I remember the first time I was shot at.

model70hunter

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In the middle years of the last century my Dad bought a 200 acre farm. Dad bought horses for us. Horses was his story, the real story was they were full registered plugs. This changed my brother and I from horse ride moochers into real cowboys. No more borrowing a cousin or uncles horse and definitely no more riding Grandpa's work horses or Mules at big family events.

One city cousin had a couple of acres in town and his Dad had bought him a champion barrel horse out of Oklahoma. His walls were covered with 1st place ribbons. The horse was also flat out fast. The horse was turned in with ours over the winter. Early one spring day the first year we had the farm when I was about 14 my cousin came up to go riding. Dad wouldn't let us ride the "fancy" horse. But when our cousin came out he let us try her out. Cuz really did not like horses, he just did it because his Dad wanted him to.

I had a friend who's Dad owned a few hundred acres on the other side of a farm between us, he asked his dad and we received full permission to cross both farms so we could ford the river to our Grandpa's farm.

My friend told me to cross the farm in the middle and take the east side gate to his Dad's farm. Heck I was a Boy Scout with the compass badge. East was no problem.

I happened to get the big fast horse for the first 1/2 of the trip. My Brother and cousin were riding some green ponies, them there famous plugs Dad bought earlier, that had progressed from not bucking much but still had to be plow reined. The big one I was on had power steering, hold the reins between two fingers lightly and neck rein, lean back and the slightest pull gave you power brakes.

Well, my friend did not get the directional Boy Scout Badge in compass reading. We went through an old homemade wood gate just like he said, next to a big Oak tree, followed the holler and soon could see the river bottom.

Just as we reached the river bottom road all heck broke loose. A crazed looking old timer leaning out his pickup up window came flying into the field holding a pump shotgun out the window. He fired right at us, if we were hit we were too scared to bleed. He had both hands on the shotgun more than the steering wheel.

I will tell you that I screamed ride hard and we did. The ponies too were scared or perhaps taking it in the rump as they kept up with the fast horse.

I looked over my shoulder, his truck was going airborne jumping ditches and he kept firing. We leaned low and kept riding hard.

I eventually pulled away from my brother and cousin I yelled I would get the gate. The truck could not run a perfect straight line but was still on our tail.

The road had tight curve in it before the gate, with 2 fingers I neck reined around it, I could see safety ahead. I looked over my shoulder and my heart sank, the ponies had gone straight ahead into a fence corner and stopped. The truck pulled in and the crazy man got out, screaming and waving the old pump shotgun threatening to kill us all.

I became a man that day. I sucked it up, spurred the fast horse over there. I got off and started talking to the business end of a 12 gauge shotgun barrel which is huge.But I also knew nothing was going to happen to my little Brother.

I kept telling him we were on Bearcat's farm, he said some thing like BS. He finally said what name do you boys want on your tombstone? Who are you boys? I told him, he said oh your Dad just bought the farm next to me and you boys think you can just ride on it anytime you want. I said no sir, Bearcat's son got us permission to ride on this farm, who are you, he told me.

The whole river bottom, the road and that part of the world had been owned by this man's grandfather, the Judge. It had eventually been pieced out among heirs and most sold off. This 160 acres was owned and farmed by a crazy semi hermit who was now measuring us for a tombstone.

I next learned to negotiate. After I got him to open up a little and more calmed I told him we were told to take the east gate to the river, he said no son it is the NORTH GATE. I asked him if we could leave and promised to never cross his land again. He said leave and if he caught us on him again he would shoot us. I guess my brother and I learned our lesson, we never rode horses on him again until he went into a nursing home.

After we got our own fast 1/4 horses and trained them we almost roped a deer on that same bend in the road where we had been cornered by the posse. The Old man's nephew inherited the farm a year after the big chase and was a little more friendly to young cowboys.

We never told Mom nor Dad. Nope just our little secret.
 
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my first time getting shot at was like a lot of others my age. trying to steal watermelons on Saturday night. rock salt didn't have the range lead shot did thank goodness. the next time I got shot at was 10,000 miles west of here and i'm pretty sure it was an AK or SKS. puckered me up more than that old farmer's 12 guage. lee
 
1st time was a BB gun fight.

2nd was an old .22 pellet pistol. That one hurt.

The first time I really thought I gonna get it was a guy ticked when my friend took a corner to fast in his Ranchero and wiped out his fence. I was in the car and the guy was out the house pointing some kind of bolt action at us.

Thank God I knew his daughter and after stepping closer to cover I told him who I was.

If I gave him the details about his girl he would have shot me dead.
 
I was shot at many years ago while on a moose hunt. Some idiot thought I was a moose or bear and just missed me.

I would never have known for sure but when the first round hit a tree 10 feet in front of me I hit the dirt and started yelling. Don't know where the second round went.

Back then we didn't wear orange vests or hats and we were in such a remote area that we never ever saw anyone else.

As I lay in the dirt the dummy was still looking for me and still didn't know who or what he was shooting at. That was until my dad yelled at him to stop. Dad had him at gun point and I can't repeat what was said but the guy left in a hurry. Never even apologized.

I remember it like it was yesterday and I still don't know whether I was more mad than scared. Scared because I was being shot at and scared because I thought my dad was going to shoot him!

Year later I lost a school buddy due to the same foolishness.
 
I was shot while at Boy Scout summer camp. We were at the firing range, shooting single shot bolt action 22s. I was in the first group to the line. We were each given 5 rounds, told not to touch them until told. Once told, we were free to load, aim, and fire. Once every one had fired their 5 rounds, we were instructed to open the bolts, lay the rifles on the bench and snag our targets.

Not sure what happened, but walking back with my target, a shot rang out, and I was struck in my right shin. I dropped like a rock. Bullet just missed the bone and passes through. i was lucky. Range was shut down for the week after that. One of the scout leaders took me to town to see a doctor, only to find out the only doctor in the little town was a horse doctor.
 
Back in the early 70's we didn't really have any procedure on how to respond to an armed robbery. We got a "robbery just occurred" call and two of the three officers on duty that night went to the scene. I didn't. It was a convenience store with a railroad running right behind it. I'm thinking the bad guy is probably walking the tracks south because if he went north he would have to go through the well lit downtown area. I was correct. I backed up behind an old warehouse and pointed the spotlight on the cruiser toward the tracks. A few minutes later I could see "something" coming my way in the dark. When I lit him up with the light I could see muzzle flashes and hear "pop! pop! pop!" from what was apparently a .22 caliber pistol. I heard a couple of them hit the cruiser. I crouched down and fired blindly in the direction of the flashes with six rounds from a model 19. I crawled out the passenger side dragging my Ithaca riot gun with me. I found cover behind a tree and got still and listened. It sounded like he was going away from me. I never saw him again. I found out who he was a few days later. Everybody that knew him said he had gone to Detroit. About two weeks after identifying him he came in second in a fight with somebody up there. No extradition, no trial, or other expenses.
 
Back when I was about 8 or 9, a buddy and I took our BB guns, and decided to raid a local farmers stock pond during the middle of the night, where there where always a couple fat mallards sleeping. We thought we were pretty sneaky, but when we shot at the first one, suddenly the porch light came on, and someone started shooting at us with a semi-auto pellet or BB rifle of some type.

We both ran, and I took one in the right leg. Hurt like hell. Then I ran into a barbed wire fence, and cut my leg up pretty good. Still have a scar from that. No more duck poaching after that.

Another time, I was about 12 or 13, I was visiting at a friends house, and he took the Browning Auto-12 down of the gun rack in his bedroom, and pointed it at me. I guess I was lucky, because some reminder of his hunter safety course kicked in, and he swung the muzzle about 2 feet from my face, and pulled the trigger. Yep, it was loaded. I thought he hit me, because of the powder and blast hitting me in the face and eyes, but I was lucky. The shot went through the sheet rock wall, thru his mothers dresses in the closet on the other side, thru the closet door, and peppered their bedroom, breaking a big mirror she had on her dresser. His father went ballistic on him with his belt while his mother, in tears, walked me home.

Fortunately, the several times in my LEO career with real guns have been misses....

Larry
 
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It was about 1970, and I was just out for a walk on the farm, when I stepped out of the woods onto the trail next to our south fence line bordering on the State game area. There's a shotgun blast from farther west along the fence, I hear pellets hitting the leaves and branches of a tree overhanging the trail in front of me, and then I'm hit in the face.

Fortunately I wear glasses, and the range was extreme, but it still stung like heck! I yelled, but as I do so, there's another blast! I jumped and rolled sideways, back into the woods, then quietly looped around to come at them from another angle so I could see who was shooting.

It's four teenagers, now in the process of climbing over the fence onto our property AT a fencepost with a "No Trespassing" sign. From a little distance I call out, asking what they think they're doing... The response, both spoken and non, is that they're up from the city, and essentially just shooting at anything that moves. I point out the sign, and what it says, and suggest that they should go back the other way. They climb back over the fence, and I head back in the other direction, deeper into the woods again... And I hear one of them suggest to the others, "Let's shoot him." I don't know how serious this idiot was, but I made sure there were plenty of trees between us.

After that, I ALWAYS took my walks carrying a gun.
 
The only direct hits were from the foolish things young boys do with BB guns. The first near miss was from a crazy old lady with a pistol, who didn't like Halloween pranks. The second near miss was from a crazy old man with a 12 ga who also did not like Halloween pranks. Most of the misses were by several feet, except for one by a third old crazy fellow whose 12 ga pockmarked the quarter panel of 1950 Buick, while I happened to be hanging out of the rear door window tossing shelled corn at him....Yeah....we were slow learners....:) The scariest was from a drunken neighbor who did not like motorcycles and took a shot at me, and my 8 year old son, as we rode past his house....he stepped out next to the street and fired from close enough that I heard the "bumblebee" pass my head and felt unburned powder sting the part of my face not covered by the helmet....He ran from me and made it behind locked doors before I could get to him, but went to jail shortly thereafter. Fortunately,(probably for me) common sense and the realization I was not bullet proof, replaced blind anger before I kicked in his door and went after him inside his home.
 
1962-newbie LEO-responded to a 'Well Being Check".
knocked at the front door (oak wood) and the old gentleman inside fired a 12 gauge Remington Model 11 though the door. One buckshot made if though the door and struck me in the upper right chest. The old shotgun was dirty/rusty and jamed after the first shot. I was taken to the local small town doctor via patrol car. The doctor took the piece of lead out and placed a bandage on the wound. I was a dispatcher until the wound healed. (eight lives left)
 
First one: Panama Canal Zone-1986.
J-street, they call it, and it's full of whores and cocaine and soldiers looking for some good times.
Some off-duty crooked cop confused me with some other red head (we all look alike) and tried to keep me in the alleyway that I was in (just leaving a lovely lady's apt).
He put a 380 PPK in my face, I grabbed his arm and tried to disarm him (young airborne infantry...thought I was invincible) and the gun discharged and dropped to the ground.
I ran for a taxi, went back to base....and stayed there for several weeks!

fast forward nearly twenty years.....
Tikrit, Iraq.
Crew Chief on a Medevac Blackhawk.
Shot at nearly every day for a year.
I'm still alive, but many others are not.

Ain't life a fun trip?! :p
 
Around 1977 or so my roomate was nearly killed in a wreck with a drunk driver outside of Culpepper Va. I drove down from Alexandria to visit him at the hospital one evening and stopped for gas just outside of town. As I am pumping, I heard the "bumblebee " fly past me head. Then heard another and the report of a .22 not too far off. As it was past sundown I am pretty sure it wasn't somebody having some target paractice. I dropped behind my Mustang and the clerk, who was standing there waiting to get paid gave a "what the heck are you doing?" kinda look. I said, "Did you hear that?" 'Bout that time another one went by and I said those are bullets going by, and you might want to get down. I tossed him some cash for the gas and left post haste. No idea what happened after. While that was the first time I had one get close enough to hear, I have had guns pulled on me two times. Both times I was someplace I shouldn't have been, doing things I shouldn't have been doing. I stopped tempting fate and changed my ways.
 
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"model70hunter" ~ I've never been shot at on purpose - just a few close calls by stray bullets while hunting. Your experience however, was like reading a best selling short story! I've never lived in a remote area with crazed residents as you describe so I was amazed by what you had to say. Thanks for posting your incredible experience!
 
I went to a block party back when I was 18. The home was on about ten acres and they had a carport on the side that the band was playing under. I found the beer kegs and figured it would be a good place to stay close to. I sat on the fence and had a good view and great access to the beer.

The band was really good. I was in heaven.

Until the band stopped playing and the lead guitarist stopped and yelled in the mike that someone was shooting. I looked at him and just then a bullet hit the carport above his head. Then one hit the swing set close to me. I bailed over the fence into the neighboring property thinking I wouldn't get trampled. Thats when I heard where the shots were coming from. The neighbor. Where he was made me right in line for his shots. I guess he didn't like someone sitting on his fence.

The song was over and so was the party. It was the best version of the Alman Bros. In Memory of Elizabeth Reed.

Every time I hear that song I think how close to being shot I was that night. I still love the song.
 
Back in 1942 when I was 9 years old my friend Rudy and I were exploring some of the mountain behind my WVa home. Guess we got a little to close to a still and got shot at with a shotgun. We ran all the way down the mountain and Rudy said you have blood on you T-shirt. Seems one pellet found its mark. The police got him and I think he was put under the jail:)
 
My first time was also one of those BB-Pellet gun fights. My older brother, a neighbor and I, hid in the back of my Dads Ford Ranger pickup-that was parked on the side street facing a park--and there were the Vasquez brothers facing us. We fired at each other for what seemed like an eternity. BBs and Pellets stinging the sides of the truck-doing zero damage (thankfully) or my Dad would have killed us all. Anyway, we saw a local cruiser coming down the street a few blocks away--which was what ended our gunfight.

Second time was when I was in College and I was one of a few students who spent Thanksgiving staying in the dorms, and the few of us there-were standing midway up the stairs and luckily having thick brick walls surrounding us on the stairwell) when we heard those "Bees" flying past us. We ducked of course and stayed put. Later-we figured that we were not the targets-but as our dorm was located right at the edge of Harlingen National Airport--the fool doing the shooting-were firing at the airplanes taking off.

The last time I was shot at-was when I had snuck onto the Farmers farm to see his daughter (not kidding-I was dating a farmers daughter at the time) and he caught sight of me sneaking out of her bedroom window. Ill leave it at that :D
 
Brain Fart here: I've been "held under arms" twice, both times in East Africa, but managed to squirm out of danger both times.

However I was sitting on my deck last week when my nephew nailed me with a SuperSoaker. Actually felt pretty good.
 
Summers during college I worked in the woods with a chain saw. Competition for the work was pretty stiff. The pay was good, but you weren't paid unless and until the entire acreage in the contract was completed to specs. I didn't spend much money on anything but gas for the truck and saw until I got paid just before class started again.

Apparently somebody wanted my contract, because about a month or so in I started taking fire. Bullets would hit the trees a few feet ahead or behind me. At first I thought it was somebody target shooting, shut off the saw and yelled. Once I fired up the saw again, the shooting resumed.

Finally I gave it up, went to town and traded my shotgun for the only handgun I could legally buy (and afford) - a Belgian copy of a Remington cap and ball .44.

Next day mid morning the shooting started again. I shut off the saw and yelled "I'm not leaving". More shots. I fired two rounds from the .44 into a stump. The shooting stopped. I finished the contract and went back to college, better educated.

The first, but not the last and never hit...so far, so good.
 

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