Bud33 wrote:for casual carry, I have the North American Arms Mini Mag.
It comes in .22mag. and can be gotten with a second cylinder for .22lr which is a lot cheaper to practice with.
The gun is made in the USA and is VERY WELL MADE!!!!!
I got one recently for a toy, and to remove MrsBFD's excuses for not carrying on-body. The conversion cylinder is a smart move. We got the folder grip, were unhappy with it on the first range trip, and have swapped it out for the mini-master rubber grip, we also picked up a "Pug" rubber slip-on grip, testing is in progress to determine which one we like best.
The thing is fun on a bun to shoot, discounting poking the spent cases out with the pin ... I put a brass pin with a slightly larger diameter in the range bag to simplify that.
The Beretta Bobcat is a little fella, so you really shouldn't need to stress over when to carry and when to not ... if it is legal, just carry.
One note about packing with rimfire: Rimfire ammo isn't going to last anywhere near as long in a pocket, so change out your ammo frequently, preferably by shooting it following a known carry period. Whatever period you determine causes degradation in ammo reliability, cut that in half and swap ammo that often. (example if I wasn't clear - if 2 weeks of CC makes your ammo even slightly susceptible to failure, swap it weekly!)
You
can afford to run through some extra .22LR ammo! You
can't afford to have a failure in a small caliber with a pistol known for trouble clearing duds!.
.22 really is a bit light for a gunfight, but
Step#1 is to
bring a gun, so you are still ahead of 95% of the population, you should have a threat without a gun outmatched, if you are proficient and not caught flat-footed. Hopefully your CC experience will be boring and unremarkable.