Nice. I do wish I had some type of grenade to toss down stairs is things got too crazy.M18A1 Claymore
In the bed holster is my SIG 320 in .357 SIG, in the nightstand proper are my stainless European beauties a Jericho 941 and a Manurhin MR88 (fits my K frame holster). Next to the nightstand stands a shortened (legally) Remington 870 with all the bells and whistles. Wife has a .32 Skorpion and a .410 Mossberg shockwave on her side. Be sure and knock loud...we don't like surprises!
Most of our pretty Smith and Wessons live in the safe (except my old service revolver, a model 13) and it could be anyone's guess where it is at any given time!
A 1961 Model 36 and next to it is an 870 loaded with buck.
I am a complete Smith and Wesson revolver lover. But in my nightstand is a Beretta mini cougar
25-2 with two hard ball filled moon clips, W 49 Bowie knife, flash light, cell phone.
Damn brother y'all got some serious lead slingers rite close at hand. I surely would hate to be the idiot that messes around y'all's house. Lol
A lamp and my C-pap machine.
In the nightstand, not the NY-1 version, but a distant cousin. A 64-3 that is electric pencil engraved on the butt PHCU (Patrick Henry Correctional Unit in VA) and loaded with Federal 130 gr. HST. Came to me with the smoothest DA pull I have ever owned and was what I used for CPL qualification.
M18A1 Claymore
This useful observation has me rethinking the concept of keeping a dedicated bedside gun at all. I think I'm just gonna park my EDC gun in my night stand at night, and take it downstairs with me in the morning. I don't wear it at home, but keep it handy downstairs to put on when I go out..... as a Detective assigned to Residential Burglary for about 10 years, can tell you that when a B&E occurs in your absence (which is about 98% of when all burglaries happen), one of the first places checked/ransacked is your bedroom in a search for the ever-present firearms and/or jewelry...