performanceboater4ronpaul
Member
- Joined
- Jan 8, 2008
- Messages
- 13
Take a peek at the Pink Lady. http://www.gunbroker.com/Auction/ViewItem.asp?Item=88908161
I have a small friend who happens to be a woman. She is about 5 foot or so. She carries a glock .40. (G27)
Anyways, some really good advice so far but I can't stress this enough: you need to go to your local range and try out several of their rental weapons first. Explain to them it's your first time - they will bend over backwards to help you and they'll probably have a range officer take you on range and really help you get started. However, the reason you need to try several weapons is because you need to find the right size, weight, caliber and recoil for your hand. Then you can discover what you're most comfortable with and buy that model.
I have wanted to buy a gun for the longest but I don't know what to get or where to get it. Is there a good place women can go to purchase weapons? I always get nervous around all the men at the gun counters and chicken out. I know its lame, but what can I say? I am small 5'2", but fit and honestly, will need some practice shooting I have only shot one gun, one time.
he had to ask...Some folks say the most dangerous place in the world is between a Mama Bear and her cubs. It may be so. I've never met a Mama Bear, myself.
The most dangerous place I ever stood was between a cornered cat and an open door.
When a cat feels threatened, she gets away from the danger as quickly as she can. She doesn't care what damage she inflicts on her way to safety, but she's not interested in fighting for fighting's sake. She does only as much as she needs to do in order to escape. She doesn't deal in revenge. If she feels threatened, she simply leaves. Efficiently.
Until she needs to use them, her claws stay sheathed. She doesn't go around threatening to maul people. She's cuddly, she's cozy, she likes to curl up next to a crackling fire on a cold winter's day. She's great company.
But don't try to trap her in a bad situation.
This site is about women and guns, not about cats. But in a way, it's about the cornered cat in all of us. It's about the determination to get away from an attacker if you need to. It's about making the decision to say, "Not me. Not mine. Not today." And it's about the tools to make that decision stick.
Okay, guys, here is one shooting woman's answer to this perennially recurring question. Here are the things you need to know and remember as you shop for a handgun for her.
I'm 5'6'' and carry a Taurus 5-shot .357 medium frame revolver. I've been around guns most of my life and am simply not confident with a semi- I've jammed two of them on firing ranges (a .25 and a 9mm) and simply no longer trust them. My personal experience with the semis is that if you jerk or bounce the gun while pulling the trigger on the smaller caliber semis- lots of times the slide with not completely function and then you're stuck with a jam that can take precious seconds (or even minutes) to clear. This is why I prefer the the revolver. In case of mis-fire all I have to do is pull the trigger again. Point is: only carry what you are confident with. If you have no faith in the firearm, you won't have faith in your ability to actually use it.
Check your local shooting ranges. Chances are one of them has a "ladies night" that will allow you to try a bunch of different guns and train with other women. If not, look for a gun store with a female employee.
But honestly, don't let the guys intimidate you. If you show even the slightest interest in firearms they will be falling all over themselves to help you find the right gun for you.
I have wanted to buy a gun for the longest but I don't know what to get or where to get it. Is there a good place women can go to purchase weapons? I always get nervous around all the men at the gun counters and chicken out. I know its lame, but what can I say? :o
I am small 5'2", but fit and honestly, will need some practice shooting I have only shot one gun, one time.