*
The number two source of income for the state was agriculture (sugar and pineapple), and number three was tourism.* Obviously it's not the same today.
Our ROTC classes were taught by regular Army sergeants.* We learned to strip and reassemble our M1s, its Viet Nam replacement, the M14, the M60 machine gun, and the Colt 45.* And after we learned to do al this with the lights on, we then had to learn to do it all blindfolded.* And if anyone here has ever stripped down and reassembled an M1 Garand, you can imagine how lethal it could be in a roomful of boys doing this in the dark.
We had map reading lessons and learned---- we're high school kids, remember--- how to determine coordinates for artillery strikes.* We learned first aid.* We had rifle and pistol practice on a range behind the football stadium.* A couple of times a year there were drill and skill competitions in Honolulu Stadium between all the ROTC brigades from the high schools.
The result of all this was at least one generation of kids in Hawaii who regarded guns no differently than a hammer.** It was a tool to be used when required.* Otherwise, we didn't think about them at all.* Each firearm I own was acquired to do a specific thing, primarily different kinds of hunting---- deer, moose, and (in Hawaii) boar.* I only have one "collector" gun, a very rare Winchester model from 1895, but I actually acquired that for hunting, too.
I have no need for a semi-automatic, "assault" weapons so I don't have any.* I have no fascination for them at all, perhaps because of my exposure to the military aspect of weaponry at an early age.* I personally believe owning one as a civilian is pointless other than the fact that for a lot of guys they are effective (apparently) penis-magnifiers.* I also believe legislation to ban them is also pointless although if laws were passed banning private ownership of assault-type weapons I wouldn't care.
So I personally have no issue with a person who desires to have a gun on board their boat, particularly someone who boats in remote areas where survival or protection could become part of the boating experience fairly quickly.* I doubt we'd be concerned about bears and whatnot if we were boating in California where most boaters cruise around San Francisco Bay and up the Sacramento River or go out to Catalina and back.
I do think, as you point out, that it's important to judge your surroundings, including the people, when it comes to firearms.* I can't imagine anyone getting upset at the sight of our shotgun on a dock in Petersburg or at a lake up in the Carriboo* in BC.* But I wouldn't go waving it around at the dock at Roche Harbor in the San Juans or in Sidney or Nanaimo.
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