It has a more friendly look to it, DD. I'm pretty sure everyone in this group knows that compliance with specific Safety rules and Firing Range protocols will be expected of everyone attending. Mike and I both are totally ignorant on how to aim a cannon without sights, so we are both attending that one for sure and we should know a bit more about how to aim a mortar too. If anyone would like to aim and fire one of the seacoast guns, we would be happy to let you do that.
About that word, "semantically", isn't that one of those cattle breeding techniques?
Richard, we are really surprised that a New Yorker like yourself hasn't heard of a "New York nanosecond" before. Well anyway, our definition is simply the taking some action in the "shortest time possible". It can be likened to an experience described by Sir Samuel Baker, that 19th century British explorer who, with his wife in tow, named Lake Albert in the upper Nile basin in April of 1864. He also had a large, 2-Bore rifle he named "Baby" which fired 8 oz. machined brass shells just slightly over 1" in diameter with 20 drams of BP. We like to think that he spun around in a New York nanosecond, because, by his own account, every time he touched off "Baby" he "spun around like a wind vane in a hurricane".
Regards,
Mike and Tracy