Perhaps you’re jumping in the deep end because it’s easy to do in the US and Tennessee in particular. Could it be that ownership was so difficult before coming here that you never thought you could ?
I have my own definitions. I do have an accumulation of firearms. Some were priced too low to pass. Some came in trades along with what I really wanted. Some were gifts. My accumulated firearms are bought and sold to finance my collections. My accumulated firearms are merely temporary guests in my house.
My collections are special. I only have one collection at a time. I specialize and I study. I try to learn everything I can about what I am collecting. I seek out each piece with care. Sometimes I find a particular piece and it takes years to acquire it.
So far, I have built collections of
Committee of Safety Muskets
Civil War Carbines
Baker Shotguns
And my current one, S&W ACP revolvers.
Each one has allowed me to expand my horizons and expand my knowledge.
At some point, something else takes center stage, I lose interest in what I have spent years collecting and sell.
I wonder what my next collection will be?
Kevin
Perhaps you’re jumping in the deep end because it’s easy to do in the US and Tennessee in particular. Could it be that ownership was so difficult before coming here that you never thought you could ?
Completing a set like it’s a goal.
I have achieved this goal with 44 mags. I have a 4, 6.5, 8 3/8 in 29-2 in blue and nickel and 629 ND in 4, 6 and 8 3/8. /QUOTE]
I am pleased to inform you of the 2017 629-10 2 5/8" PC I picked up awhile back. There are still lots of NIB examples around.
Ivan
Ματθιας;142133742 said:I used to be a completest - I had to collect everything and complete the collection. For me, the chase is more fun than the catch.
I'm younger than you, but after a while, at least, for me, it got kind of old - especially when I took inventory and I realized I accumulated so much stuff, I started to wonder if I owned the collection or if it owns me.
It's not an addiction. It's an obsession. Barely a difference, though.
I feel like it’s the “thrill of the race” that sometimes gets you hooked. Even when you’re broke (like I am now), I’m still on the hunt, even if I can only afford the “low-hanging fruit” at the moment.
Wait until you reach the point that your wish list is pretty short and everything on it is very hard to find and very expensive.
Only then can you consider that you just might have a problem.
Yeah, I BTDT long ago.![]()
Hah.
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Thank you! I need this kind of inspiration, encouragement enabling. I can feel normal in my obsession.
The almost un-nerving thing is how very quickly it happened.
It was like walking in front of an Airbus jet engine and getting sucked in that fast…