I thought, and still do, think it best to never let my ammo supply get low enough to be a crisis. This pandemic is not a crisis, for me/us. My days of high-volume centerfire shooting are over, anyway, with my thumbs/hands/wrists not aging all that well, so large volumes of my favored .357 Mag, .38 Special, .45 ACP, and .45 Colt are not necessary. I mostly just need to feed .22 LR to my S&W 17-4, and occasionally fire a few centerfire rounds, with various revolvers. I have a place to discreetly plink, with .22 LR, on private land.
My Glocks do require more trigger time, to maintain proficiency, but training opportunities are severely limited by the pandemic, so my Glocks have become unloaded relics of my LEO-ing days. I do have several hundred rounds, each, of training and carry 9mm ammo, but it will be a while before I use any of it.
OTOH, I recently added some rifles, as my attention has shifted to long guns, as my left shoulder remains healthy. The current ammo shortages have made it difficult to acquire enough ammo for function and accuracy testing. This is not a crisis, just an annoying inconvenience. I already had an adequate supply of ammo for my long-favored rifles.
My Glocks do require more trigger time, to maintain proficiency, but training opportunities are severely limited by the pandemic, so my Glocks have become unloaded relics of my LEO-ing days. I do have several hundred rounds, each, of training and carry 9mm ammo, but it will be a while before I use any of it.
OTOH, I recently added some rifles, as my attention has shifted to long guns, as my left shoulder remains healthy. The current ammo shortages have made it difficult to acquire enough ammo for function and accuracy testing. This is not a crisis, just an annoying inconvenience. I already had an adequate supply of ammo for my long-favored rifles.