Old Salt
Senior Member
- Location
- New Brunswick, Canada!
This thread brings back so many memories! The German Army used a shed near the forest to store all kinds of goodies like bags of gun powder, 88 ammo, small arms ammo, revolvers, pistols .. you name it. And left all when they were forced to withdraw in a haste!
We had a blast. I owned a couple of revolvers and a pistol at the time, same with my brother and we had loads of ammo to go with it. Our friends and classmates and us would light a fire between the buttresses of our local church, throw a handful of ammunition into the fire and then lay down flat, waiting for them to go off! It's a wonder no one got killed.
However, our love of bringing live ammo home almost killed the young girl who had been assigned to us by the authorities. This was normal, they were supposed to help women with children whose husbands were fighting in the German Armed Forces. She was young enough to be quite naive and swept up the loose ammo she found and put it into the wood stove for disposal! You can guess what happened, they went off with a great bang, one of the bullets went through a kettle of water, missed her by a few inches and ended up lodged in the kitchen wall! Needless to say, the rod came out that day again!
And we threw our guns into the local river, the day before the French colonial troups entered our town!
We had a blast. I owned a couple of revolvers and a pistol at the time, same with my brother and we had loads of ammo to go with it. Our friends and classmates and us would light a fire between the buttresses of our local church, throw a handful of ammunition into the fire and then lay down flat, waiting for them to go off! It's a wonder no one got killed.
However, our love of bringing live ammo home almost killed the young girl who had been assigned to us by the authorities. This was normal, they were supposed to help women with children whose husbands were fighting in the German Armed Forces. She was young enough to be quite naive and swept up the loose ammo she found and put it into the wood stove for disposal! You can guess what happened, they went off with a great bang, one of the bullets went through a kettle of water, missed her by a few inches and ended up lodged in the kitchen wall! Needless to say, the rod came out that day again!
And we threw our guns into the local river, the day before the French colonial troups entered our town!
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