Shot something you shouldn’t???

This post has made me speak of a small guilt, when I started small gaming with my .22 Dreamline. I didn't shoot anything that I shouldn't have. But, I did shoot many pheasants at more than required power levels and wrong shot placements at times that made them die deep inside thick bushes where I couldn't reach.
Though, I learnt this quite late.... but, yes, should have taken shots correctly.
Eventually, all issues settled with my .25 Cricket.
 
2 summers ago I’m on my range shooting and a big horse fly lands on my table. Couldn’t resist. I shortened his legs.
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About 2 months again shooting. My trigger screw was almost falling out on my HW97 .25. When I hit the safety as I moving gun into position, it went off into my soffit.
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Just missed my eave trough.
Same thing happened in winter, it was lower but hit my shingles on porch.
Thirty+ years ago I was pissed at this squirrel. Dislike squirrels, the reason I’m into Airgun’s. Had no ammo so I grabbed 3 wood screws, as I was building. I was in living room shooting through a just installed sliding patio door. I had 3 #8 3/4 wood screws in pouch. I was going to more than nail him. When I let it go the elastic broke and I put the screws though the glass door. Didn’t save the marriage for a while.
You should see what I do for an encore. Crow
 
The wall of my airgun shed. Had a back stop setup with a bunch of old blue jeans stuffed tightly in a box. Was doing some Chrono work on my.25 Sumatra thinking that would be enough to stop them. NOPE! Ended up with 4 holes through the wood walls of the shed. Thankfully none of the dogs were on the other side. It didn't take many shots to drill right through the blue jeans. Now it's a box filled with rubber mulch.
 
so today it was my turn to shoot something I shouldn't. My robotic lawn mower was hit hard (70 joules): I was shooting at quite high magnification, and just when I pulled the trigger the poor thing appeared.
Fortunately there's an inner and an outer housing: I just touched the outer one. So besides two holes it's still functioning. I didn't shoot it twice though, it's an entry and exit hole.
A good lesson to turn it down while shooting...

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My wife's dog. When we got married she had this little white dog that was really a nice dog. One day I was sitting in the living room with a CO2 bb pistol. I had shot the gun several times to make sure it was empty. The dog walked by so I thought I would scare it with a blast of air from the gun so I shot it and it yelped and ran away. Shortly thereafter my wife came in carrying the dog that now had a small hole in it's side from a bb. I don't think I ever felt so bad and low. I would have sworn that gun was empty. Luckily the dog was fine. Lesson learned.... never shoot anything, even with an "empty" gun unless you intend to hurt it. That was 46 years ago and I still feel like a sh.theel when I think about it.
 
Heck, when I was a kid, almost everything I shot at was something I shouldn't! :) No, I wasn't quite that bad, since both of my parents were firm believers in corporal punishment, with the sentence for the worst of the worst infractions being 1) a green switch for my mother or 2) The Belt from my dad. Not being complete and total idiots, we three youngin's learned quite quickly to be pretty good kids. Well, most of the time. ;-)

Anyhow, and this seems just amazing to even consider in today's world, quite a few of us would take our BB guns to school with us in the morning, for playing war before the school day started. It was 1st grade for me, so this was back around 1961 or so, catching the school bus in the wee mornin' hours from our farm WAY out in the countryside to the elementary school in scenic downtown Round Hill, VA (basically, just a few homes, a combination general store/pharmacy/post office, a volunteer fire department, a gas station and the school). Anyway, most of the kids back then had BB guns that you unscrewed at the muzzle, pulled out the attached six or eight inch storage tube, loaded by pouring in as many BBs as it would hold, screwed it back in place, cocked it and ready to shoot. These were not variable pumpers, since a single 'pump' loaded a BB (most of the time) and 'cocked' it, and luckily, they were not very powerful -- hardly enough oomph even for the smallest bird or other critter unlucky and close enough to be targeted. Since we were going to school, we just didn't take the muzzle loading assembly along with us, making shooting a BB impossible. Instead, we'd push the open muzzle down into damp dirt (!!!!!) to get a circular clod of earth and grass roots that we'd very actively and with malice aforethought do our very very best to hunt down and shoot each other with! Even at almost point blank range, it wasn't painful, thank goodness, and if fairly dry, it almost looked like smoke from an explosion (which everyone thought very cool), and most of the kids were good enough to try and make sure not to shoot anybody in the head, so we considered the system cool and safe. Looking back on it now though... even as weak as those old guns were, that was INCREDIBLY dangerous and stupid (anyone else out there feel lucky to have survived their youth?)! I can't believe we got away with it at all, but incredibly, our little before-school-day-starting-bell war went on for weeks, until some random, tender young lady ended up as collateral damage from a dirty dress or skirt or something. She was not pleased, ensuring word of the dirt-clodding reached the school principal, so that was the end of BB guns at school. Still, we were able to get away with it for WEEKS before being shut down! Heck, a number of teachers actually had checked into what we were up to and given us tacit approval, since without the muzzle assembly, a ball of air (or a dirt clod, which we didn't demonstrate for some reason) was the worst thing we could shoot at each other, so they let us continue! Can you imagine? I can't even BEGIN to think about anything like that being possible today! Wow.
 
I got the chronograph for the third and final time recently. First two times were with a .30 caliber, which blew out plastic bits and the battery once as it ricocheted down through the unit. It was still functional and easily fixed then. But this last time it was with the Rattler 45 and it hit square on the screen. There was no saving that.
 
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Glad to see many of you helping out the economy! at least the window industry is thriving :D
My cousin and I found some old rusty dusty shotgun shells in a barn and decided to shoot them with a bb gun. we set them up and were shooting them, and one shell fell with the primer facing me, I took careful aim and kaboom! The blast went through the barn wall and blew the tire off the tractor. I can tell you that the stock on a red rider was the perfect fit to my butt! and is some of the hardest wood I have ever felt.
 
so today it was my turn to shoot something I shouldn't. My robotic lawn mower was hit hard (70 joules): I was shooting at quite high magnification, and just when I pulled the trigger the poor thing appeared.
Fortunately there's an inner and an outer housing: I just touched the outer one. So besides two holes it's still functioning. I didn't shoot it twice though, it's an entry and exit hole.
A good lesson to turn it down while shooting...

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I lack the self-control not to turn this into a mobile target system, that can also mow the grass! Does it have headlights? :oops:
 
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This was somewhat costly accident! No visible damage to the PCB but it didn't work anymore. Sent it in for repairs, came back like new.

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This was somewhat costly accident! No visible damage to the PCB but it didn't work anymore. Sent it in for repairs, came back like new.

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just wondering... How do you shoot a chrony that is supposed to be
I lack the self-control not to turn this into a mobile target system, that can also mow the grass! Does it have headlights? :oops:
well that's an idea! although misses could be very expensive. Let's wait for when it's end of life ;-) I won't try my luck a 2nd time!

You can indeed buy headlights as an option. I didn't do this, because it's not making sense: the mower doesn't have cameras for navigation. It's just for fun I guess. My wife does not allow for it to run at night, as it could run over a hedgehog ;-) so no need for the lights for the cool factor either.
(as you will ask anyway: she does not allow me to shoot the hedgehog either 😂)
 
Shooting something you shouldn't shoot. Well I remember this one time probably like 30 years ago. This cat from some neighbor few doors down keep coming into our property and eating our chicken. Baby chickens would go missing and adult chicken have their head tear off. We would wake up like 6am to chicken screaming like crazy. Then we see a cat chasing them. So me and my dad we got out crosman 2100 pump master. We pump it 10 times and aim at the cat and open fire. Cat scream and run like crazy out the fence. A few days later neighbor called the cops on us. Cops took report and ask what happen. We told them cat been killing our chicken so we shoot it with a bb gun. Cop said that was defending out livestock so they couldn't do anything and cause it was on our property. They just said next time try to trap the cat and call animal control instead. If we have high power pcp like we do now back 30 years ago. Cat be dead and wouldn't snitch on us lol.