Well, it was a good and a sort of sad day. The show was OK; there was some decent stuff there that I go for, and I made a couple of deals. I wouldn't call the place packed, but at least there weren't screens covering portions of the room that had no tables. The rows of tables were spread wider than normal, conceivably to give the room a fuller appearance. Gun prices, at least the ones I pay attention to, were decent. Ammo prices, even on the common stuff, were higher than Shooter's and Wal-Mart. Some reloading stuff, and I made a couple deals. Worth my time to go there. Hit Shooter's Outpost after, and then to the pit of despair called Riley's. It is clear, to even the most casual observer, that the clock is ticking on Riley's. Handguns spread way out in the cabinets where once there were many. Virtually no used handguns, and bare walls on that center display wall in between the pistol cases that used to be full of stuff from A-Z. The long gun racks, once 2 stories high on the walls and two center aisles are now reduced to just a few, and the gaps where there is no inventory make the whole sad display look like a broken picket fence with multiple boards missing. The old ammo displays are gone, and the 1970's NRA posters have been taken down. I know that change is inevitable, but this is just sad. As a guy who used to go in there as a teenager and look around for hours, continuing on until the present day, where I am in and out of the place in 6 minutes, the change is striking. It's like looking at John Wayne in the 1960's, and then looking at him at the Academy Awards in 1979, shortly before his death. He was still The Duke, but had wasted away to nothing. It's a fair comparison.