Review: PHLster Flatpack Tourniquet Carrier

What follows is my (initial impressions) review of the PHLster Flatpack™ Tourniquet Carrier.

Background

So I blame Caleb Causey @ Lone Star Medics for all of this. 🙂 For some years now I’ve been trying to find a way to carry a tourniquet as a part of my every day carry (EDC). Alas, there’s been no good solution.

Caleb’s preferred solution is an ankle-wrap, which is a fantastic solution. But it doesn’t work for me, because I like wearing shorts. Plus, enough heat, sweat, etc. and my skin starts to get irritated. So a solution like that just is not feasible for me.

Caleb helped me look at a lot of solutions, such as various pouches, MOLLE, and various things. Alas, nothing really worked. Some time ago I found some excellent pouches from Eleven10 Gear. I do think they make some great TQ pouches, but I just did not find them workable for EDC. It’s not really the fault of the pouches, but of the TQ itself. Any good tourniquet, like a SOF-TT Wide or a C-A-T is just going to be of particular dimensions and constraints due to the windlass. If the TQ rides vertically, then it’s really tall and that windless is a stick in your back. And no one was really making horizontal solutions. For the record, I do still have my Eleven10 pouches and one rides in my range bag so I can keep one easily on-hand while working at KR Training. Again, fine products, but I just did not find them suitable for my EDC because it was either very uncomfortable, or the sheer dimensions and resulting thickness of the whole schebang was unconcealable.

Oh, and I refuse to use any other sort of TQ because well… they just haven’t demonstrated effective. I defer to the expertise of folks, like Caleb Causey, on this topic. And personally, I prefer the SOF-TT Wide.

The quest continued. I’d have a TQ somewhere, like in a bag, but those bags aren’t always in immediate proximity and that’s really what I’d like.

So when Facebook auto-stalked a comment Caleb made to the BFE Labs page, it was one time I was thankful for Facebook’s auto-stalk “feature”. I immediately expressed interest, and the folks at BFE were kind enough to post some pictures to show dimensions and size. This PHLster Flatpack seemed to be the answer to my problems!

I ordered two.

My Impressions

It’s a simple thing, as you can see in pictures and video. And it should be able to accommodate your favorite big-windlass TQ. But yes, you MUST fold it a certain way to get the TQ to pack as flat as possible.

When you do, it’s quite flat:

PHLstr Flatpack™ TQ Carrier, and a S&W M&P9 magazine.

That was the best part! On my belt, this was no thicker than anything else I already carried. Yes, it takes up more room because it runs horizontal, but it conceals just fine.

I was pretty stoked. 🙂

And once you learn how to fold the TQ that way, you almost don’t want to ever fold it any other way.

I think construction is generally good. Loops are made for 1.5″ belt and generally sturdy construction. I appreciate the use of the shock-cord and that there’s ways to adjust it because different TQ styles and fittings. BUT to me that’s also a potential downside: shock cord will wear out and eventually snap. Easy enough to fix, but having it decide to break while you’re out and about isn’t ideal. Not a knock against the design, just reality of using shock cord. I also worry that the attachments of the shock may come undone and release the TQ. So far not an issue, but I also haven’t subjected it to harsh stuff like rolling around on the ground, etc.. As well, the TQ is totally exposed — the only thing “protecting” it is your shirt. Is that going to be good? I mean, it’s a TQ… dust, dirt, etc. getting into it? other exposure. Or just simply friction wear from things rubbing against it all day? I mean, give a read to Caleb’s recent article about TQ failure. Is that going to be good or bad? vs. say a more covered “pouch” approach? But of course, the lack of pouch is what helps the slim design.

So it’s a trade-off, and a design that I reckon is still to be vetted.

Still, I appreciate these guys are trying to come up with something.

So… wearing it.

I’m wearing it at the 4-5 o’clock position — it’s the only place I have room on my belt. My wife calls it my Batman Utility Belt because yes, I wear stuff all over it. Consequently, that dictated where I wore it because that’s the only place I have left. But in a way it’s good because that position was a “hole” and this balanced things out — especially when I leaned back into a chair.

Generally I have no idea it’s there, and as I said before, it conceals quite well.

But it’s not perfect. The nature of it wobbles; just how it’s built, attached, and the fact it’s cloth just bungied to a board. So sometimes when I sit down I have to reposition myself to get it to drop or shift to a more comfortable position. It’s a little harder if I lay down, and I do have to reposition myself until I get it placed more comfortable. If it was a full kydex (or leather or whatever) covering it, fixed attachments to the belt, etc. I wonder how this might change — tho it could change for the worse too because perhaps the flexibility helps find the right position.

All in all tho I’ve been happy with the construction and approach, and it’s nice to know I’ve got something should I need it.

I did find another snag — literally. I can’t draw. 😦 Because of my body shape, clothing, position on my belt relative to everything else… I can’t draw. I go to lift my shirt and the Flatpack (well, the TQ mounted on the Flatpack) perfectly snags my shirt almost every time and makes it impossible to lift up. I can get around it if I reach REALLY far back when I lift my shirt… or if I do things like lean backwards (towards 4:30 or so) so the shirt lifts at a different angle — but these are totally not feasible workarounds. And if it was a fully covered pouch it MIGHT help because it’d be smooth with rounded corners, but there’s no guarantee it wouldn’t have the same problem. So the solution here is carrying it in a different location, but I really can’t — the things on my left-back have to be there and can’t be relocated, and I can’t wear it up front. However, up front may be my only possible, but I’m not really hot about that for some reasons as to why AIWB isn’t working for me.

So… I don’t know.

This is the closest solution I’ve found, but it’s causing some serious issues for me. I don’t think the product is bad — I think it has a place and people should consider it for sure. I think ankle rig is really good because you can carry more than just a TQ — and to me, I think you really need more than a TQ, but then you need a way to carry it which generally means some sort of bag/kit on or about you. My briefcase is pretty stocked, but I don’t carry my briefcase everywhere.

I think the Flatpack design is a worthwhile attempt. I think it’s going to need some time (read: years) to fully vet the design. People wearing it in daily carry, to more rough-and-tumble classes, and just really giving it a work-out to ensure this design is really going to work. I think there’s a lot of good things here, and frankly it may be the right solution for YOU. Consider what the product offers, what it is, what it is not, what your situation is, what freedoms and limitations you operate within. It may be right for you. If you’re not sure if it’s right, pick one up and give it a try because you really won’t know for certain until you do.

As for me, I’m not willing to give up on it entirely, but I have taken it off my belt until I can think of a way to make it work for me.

KR Training 2016-03-12 – Basic Pistol 1 Quick Hits

It was a short day for me today: just helping with a Basic Pistol 1 class this morning at KR Training.

We had an almost-full house: the class was sold out, but a few people no-showed for unknown reasons. Weather was great, despite the week-long rains that left the ground a bit soggy and marshy. A wonderful day to be outside.

Not much to report here as the nature of BP1 is introductory so there’s not much to tell the attending students other than contact us with any questions. We’re happy to help out.

I will point out a few things from the KR Training website that I mentioned:

In related news, a student came with a gun and wanted to try it out. So after class he and I went back to the range and ran through a few things. The gun was a Ruger 9E. First time I’ve gotten to handle one, and I must say I’m not terribly impressed.

It’s not a horrible gun: it certainly seemed functional and serviceable. It would be interesting to see how well it could handle a high-stress class. But what got me about it was the manual thumb safety. It was damn near impossible to actuate with your thumb. Oh sure I could get it eventually, and there’d be much struggling and failing. But geez, why? That’s the LAST thing you need in a piece of life-safety equipment. Just about an hour prior I had this student shooting a 1911, so he was able to have a reference point of how a good manual thumb safety works.

I just can’t jive with such a design. I won’t call it a flaw, because they obviously designed it this way as a feature. But it’s not a feature I would want. The manual thumb safety doesn’t operate easily, you fail to operate it numerous times, and gee if that’s not something you need to have go wrong when your life depends on it.

Oh, and apparently it has a magazine disconnect too. That will complicate dry fire practice.

It wasn’t the worst thing in the world, but in my experience and opinion, there’s better stuff out there. So yeah… I figure he’s going to go shopping soon. 🙂  Looking forward to seeing what he settles on.

Anyways, a good day to be outside. Thank you all for coming and spending your time with us today.

Should I train like I’d fight? Perhaps…

It’s an old adage: train like you’ll fight.

It makes sense. If you’re going to have to fight in X manner, then you should train in X manner and in manner than directly support X. Because to do otherwise is a waste of time, energy, and will not serve you in your end goal.

Another way of looking at it is the S.A.I.D. principle: Specific Adaptation to Imposed Demands. You want to get good at something? You have to do that something. You can do things very close to that something to help make it better, but when you get too far away from that something, it’s probably not going to help. SAID is a rather deep topic and you should Google it to learn more about it. But think of it this way: if you want to get better at boxing, you need to get in the ring and box. You can do some other things to support it, such as bag work, because while they aren’t  the specific thing you’re trying to get better at, it’s fairly close and has good carryover. Some things are further away, such as road work, but there’s still some carryover because you need aerobic capacity to go 15 rounds. But learning to shoot basketballs has nothing to do with boxing and will not help you become a better boxer. Or consider playing the piano. Playing the organ will have some carryover, but learning the oboe won’t help you become a better pianist. Yeah there’s some overlap because music, scales, etc., but the mechanics and what your body and brain must adapt to are too different.

And so it goes with anything.

In this context, I’m talking about guns and shooting, and something that I’ve seen numerous times before, but two things recently happened that spurred me to write.

First, during a recent class at KR Training I spoke with at student that was all gunned up   with a rig for class. He told me he wasn’t too familiar with the rig, as it’s not what he actually carries. A big, full-sized, all-steel gun, in a holster that he rarely uses. No magazine pouches, and he thought he’d keep them in his front pocket; I suggested he borrow some mag pouches from our loaner gear and give that a try. He said his normal mode of carry tho is a small pocket gun in his front pant pocket. I’m not out to pick on this student, just that this was a recent event – but he’s not the first student (nor will he be the last) that comes to class with a different rig than what he/she normally carries.

Second, in the March 2016 Rangemaster Newsletter, Tiffany Johnson wrote the following:

To those who train seriously and often: when you prepare for a firearms class, do you swap out your everyday apparel for that favorite training holster or preferred pair of pants with the belt loops in exactly the right spot? If so, you might be gaming yourself out of the whole point of taking classes. Do whatever you can to enable yourself to practice using the gear you actually carry — disadvantages and all. If your number ever gets called, I doubt the bad guy will wait for you to dip into the phone booth and re-emerge in the superman costume that always made you two-tenths of a second faster than the guy next to you on the range.

I agree.

Now, to that one student I did make a suggestion. Take the class with that rig, but later this year we should be offering our Defensive Pistol Skills: BUG class and to come back then and take that class with that small pocket gun. That is, come train like you fight.

So that got me thinking about the whole “train like you fight” thing, in terms of firearms training.

Some people treat it like a hard mantra, that if you aren’t going to train precisely as you’re going to fight, that you’re a fool and aren’t to be taken seriously. On the same token, some people think it doesn’t matter one way or the other and that if I take classes with my class-rig then run around town with my little pocket gun, everything will be just fine. Well, I just don’t think it’s that black-and-white.

The issue is: what are you trying to gain? What is your goal? If you are coming to a fundamentals class, wouldn’t it be good to work with gear that enables you to focus on the class material and work on those fundamentals? We say it all the time that people shouldn’t have to fight their gear, and that people should have gear that facilitates class. For example, having guns with 15+ round capacity do make things run faster and smoother than if your gun only holds 5 and you’re constantly reloading. Maybe in this rifle class you’d never wear a chest rig, but having that rig for the class makes things run smoother. Is that a horrible thing? Is it so horrible to keep class running smoothly? To have gear that enables you to focus on and practice what the instructor is teaching and you paid all that time and money for?

And so, why I felt it was acceptable for this student to take the class with his “class rig”. If it enables him to focus on the class and get the concepts and skills down, then that’s a good thing.

However, if the student doesn’t take it the next step and work to (re)apply those learnings to the other context, it will do them no good. If he never tries all the same stuff from class but with that pocket gun, how will it serve him? He needs to actually carry-over those skills to the other context, especially to find out if there is any carry-over or not! This can be had through one’s own practice, or come back and take the same class a second time but now with the other gun. That way now you can focus on the concepts and the gun, not just the concepts (and the gun being an obstacle).

Another way to look at it is when you make choices about gear and skills, try to make ones that have good carryover. For example, I might take class with my full-sized M&P9 because that enables class to run smoother. But when I carry, I might carry the compact M&P9c, because it conceals better. These two guns are quite similar, outfitted the same (e.g. both have Apex Tactical DCAEK, both have improved aftermarket sights with red fiber-optic front sights and all-black rear sights), and even fit into the same holster. So there’s very little that changes. Thus working with one, the carry-over to the other is high.

This is as opposed to always training and practicing with the M&P9 on my hip, then carrying that little NAA Guardian .32 ACP pocket pistol. Sure, there’s some bit of carryover as they’re both handguns and the fundamentals of operation are the same. But they are two very different platforms, and carry-over is minimal. If I want to carry that Guardian, I have to specifically practice with it. It’s one reason I stopped carrying a S&W 442 snub revolver as my BUG: too different, too little carryover from my primary. The M&P Shield provided better carryover.

Of course yes, if I’m going to carry the M&P9c I should be sure to practice directly with it. The key takeaway here is S.A.I.D. and carryover.

In the end, yes I agree: you should train as you fight. That if you train in some other way, as Tiffany said, you might be gaming yourself out of the whole point of the class and training. However, I just don’t think it’s so black-and-white. Keep S.A.I.D. in mind: some things can have carryover, other things not so much. Consider your end goal and make choices that serve achieving that goal, because even learning that something sucks and is the wrong choice is still learning and still progress towards your goal.

KR Training – 2016-03-05 – BP2/DPS1 Quick Hits

Saturday March 5, 2016. KR Training. One of our flagship days of Basic Pistol 2 (Defensive Pistol Skills Essentials) and Defensive Pistol Skills 1. A very important set of classes to help establish the necessary foundations for the carry and use of a pistol in a defensive context.

The weather was gorgeous. The classes I believe were sold out but some people bailed at the last minute due to various reasons. But we still had a great set of students, many of whom came for both classes. A diverse group as well: old and young, men and women, and from what I could tell all over the map in terms of economic status, education level, race/ethnicity, you name it. May be a little awkward to point that out, but I do so to continue to demonstrate that ignorant stereotypes of gun owners are just that – ignorant.

The day started a little rough, but we instructors spoke afterwards and think the day wound up going pretty smooth and that folks left better than they came.

In many respects it was typical BP2/DPS1 stuff. People being exposed to new concepts,  old habits creeping up and needing to be broken, and just coping with the overload of new information. But when you see people self-correcting, when you see people catching themselves, and when you see them improving, you know it’s all good. No one will come out of a 4-hour class (or 2, 4-hour classes) having mastered the skills, but seeing seeds sown and knowing what now needs to be practiced? All good.

As per these classes, focus on practicing what you learned. That 4-count drawstroke, the press-out, getting on the trigger and working with simultaneous action (getting that coordinated and smooth will help you go quicker without having to go faster). Practicing the “3 Seconds or Less” drill, just about all of which you can do in dry fire from your home.

A few specifics from class:

  • Gear matters. So many people think their gear is great, but they never use it under pressure. Often when gear is subject to more pressure, that’s when you start to see it fail. We had one gun that was having failures to extract. I tried the gun myself, and when I did the trigger press felt odd, didn’t always fire, but then double-fired. Yikes! That one’s going back to the manufacturer for warranty work (supposedly bought about 1-2 months ago, about 600 rounds through it). But better it was discovered here.
  • Gear doesn’t matter. Once you get your gear working, focus on skills. So the above student swapped out that gun for another, an M&P Shield, and while it took a little bit to change mental gears, she shot with that gun the rest of the day and did quite well. We saw much improvement in her shooting, and while of course there’s work ahead, in many regards I feel she’ll do great to just keep working with that Shield (and perhaps pick up some of those 10-round Pro-Mag magazines).
  • Run your gear. I’ll talk more about this in another post in a couple of days.
  • Have enough gear. You don’t have enough magazines. Buy more. Buy an UpLULA (seriously, nothing helps loading magazines better). The more mags you can have, the more you can keep them loaded, the more you can run well in class.
  • We don’t have a problem with Appendix carry. Those who wish to, you would be well-served to read this article from Todd Louis Green. I’d also look at dedicated AIWB holsters like CCC’s Shaggy, or one from Keepers Concealment.
  • Don’t worry if you don’t remember it all – especially those who were there all day. It was a lot of information. A few things I’m sure stood out to you, everyone seemed to have a “yeah, this is what I need to work on”, and so focus on those. And don’t be afraid to come take the classes again. When you do, you’ll now be able to focus on other things, as well as see your progression because there’s a measurable standard you can work against.
  • If you felt humbled, maybe a little ego bruised, good. Not that we’re out to destroy you and make you feel like shit; far from it. It’s that self-defense is not a place for ego, a place for false bravado, or a place to overestimate your skills and abilities. You need to be brutally honest with yourself so you can properly assess then properly learn and grow. As Tom likes to say, “we want to knock the Wyatt Earp right out of you”, because we’re interested in your growth, your maturity, your capability/proficiency, and ultimately your safety and ability to keep yourself and your loved-ones safe. 🙂

Thank you for coming out and spending your day with us. We appreciate your trust in us, and providing us with the privilege of teaching you. Hope to see you back out on the range soon.

 

KR Training March 2016 newsletter

KR Training’s March 2016 newsletter is up.

Classes are chock-full, including a lot of great guest instructors. I’m most excited about Kathy Jackson coming to teach her instructor course, and that Greg Hamilton is coming back for Street & Vehicle Tactics in the Fall. I took S&VT many years ago, and look forward to taking it again.

As well, we’re determining our class schedule for the rest of the year. If there’s a particular class you’d like to take, speak up and let us know!

See you on the range.

Karl Rehn – on grip

Melody Laurer just published an article over at the Lucky Gunner Lounge: “What’s Wrong With My Handgun Grip?” In the article Melody consults with 4 top instructors — including my boss-man, Karl Rehn:

At the top of my list of people to talk to when I started researching grip issues was Karl Rehn. Rehn is a IPSC Grand Master who started competitive shooting around the time I was born. In addition to taking almost every shooting class available from every major gun school in the country, he’s also an instructor who is well-versed in the history of shooting and technique.

Yeah, you want to click through and read it. 🙂

Please understand this about me

I will not seek a fight, and if possible I will avoid one, but if one is forced upon me I will do whatever it takes to survive.

My sidearm is neither a status symbol nor an emotional crutch. I will not reach for it unless out of dire necessity, but if I must use deadly force to preserve my life or that of an innocent person, I will use it skillfully and without hesitation.

The above comes from Tom Givens, of Rangemaster, but was recently discussed on another website (and is a good read).

This is something a lot of non-gun-owning people – and people afraid of (people with/owning) guns – don’t understand about gun-owning people.

The overwhelming majority of us are not out to seek a fight.

In fact yes, most of us want to avoid fights.

But if you bring me a fight – and a fight that if I do not swiftly and decisively respond to likely results in death or grave harm to myself or another innocent person – yes I will respond.

And that’s all it means.

Furthermore, realize that, at least here in Texas, anyone that can legally carry a handgun “out in public” must be licensed. Amongst other things, that means this person has been extensively background checked, fingerprinted, and isn’t a felon. This person has had more vetting than most of the citizenry that surrounds you on a daily basis.

So understand when people like me hear about the University of Houston, in response to the new “campus carry” laws, telling faculty things like “be careful discussing sensitive topics; drop certain topics from your curriculum; not “go there” if you sense anger; limit student access off hours”, it makes me sad and confused.

These people are supposed to be academics, but they demonstrate a lack of research, knowledge, understanding, and empathy about the issue and people involved. Not just because they keep talking about “open carry” (check the laws; there is no legal open carry on Texas college campuses), but because who are they afraid of?

The only people that would be allowed to (concealed) carry on campus are licensed individuals, who again are extensively background checked, fingerprinted, not felons, not drug users – try saying that about your average college student. In fact, try saying that about your average college professor! A little digging around (and someone please correct me if I’m wrong), but from what I can find about the hiring practices of Texas universities, criminal history is only used when hiring for security-sensitive positions. So that seems that a UH professor could be a felon, a drug user, a deadbeat mom, at some point in their life perhaps committed to a mental institution, subject to a restraining order, and who would know any of that? But if you have – and wish to keep – a Texas Handgun License, you can’t be any of those things.

Who should be afraid of whom?

Are such-licensed individuals people you should be afraid of? Aren’t non-criminal, drug-free, mentally sound, good people the sort of thing our society desires? How will presence and existence of such good people cause you harm? Why should it give you fear? Can you articulate a sound reason for your fear? Note that it’s not unreasonable to be afraid; it’s the difference between having a rational fear or being afraid of the boogeyman.

And then why are you not afraid of your other students? Have you not seen the endless cell phone footage of students in high school classrooms that have zero respect for their teachers, physically accosting the teachers and the teachers unable to do anything about it? There are no guns, just empty hands. Why are you not afraid of any and all of your students? Can you articulate a sound reason for this lack of fear?

It’s funny how a lot of people say “I don’t carry a gun, because I don’t live in fear”. Well, the above behavior speaks to the contrary.

I don’t carry out of fear – I carry out of an acceptance of reality. Just like I keep a fire extinguisher in my home because I understand fires can happen. Just like I wear a seat belt when I’m in a car because I understand brakes can fail. Just like I have insurance because stuff happens. I suppose you don’t do these things tho, because you don’t live in fear.

I don’t carry a gun because of you. I don’t carry a gun to intimidate. I don’t carry a gun to try to “get my way”. I don’t carry a gun for political reasons.

I carry a gun because I love my family, and if someone seeks to cause them harm, I will not allow it.

I will not seek a fight, and if possible I will avoid one, but if one is forced upon me I will do whatever it takes to survive.

My sidearm is neither a status symbol nor an emotional crutch. I will not reach for it unless out of dire necessity, but if I must use deadly force to preserve my life or that of an innocent person, I will use it skillfully and without hesitation.

Telling it like it is

Rifle [Open Carry] is fucking stupid. It’s not done to keep peace, it’s done to get attention and create confrontations. And those of us with actual training and experience, especially those of us who carry concealed pistols to defend ourselves, our families and innocent people around us, have to react when we see someone carrying a rifle ready to engage in public. For those of us with a sworn duty to protect the public, OC creates even more problems. This isn’t about police overreaction; after aaallll the mass shootings we’ve had in America, and after the horrors of the Paris attack, any police officer who ignores Random Guy Walking Down The Street With A Rifle is guilty of criminal negligence.

[…]

Now that we’ve seen, over and over, what kind of damage a murderer with a rifle can cause, we sane 2A advocates have a responsibility. If we want to maintain 2nd Amendment freedoms for ourselves, children and grandchildren, we need to oppose the mindless stupidity personified by OC activism. Scaring the public with rifles isn’t exactly the best way to show why we citizens should own ARs and AKs. The Founding Fathers recognized the right to bear arms for a reason: they didn’t want American citizens to fight tyranny with pitchforks against cannon, as so often happened in Europe. It’s safe to say they didn’t want a bunch of untrained dipshits swaggering around town showing the world they could massacre everyone around if they feel like it.

Once again, Chris Hernandez, telling it like it is. (h/t Greg Ellifritz).

Yes, click through and read his entire article, so you can better understand his context. It’s short, but informative – I promise.

The problems with drawing (especially from a SERPA)

My boss-man, Karl Rehn of KR Training, with an excellent examination of a piece of video that’s been going around the past few days. Click-through and read: not asking you, telling you.

Despite it being pretty well-established that the SERPA holster is A Bad IdeaÂŽ, there are still those out there that deny the facts. But then, we have people who believe the Earth is flat and meth is good for you. What’s particularly damning about this video is it comes from a greater video that’s all about the denial, then within the video the guy does precisely the thing that shows why it’s A Bad IdeaÂŽ.

Facepalm.

What’s extra good about Karl’s article is he not only talks about why the SERPA has yet again been demonstrated to be A Bad IdeaÂŽ, but also some other general issues about the drawstroke – including some good things demonstrated in the video. Things that many others are overlooking in their commentary on the video.

Look: you’re welcome to (continue to) justify your bad decisions – that’s also your decision. Remember, this is realm where ego-investment really doesn’t serve you well. There’s lots of good equipment out there, that does the same job better. Then there’s you, who can practice and even use video to help keep yourself honest. You carry a gun to keep yourself safe, right? So, make choices that help keep yourself safe.

Where do Texas LTC-holders live?

Ever wonder where LTC (License To Carry, formerly CHL – Concealed Handgun License) holders in Texas actually live?

The San Antonio Express News wrote an article with an interactive map to facilitate viewing where LTC holders live.

As you might guess, most of the holders naturally fall where there’s the most concentration of people – cities. Nothing really odd about the distribution.

And yes Austin – lots of people in and around Austin are licensed.

The article seems to be based upon a database published by mySA.com, but that’s just numbers (enter zip code, get numbers). The map is certainly better for visualization.

I find it interesting that we’re just shy of 1,000,000 license holders. Every time I look at this number it’s increased, and it shows no signs of slowing down.

Otherwise, the article is a poor one. It jams a bunch of unrelated “gun news” into a single article.

But the map is kinda cool to play with.