Maybe it's getting 'that time'

No worries here. Between my brother, my son and my three grandsons they’ll have to fight it out to see who gets what.
I have already started to thin the herd by giving certain guns to specific members of the family. They can divide the thousands of rounds of ammo however they see fit.
 
@vito your wife and daughter might be anti-gun (my condolences), but I seriously doubt they are anti-funds.

I suspect that their distaste for anything to do with guns will override their desire to get what they are worth. When it comes to death and funerals and everything associated with that, sense and reason fly out the window. Once you are dead your body is just a hunk of rotting flesh, it is no longer you, or even human. Yet famillies will spend tens of thousands of dollars that might be sorely needed for the living to have elaborate funerals with fancy caskets and expensive monuments in the cemetary. If people were concerned with "funds" when a loved one died, they would see the sense in a simple pine box and a modest grave marker or even just a simple urn with ashes.
 
I have no children to leave my possessions to ( My kids are autistic or crippled ), so I have a young man who I consider a nephew. He will probably inherit my reloading set up.
I told my wife to sell my prized possessions in the event of my demise by having my best friend liquidate them in any manner possible.
In the past I sold most of my collection of Colt "D" frame revolvers to pay off my sons medical bills and fund trips to the DFW area. It was a decision I made years ago , because no earthly possession means more than my little buddy Justin. So the time I have left I enjoy a round or two of fun at the range. My investments in firearms was a wise one , I think.
 
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