I got good enough with my Benjamin to shoot wasps off the trough. They would 
land on the water for a drink, and I'd snipe them from the porch deck chair. 
The minnows learned a meal was coming and would wait under the wasp.


Don's iPhone.

On Feb 10, 2011, at 2:59 PM, Rod Goke <[email protected]> wrote:

> I don't know about those Red Ryder BB guns, but my old single shot, hand pump 
> style pellet gun used to work great for shooting flies inside the house. It 
> worked much better than a fly swatter. Fly swatters have two drawbacks. One 
> is that flies quickly learn to avoid them. In many cases, it's hard to sneak 
> up on a fly with a swatter in your hand. Get anywhere close and it'll fly out 
> of range. The pellet gun, however, didn't seem to scare the flies. I usually 
> could put the gun's muzzle within an inch or two of the fly without scaring 
> the fly away. At that range its hard to miss!
> 
> The other big advantage of the pellet gun over a fly swatter was that there 
> was less mess to clean up afterwards. Swat a fly on the wall with a fly 
> swatter, and you'd have a wet blob of gooey fly guts to clean off the wall. 
> The pellet gun, however, would instantly dismember the fly into separate 
> wings, legs, and some relatively solid body parts that would drift through 
> the air and land on the floor, where they could be picked up easily with a 
> vacuum cleaner, leaving no gooey mess.
> 
> Sure, you say, but what about all those bullet holes in the walls? Aren't 
> they worse than squashed fly guts! The trick is that YOU DON'T PUT ANY PELLET 
> IN THE PELLET GUN. That way you don't shoot holes in anything. When you pump 
> it up and pull the trigger, all that comes out the muzzle is a puff of 
> compressed air. If the muzzle is only an inch or two from the fly, the air 
> blast is sufficient to disintegrate the fly without damaging anything else. 
> Normally, it's not a good idea to fire the gun directly towards the wall, 
> since that would splatter fly guts on the wall almost as bad as a fly 
> swatter. Instead, I'd usually position the gun at an angle nearly parallel to 
> the wall, such that fly parts would fly through the air and drift to the 
> floor instead of splattering on the wall. The same technique also worked well 
> for mosquitoes and small spiders. With small, fragile bugs, the technique 
> often worked best with the gun pumped to only moderate pressure (like maybe 4 
> pump strokes using a pellet gun designed for a maximum of 6 to 8 strokes). 
> That way the air blast would be sufficient to instantly kill the bug without 
> turning it into a gooey mess that would be harder to clean up. Tougher bugs, 
> such as wasps, were hard to kill with an air blast, even with the gun pumped 
> to its maximum pressure. I killed a few indoor wasps this way, but I don't 
> recommend it, since sometimes the air blast was just enough to put them into 
> a bad mood.
> 
> For safety, I'd always double check that the gun contained no pellet before 
> using it for indoor bug blasting. First I'd open the action to see visually 
> that it was empty. Then I'd close the action, pump the gun to minimal firing 
> pressure (one or two strokes on that pellet gun), and fire it in a safe 
> direction to be sure there was nothing in it. (At that low pressure, even if 
> a pellet had been left in the gun accidentally, it would have been blown out 
> the barrel at a low enough velocity to cause negligible damage or safety risk 
> when fired in a safe direction.) Finally, when actually firing an air blast 
> at a bug, I'd fire in a safe direction that would not have endangered anyone 
> even if a pellet had been left in the gun.
> 
> That old pellet gun, which I had had since I was a kid, eventually wore out, 
> but it sure was a useful bug blaster while it lasted.
> 
> As they say on TV, don't try this at home, kids (at least not while anyone is 
> watching).  ;-)
> 
> Rod
> 
> -----Original Message-----
>> From: Andy Gluesenkamp <[email protected]>
>> Sent: Feb 10, 2011 11:35 AM
>> To: Bill Bentley <[email protected]>, Fritz Holt 
>> <[email protected]>, "[email protected]" 
>> <[email protected]>, "[email protected]" <[email protected]>
>> Cc: "[email protected]" <[email protected]>, Mandy Holt 
>> <[email protected]>, Jenny Holt <[email protected]>
>> Subject: Re: [Texascavers] Bear Grylls related
>> 
>> Someone needs to.
>> 
>> You'll shoot your eye out.
>> 
>> Fritz Holt <[email protected]> wrote:
>> 
>>> WATCH OUT! My daughters and I own Red Ryder BB guns. We shoot holes in 
>>> cans, not 
>>> birds or other creatures.
>>> I am a Bee Gee fan. They make good music.
>>> 
>>> Fritz
> 
> 
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