Once we're past the worst of the REEEEEing, consider it lesson-learned: Always keep at least a 2,000 round minimum emergency stockpile for every caliber you plan to use. Never eat into it unless you CANNOT resupply.
The people that trip me out right now are the ones who still go shooting. Like every bang sound now is like 1$ worth of something precious to save your life when the shelves are bare with no letup in the future horizon.
I used to stick to shooting my ammo in the desert behind my house. Never liked the lack of freedom on private ranges. It has been a couple months since I've shot. But before the ammo crunch I was getting a good amount of trigger time. As well as buying ammo. I almost maxed my credit card in February buying ammo. Talking thousands worth. (Pre pandemic prices) my wife wasn't too thrilled at the time. But she understands now.
Once we're past the worst of the REEEEEing, consider it lesson-learned: Always keep at least a 2,000 round minimum emergency stockpile for every caliber you plan to use. Never eat into it unless you CANNOT resupply.
The people that trip me out right now are the ones who still go shooting. Like every bang sound now is like 1$ worth of something precious to save your life when the shelves are bare with no letup in the future horizon.
I personally know people with 15k reserves specifically so they can continue to shoot and train through the droughts.
Shoot what you can afford to replenish.
Don’t get rusty from lack of range time. Most ranges still ration enough to shooters to cover your visit. It isn’t cheap.
I used to stick to shooting my ammo in the desert behind my house. Never liked the lack of freedom on private ranges. It has been a couple months since I've shot. But before the ammo crunch I was getting a good amount of trigger time. As well as buying ammo. I almost maxed my credit card in February buying ammo. Talking thousands worth. (Pre pandemic prices) my wife wasn't too thrilled at the time. But she understands now.
Yes. Buy cheap. Stock deep.