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TheTman
03-31-2011, 02:29 PM
The bow and arrow story
Around age 10 my dad got me one of those little badarse compound bow beginner kits. Of course, the first month I went around our land sticking arrows in anything that could get stuck by an arrow. Did you know that a 1955 40 horse Farmall tractor tire will take 6 rounds before it goes down? Tough sumbich.
That got boring, so being the 10 yr. old Dukes of Hazard fan that I was, I quickly advanced to taking strips of cut up T-shirt doused in chainsaw gas tied around the end and was sending flaming arrows all over the place. One summer afternoon, I was shooting flaming arrows into a large rotten oak stump in our backyard. I looked over under the carport and see a shiny brand new can of starting fluid (Ether). The light bulb went off in my head. I grabbed the can and set it on the stump. I thought that it would probably just spray out in a disappointing manner. Lets face it, to a 10 yr old mouth-breather like myself, (Ether), really doesn't "sound" flammable. So, I went back into the house and got a 1 pound can of pyrodex (black powder for muzzle loader rifles).
At this point, I set the can of ether on the stump and opened up the can of black powder. My intentions were to sprinkle a little bit around the (Ether) can but it all sorta dumped out on me. No biggie, a 1 lb. pyrodex and 16 oz (Ether) should make a loud pop, kinda like a firecracker you know? You know what? Screw that I'm going back in the house for the other can.
Yes, I got a second can of pyrodex and dumped it too. Now we're cookin'.
I stepped back about 15 ft and lit the 2 stroke arrow. I drew the nock to my cheek and took aim. As I released I heard a clunk as the arrow launched from my bow. In a slow motion time frame, I turned to see my dad getting out of the truck... OH Shiiit! He just got home from work. So help me God it took 10 minutes for that arrow to go from my bow to the can. My dad was walking towards me in slow motion with a WTF look in his eyes. I turned back towards my target just in time to see the arrow pierce the starting fluid can right at the bottom. Right through the main pile of pyrodex and into the can. Oh ****.
When the shock wave hit it knocked me off my feet. I don't know if it was the actual compression wave that threw me back or just reflex jerk back from 235 fricking decibels of sound. I caught a half a millisecond glimpse of the violence during the initial explosion and I will tell you there was dust, grass, and bugs all hovering 1 ft above the ground as far as I could see. It was like a little low to the ground layer of dust fog full of grasshoppers, spiders, and a worm or two.
The daylight turned purple. Let me repeat this... THE FRICKING DAYLIGHT TURNED PURPLE.
There was a big sweetgum tree out by the gate going into the pasture. Notice I said "was". That son-of-a-beach got up and ran off.
So here I am, on the ground blown completely out of my shoes with my thundercats T-Shirt shredded, my dad is on the other side of the carport having what I can only assume is a Vietnam flashback:
ECHO BRAVO CHARLIE YOU'RE BRINGIN' EM IN TOO CLOSE!! CEASE FIRE. DAMNIT CEASE FIRE!!!!!
His hat has blown off and is 30 ft behind him in the driveway. All windows on the north side of the house are blown out and there is a slow rolling mushroom cloud about 2000 ft. over our backyard. There is a Honda 185 3 wheeler parked on the other side of the yard and the fenders are drooped down and are now touching the tires.
I wish I knew what I said to my dad at this moment. I don't know - I know I said something. I couldn't hear. I couldn't hear inside my own head. I don't think he heard me either... not that it would really matter. I don't remember much from this point on. I said something, felt a sharp pain, and then woke up later. I felt a sharp pain, blacked out, woke later....repeat this process for an hour or so and you get the idea. I remember at one point my mom had to give me CPR. and Dad screaming "Bring him back to life so I can kill him again". Thanks Mom .
One thing is for sure... I never had to mow around that stump again, Mom had been bitching about that thing for years and dad never did anything about it. I stepped up to the plate and handled business.
Dad sold his muzzle loader a week or so later. I still have some sort of bone growth abnormality, either from the blast or the beating, or both.
I guess what I'm trying to say is, get your kids into archery. It's good discipline and will teach them skills they can use later on in life

melissa5
03-31-2011, 02:37 PM
Bwahahahaha! Great story!

Bawanna
03-31-2011, 02:41 PM
Thank you thetmanski, you've saved an otherwise dreadful day. Thats one of the finest stories I've ever been told.

Echo Bravo Charlie, you scored a direct hit on Bawanna today. My sides will be better in a few days, well maybe not, I'm gonna read this a few more times.

My co workers sure wonder what the heck I'm up to in my little cubicle this morning.

Thank you so much for sharing that.

jocko
03-31-2011, 03:10 PM
yup u made my day, kinda got me off these fokking illegals for a minute. That is truly hilarious. I shot a bow for 30 years. I could tell some real bow and arrow horor stores, but I will pass on that. That is the great sport, that I never mastered to..

Bill K
03-31-2011, 03:20 PM
Thanks, a great read for an otherwise blah day here in Connecticut.

Is this what the explosion kinda looked like?

http://www.baconbabble.com/wp-content/uploads/2009/11/explosion.gif

Bill K.

Bawanna
03-31-2011, 03:53 PM
Dang, he might have been caught on tape and didnt' realize it.

I"m reminded of the time my brush pile wasn't burning good enough to suit me. So I climbed on top of it with a 5 gallon can of gas. DUMB:eek:

I experience zero gravity for several seconds but didn't break anything, wife wondered what the commotion was. Next time I'll use my bow and some pyrodex. I'm a fast learner.

Pa Kahr
03-31-2011, 04:08 PM
LOL LOL LOL makes me think of the really stupid things we did as kids....and lived to tell the stories.

jocko
03-31-2011, 04:14 PM
heh now cool it guys that is my oldest brother running and I am the only one who can call him MY BROTHER TO..

Bawanna
03-31-2011, 04:20 PM
heh now cool it guys that is my oldest brother running and I am the only one who can call him MY BROTHER TO..

You seem to be a real hurry to put him out looks to me like. Must like him alot huh?

TheTman
03-31-2011, 05:37 PM
Glad I was able to bring a smile to some faces. Got that in my email this morning and had to share it. Too funny to keep to myself.
I have to agree Pa Kahr about the stupid things we did when we were kids and lived to tell about it. Lots of stuff you can get in trouble with on a farm.
I learned a good lesson about using diesel fuel instead of gas to set brush piles on fire and wearing shorts while doing so. Had 2nd degree burns from my knees down to my shoe tops. Now if I don't have diesel on hand I mix a little old oil in with the gas and it's not near as explosive.
Have a good evening.

Bawanna
03-31-2011, 05:53 PM
Smile? A few of my coworkers thought surely my Beagle had died or something. There was tears in my eyes from laughing so hard. One thought surely I needed to have my appendix removed. Dang back yard doctors......

aray
03-31-2011, 06:00 PM
Funny story. Thanks, I needed that!

I can’t top at all that but I do have something similar I hope ya’ll enjoy. True story:

When I was in high school I went camping with some neighborhood friends of mine. Nothing elaborate, just some nice woods about 5 miles from where we lived that I had access to. Next morning it was time to put the fire out and then to break camp.

This was of course way back before two liter plastic bottles. Instead I’m sure all of you remember those massive thick glass bottles that juice and other things of similar size used to come in. Well I hefted those things down to the local pond to fill up with water, intent on returning to the fire, pouring the water over the still-burning logs, and putting out the fire.

Sadly, on the trip to the pond the geeky part of me took over… :nerd:

I thought: why not just fill ‘em up, screw the metal cap on the jugs, and toss ‘em in the fire? Yeah, I knew that the water would boil and eventually break the bottles. The water would then run out and put the fire out. Problem solved right, and done in true nerd fashion to boot. A two-fer to be sure.

So that’s exactly what I did. Only of course I had to explain it to my non-geek friends the principles of operations and all. As we all thus stood around the campfire, watching the bottles get hotter & hotter, with them listening to me drone on and on about how this would all work, a disturbing thought then silently entered my mind:

Gee, I wonder what sorts of pressure these thick glass bottles can sustain before they achieve structural failure?

And then:

Gee, if the pressure is evenly distributed across the entire surface of the glass, that’s gotta be quite a pressure load before they fail – indeed this isn’t at all like whacking them with a hammer at just one point.

And then:

Um, maybe I should get these things outta here pronto.

And then:

Er, that ain’t exactly gonna work ‘cause they’re pretty hot by now and any minute, or with any disturbance, they’re gonna let us all know they ain’t happy. And I'm thinkin' I don't wanna be looking over this campfire at them when that happens.

And then:

Uhh, I think I just sorta created a bomb here that I can’t exactly “defuse”…

All that within a fraction of a second. My next reaction was to urgently say to all of my friends, all peering over the campfire with our faces down low to see the reaction:

“I think we ought to seek shelter!”

So I grab them by their T-shirts, drag them off to a nearby log, and only then explain the physics of the situation to them.

The waiting actually took much longer than I though. Or maybe it was just the time distortion that the brain causes when you are in deep trouble. Several times I reconsidered my decision to abandon the campfire and almost went back as the clock slowly ticked away. Fortunately my better senses prevailed until

B O O M !

It was a bomb. A literal bomb.

I physically heard glass shrapnel whizzing past my ears. Glass shards cut twigs and leaves from the tree above our heads, sending a gentle rain of the forest canopy showering down upon us as we cowered behind our scant refuge.

Flaming logs went shooting into the air. Embers fell on my tent, catching it on fire. :eek: Burning wood, sprayed in every direction by the force of the explosion, landed in the woods around us and ignited the twigs and dead leaves already on the ground. Whereas before I had one campfire in one location to extinguish, now I had countless fires all across the forest springing up to life.

And I had no water bottles with which to get water and put them all out!

The crater left by the explosion was several inches deeper than the fire pit that we had dug the night before. Ironically, looking around 360 degrees, the fire pit was about the only place left that was not on fire.

Fortunately, we had survived the initial explosion, and the mini-forest fires were relatively easy to stomp out with our sneakers. The tent, however, was a total loss. We were able to rescue its contents before it was (no pun intended) toast.

Needless to say - it wasn’t the smartest nor the proudest moment of my life. :blushing:

But I swear it’s true: Winter Park Florida, mid-1970s, camping in the vacant lot on SR-436 now occupied by Aloma Baptist Church (before they moved). I see it every time I go home to visit – that’s my original home church.


LOL LOL LOL makes me think of the really stupid things we did as kids....and lived to tell the stories.

By the grace of God, man, by the grace of God… :angel:

Willieboy
03-31-2011, 08:35 PM
That was an excellent anecdote, especially the part about "Bring him back to life so I can kill him again." I nearly wet my pants.

jlottmc
04-02-2011, 10:23 AM
Well how about the world's best spudgun shot? My brother (from different parents) holds that record, clearing a county line (about a mile and a half). Had the spud gun rigged to the #4 cylinder of his jeep, with a cast iron bbl. Forgot he had it loaded, and hoped into the jeep in a hurry. Worst part was it hit a deputy's windshield as he crossed a bridge near the county line. Did you know that liquid nitrogen can be an explosive if misted properly? That tater was literally on fire and half frozen as well. The deputy knew who done it, and came a callin' made my brother get a new windshield and razzed him for a little while.
Then there was my shot with one of them, I almost killed a guy working on his roof (second story), but luckily he landed in the deep end of his pool (had no clue he was there until that spud was almost in his chest).
Looking back, it's a wonder we survived the stupid stuff we were prone to doing.

O'Dell
04-03-2011, 03:24 PM
GREAT STORY!!

Sorta reminds me of the time when I was about twelve and was experimenting with building model rockets. I set the roof of the house on fire when one went off course, hit the roof, and exploded.

Later, a friend and I started to work on a liquid fuel rocket engine. Fortunately, I was off to college, before he leveled a two car brick garage and killed himself.