Ponds and guns

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Old 03-21-2007, 10:20 AM


Really. I'm not as mobile as I used to be so it makes sense for me to
do my weeding largely from one spot. I sit on the bank of my pond and
shoot at weeds on the other sides. What I use is a fairly inexpensive
air gun, well, actually several of them. I use pellets from England
that are non-toxic and not made of lead at all, I think they are sold
in the US now as "Logan Penetrators," but at the time the only place I
could find suitable non-toxic ammo was overseas, and shipping pellets
isn't the cheapest. I prefer the .22 to the .177 size as the .22
takes out more weed than the .177, which isn't all that surprising,
the .22 is bigger and has more mass. I also nail the occasional wasp.
Butterflies and dragonflies are safe however, I just can't bring
myself to shoot at them, even though there are a bunch of them. One
note of caution. Sometimes the pellets will ricochet off the surface
of the pond and head in directions that are unintended. They won't
fly back and hit the shooter, but it isn't a really smart thing to do
anywhere a stray pellet could do some damage. In my case, there
simply isn't anything or anyone for hundreds of yards, so I'm not very
concerned about the occasional ricochet. Firearm ammunition I
suspect would be prohibitively expensive, if non-toxic ammo even
exists, and I doubt that kind of power would be necessary or even
desirable.
--
Galen Hekhuis
Illiterate? Write for FREE help



Galen Hekhuis
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  #2  
Old 03-21-2007, 12:31 PM
©anadian Ponder
 
Posts: n/a
Galen Hekhuis wrote:
> Really. I'm not as mobile as I used to be so it makes sense for me to
> do my weeding largely from one spot. I sit on the bank of my pond and
> shoot at weeds on the other sides. What I use is a fairly inexpensive
> air gun, well, actually several of them. I use pellets from England
> that are non-toxic and not made of lead at all, I think they are sold
> in the US now as "Logan Penetrators," but at the time the only place I
> could find suitable non-toxic ammo was overseas, and shipping pellets
> isn't the cheapest. I prefer the .22 to the .177 size as the .22
> takes out more weed than the .177, which isn't all that surprising,
> the .22 is bigger and has more mass. I also nail the occasional wasp.
> Butterflies and dragonflies are safe however, I just can't bring
> myself to shoot at them, even though there are a bunch of them. One
> note of caution. Sometimes the pellets will ricochet off the surface
> of the pond and head in directions that are unintended. They won't
> fly back and hit the shooter, but it isn't a really smart thing to do
> anywhere a stray pellet could do some damage. In my case, there
> simply isn't anything or anyone for hundreds of yards, so I'm not very
> concerned about the occasional ricochet. Firearm ammunition I
> suspect would be prohibitively expensive, if non-toxic ammo even
> exists, and I doubt that kind of power would be necessary or even
> desirable.
> --
> Galen Hekhuis
> Illiterate? Write for FREE help
>


This is a first for me ???????

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  #3  
Old 03-21-2007, 12:57 PM
Reel McKoi
 
Posts: n/a

"©anadian Ponder" <" "@greatnowhere.com> wrote in message
news:46015cae$0$21939$ .com...
> Galen Hekhuis wrote:
>> Really. I'm not as mobile as I used to be so it makes sense for me to
>> do my weeding largely from one spot. I sit on the bank of my pond and
>> shoot at weeds on the other sides. What I use is a fairly inexpensive
>> air gun, well, actually several of them. I use pellets from England
>> that are non-toxic and not made of lead at all, I think they are sold
>> in the US now as "Logan Penetrators," but at the time the only place I
>> could find suitable non-toxic ammo was overseas, and shipping pellets
>> isn't the cheapest. I prefer the .22 to the .177 size as the .22
>> takes out more weed than the .177, which isn't all that surprising,
>> the .22 is bigger and has more mass. I also nail the occasional wasp.
>> Butterflies and dragonflies are safe however, I just can't bring
>> myself to shoot at them, even though there are a bunch of them. One
>> note of caution. Sometimes the pellets will ricochet off the surface
>> of the pond and head in directions that are unintended. They won't
>> fly back and hit the shooter, but it isn't a really smart thing to do
>> anywhere a stray pellet could do some damage. In my case, there
>> simply isn't anything or anyone for hundreds of yards, so I'm not very
>> concerned about the occasional ricochet. Firearm ammunition I
>> suspect would be prohibitively expensive, if non-toxic ammo even
>> exists, and I doubt that kind of power would be necessary or even
>> desirable.
>> --
>> Galen Hekhuis
>> Illiterate? Write for FREE help
>>

>
> This is a first for me ???????

=========================
I never heard of "weeding" with a gun either. I would like to see how it's
done. I hand pull them around the ponds. Everywere else I use a spray like
RoundUp.
--
RM....
Frugal ponding since 1995.
rec.ponder since late 1996.
My Pond & Aquarium Pages:
http://tinyurl.com/9do58
Zone 6. USA
~~~~ }<((((*> ~~~ }<{{{{(ö>








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