I’m guessing the 1st recent one was when Obama was elected. The most recent and bigger one was after Sandy Hook when Obama announced he was going to enact sweeping gun control measures.
There was also a supply issue with .556 ammo because there were two wars going on. Units training up for deployment use a lot of ammo so the mitary was buying a lot.
Not in GQ, so anecdote time: Yesterday went to a nice grand opening of a gun store/range in our neighboring “big city” and they had an entire central block-stack of 5000 round cases of .22LR, as well as a head-high shelving unit of 50-round boxes of .22LR. Federal and CCI were the ones I saw. I walked out with 1000 rounds for a relative who can’t find any in their dinky town, and didn’t even *dent *the supply on display.
Otherwise, I saw thousands of every caliber I’m familiar with, and many that I’ve never seen before (25-06? 45-70? damn, what are these people killing? Elephants?)
There was specifically quite a lot of the usually not-in-stock or “limited buy” calibers: obviously the .22 LRs, and notably .222 and .243 that had been a little scarce around here recently.
I will say that even in the throes of the “panic” we never truly ran out of anything around here - it might have taken a couple of stops and a few different outlets during a week to be lucky enough to grab a box or two of .22LR, but even then .22S and.22L were often still there. Other than those, everything else we wanted was always there in some form, as long as you weren’t picky about your brand, your grain-count, and your price.
Now if prices would only drop down again, but that’s not ever going to happen, sadly.
Bears, actually. My packing gun in Alaska was a Marlin lever-action .45-70. Fit nicely behind the pockets on one side of my pack, and was enough gun to discourage any bear I was stupid enough to encounter. But bells, camp cleanliness discipline and kimchee made encounters few and fleeting.
This has been my experience lately here in Indiana. I can find .223 and 9mm but not always my prefered brand. Plinking grade is harder to find, pricey personal protection grade is easier.
I should hope not. It’s a great defensive round, not a target round.
Even though there have been a couple of more advanced/capable rounds developed recently, they’re certainly up to any [del]intruder[/del] task that comes knocking.
I still carry it in a couple of my pistols. My shower gun, my lawnmower gun, my garbage can gun…
I could have used one a couple of times when the raccoon family was swarming the dumpster. Never know what you’ll find by trash cans, depending on where you live, from a bear to stray dogs to homeless junkies.
The Aurora shooting, and later Sandy Hook, which the mainstrem media won’t tell you were both orchestrated by Obama so he could authorize door-to-door searches without a warrant, to confiscate everyone’s guns.