I just left county line/Emerson store. Lady there says they haven't had ANY .22 in a long time. Wasted trip!
I just left county line/Emerson store. Lady there says they haven't had ANY .22 in a long time. Wasted trip!
The lady that told you that is full of ****. I bought .22lr about a week abs a half ago. Ben was there too. I've been there 3 times in the pad month when they have pulled 22 out of he back.
The lady that told you that is full of ****. I bought .22lr about a week abs a half ago. Ben was there too. I've been there 3 times in the past month when they have pulled 22 out of he back.
I'd like to thank all of those here who've shared their advice on how to find reasonably priced ammo. Here's a summary of things I've learned from using that advice and looking around myself:
1) Sign up for email advisories on when ammo is in stock at the bigger resellers.
2) Decide on a per round price you are willing to pay in order to help you decide when to pull the trigger. When you see it available, then buy it ASAP.
3) Get the WalMart app and use it to find when their ammo is in stock. Here's a good explaination for how to use it that I posted earlier in this thread: Using Walmart App on Phone to Find AMMO - KTOG - Kel Tec Owners Group Forum
3a) When the WalMart app says it is in stock or limited stock then it IS there. If employees say it is not then they are either too busy/lazy/annoyed by all of us ammo hunters to check or an employee has it set aside (not meant as a slam on the employees of WalMart, just my experience at this point).
3b) Each store seems to have their own restocking policies so find them out and adapt to them (or at least know which stores to avoid at what times).
3c) Be nice to the employees! You get more flys with honey. They are generally overworked and under paid. Being polite but firm and persistant always helps in my experience. Just avoid being a jerk/pest and most of them will be helpful. Be mindful that they are just trying to get their assigned work done while dealing with a stream of us interrupting their work to make the same demands on their time.
Goo luck and happy hunting.
I'd like to thank all of those here who've shared their advice on how to find reasonably priced ammo. Here's a summary of things I've learned from using that advice and looking around myself:
1) Sign up for email advisories on when ammo is in stock at the bigger resellers.
2) Decide on a per round price you are willing to pay in order to help you decide when to pull the trigger. When you see it available, then buy it ASAP.
3) Get the WalMart app and use it to find when their ammo is in stock. Here's a good explaination for how to use it that I shared earlier in this thread: Using Walmart App on Phone to Find AMMO - KTOG - Kel Tec Owners Group Forum
3a) When the WalMart app says it is in stock or limited stock then it IS there. If employees say it is not then they are either too busy/lazy/annoyed by all of us ammo hunters to check or an employee has it set aside (not meant as a slam on the employees of WalMart, just my experience at this point).
3b) Each store seems to have their own restocking policies so find them out and adapt to them (or at least know which stores to avoid at what times).
3c) Be nice to the employees! As the saying goes, you get more flys with honey. They are generally overworked and under paid. Being polite but firm and persistant always helps in my experience. Just avoid being a jerk/pest and most of them will be helpful. Be mindful that they are just trying to get their assigned work done while dealing with a stream of us interrupting their work to make the same demands on their time.
Good luck and happy hunting.
I'd like to thank all of those here who've shared their advice on how to find reasonably priced ammo. Here's a summary of things I've learned from using that advice and looking around myself:
1) Sign up for email advisories on when ammo is in stock at the bigger resellers.
2) Decide on a per round price you are willing to pay in order to help you decide when to pull the trigger. When you see it available, then buy it ASAP.
3) Get the WalMart app and use it to find when their ammo is in stock. Here's a good explaination for how to use it that I shared earlier in this thread: Using Walmart App on Phone to Find AMMO - KTOG - Kel Tec Owners Group Forum
3a) When the WalMart app says it is in stock or limited stock then it IS there. If employees say it is not then they are either too busy/lazy/annoyed by all of us ammo hunters to check or an employee has it set aside (not meant as a slam on the employees of WalMart, just my experience at this point).
3b) Each store seems to have their own restocking policies so find them out and adapt to them (or at least know which stores to avoid at what times).
3c) Be nice to the employees! As the saying goes, you get more flys with honey. They are generally overworked and under paid. Being polite but firm and persistant always helps in my experience. Just avoid being a jerk/pest and most of them will be helpful. Be mindful that they are just trying to get their assigned work done while dealing with a stream of us interrupting their work to make the same demands on their time.
Good luck and happy hunting.
They had M22 also... until I got there. I think I upset the old fella that sold it to me, because I have a feeling he really didn't want it put out, but his coworker put it in the cabinet and I saw it before he could snag it for himself.Southport Wally World has .223 Tula & Winchester .22 mag on the shelf.