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Question about rifle hunting and rifle cleaning chemicals
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<blockquote data-quote="300RUM LNGRNGE" data-source="post: 1159361" data-attributes="member: 38737"><p>Yeah, waaay over-thinking this.....I don't eat the meat that I blew apart, meaning usually the wound channel is blood shot/tore up and I cut around that. </p><p>If it concerns you , after cleaning, run some hand sanitizer in the first few inches of the muzzle.........but then what about the bacteria in the air between you and your game.......</p><p> </p><p>I think the media has everyone so over sensitive to this kind of thing.</p><p>For example, a friend of mine had his kid in for lead testing, she tested high and the suggestion was made to remove all lead products from the household. The lead product in the house was paint. Old house, all the wood was painted. to get rid of this, you either strip it all down and re-paint (which would release the lead into the air causing a bigger problem), or replace all the wood. </p><p>My friend could afford to do neither and upon the next check-up, lo and behold, lead levels still high. Explained his plight to the doctor who told him ...the doctor , mind you, ...that the lead discussion is blown way out of proportion and that unless his kid was eating lead exclusively for breakfast every day, not to worry about it.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="300RUM LNGRNGE, post: 1159361, member: 38737"] Yeah, waaay over-thinking this.....I don't eat the meat that I blew apart, meaning usually the wound channel is blood shot/tore up and I cut around that. If it concerns you , after cleaning, run some hand sanitizer in the first few inches of the muzzle.........but then what about the bacteria in the air between you and your game....... I think the media has everyone so over sensitive to this kind of thing. For example, a friend of mine had his kid in for lead testing, she tested high and the suggestion was made to remove all lead products from the household. The lead product in the house was paint. Old house, all the wood was painted. to get rid of this, you either strip it all down and re-paint (which would release the lead into the air causing a bigger problem), or replace all the wood. My friend could afford to do neither and upon the next check-up, lo and behold, lead levels still high. Explained his plight to the doctor who told him ...the doctor , mind you, ...that the lead discussion is blown way out of proportion and that unless his kid was eating lead exclusively for breakfast every day, not to worry about it. [/QUOTE]
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