I love lists. I loves hidden compartments. I love guns. So I will follow their lead and make me some lists!
There is a vast array of commercial solutions you can buy to hide your guns:
- Hidden safes under your mattress, in the walls
- Behind working clocks
- Small safes under desks,
- Paintings and framed photos
- Safes that look like hot water heaters
- Furniture with built in compartments
- Fake gas cans
- Hollowed out books
- Modified furniture
- Hinged paintings or mirrors
- Hidden rooms
- Converted items like computer cases, freezers, grandfather clocks, scanners,
- Velcro'd holsters in furniture, fake plants, old boots, behind places
- Inside fake outlets, switches and vents
- Behind kick plates in furniture or kitchen or bathroom cabinets
- Fake stair risers
- Fake electrical boxes outside
Above the door in the coat closet by the front door.
ReplyDeleteI keep a stainless steel SP101 in a tofu box on the door of my fridge.
ReplyDeleteNO ONE has ever touched that box!
A "stash can"- a tapered body trash can with a board that covers the top, and a lot of trash hot glued to the top. Grab a piece of trash, and the whole top comes off, revealing storage below.
ReplyDeleteIt works.
Inside a bag of frozen mixed vegetables. In the ash drop from a fireplace (use a plastic bag to keep it clean) that you don't clean out too often. For less accessible hiding, behind paneling in a finished basement. In an emergency, have a pry bar ready. (This is for a MSR in states that are banning/regulating them.) There are others unique to my particular house, and it helps if you are a pack rat. No one wants to go through a ton of stored memorabilia in a crawl space, eh?
ReplyDeleteAlthough the CAPTCHA for this starts off with "surprised". Omen?
Inside the duct work. It will confound metal detectors!
ReplyDeleteAll good ones, and there are a few others, but Anon's point is a good one, need metal near to defend against metal detectors.
ReplyDelete