3.0 Lawn & Garden salt gun - Bug-A-Salt
Flies. Mosquitoes. Wasps on your patio. We all know them. The Bug-A-Salt 3.0 Lawn & Garden turns it into a sport. Fill the reservoir with table salt, pump the action, aim, fire. The salt spreads like a miniature shotgun pattern and hits the insect at close range with enough force to take it out. No mess, no chemicals, no fly swatter smacking your furniture.
The Lawn & Garden version
The 3.0 Lawn & Garden is the more powerful variant in the Bug-A-Salt lineup. Where the standard versions work fine indoors, this one is built specifically for outside. More salt per shot, a harder hit, and a wider spread. That matters outdoors, because insects in the garden are more alert and you want to be able to reach them at a bit more distance. Effective range sits between 60 and 90 centimetres.
How it works
On top sits a transparent reservoir that you fill with regular table salt. Fine salt works best, coarse salt can jam. The pump-action grip on the underside cocks the gun. The front sight only pops up when the Bug-A-Salt is loaded, so you always know whether it is ready to fire. A cross-bolt safety prevents accidental discharge. One fill gives you roughly 70 shots.
Safety
The Bug-A-Salt is made for insects. Do not aim it at people or pets, and definitely not at eyes or faces. It looks like a toy, but the salt comes out with enough force to hurt at close range. Keep it out of reach of small children and treat it like you would treat any device that shoots: do not point it at anything you do not want to shoot.
Specifications
• Ammunition: table salt (fine)
• Action: pump-action
• Safety: cross-bolt safety
• Range: 60 to 90 cm
• Shots per fill: approx. 70
• Sights: iron sights with pop-up front sight (rises when cocked)
• Material: polymer
• Batteries: not required
• Version: Lawn & Garden (outdoor use, extra power)
The perfect gift
Let us be honest: the Bug-A-Salt is a gift nobody expects but everyone enjoys. For the shooter who has everything. For the garden enthusiast driven mad by flies at the barbecue. Or for yourself, because sometimes you just want to destroy something that deserves it. And what is more satisfying than shooting a fly out of the air with a handful of table salt?
Questions? Get in touch.