What are yall's opinions on Primitive weapons seasons? I'm assuming this varies widely by state, but in general, are they still relevant? Are they effective from a management standpoint? Or do they have a place because of tradition or sentimental reasons? Just curious about some opinions from others.
Here in Mississippi a primitive weapon is a single shot rifle with an exposed hammer, caliber over .35, and any sighting system is allowed. So you can have a single shot .35 whelen with a 6-24x scope if you want and have almost zero handicap during primitive season compared to the scoped 30-06 you might use during rifle season. How is that primitive? How does that make a difference with game management? Oh yeah, and it only applies on public land, which is less than 10% of our state.
I'm putting some ideas together to start sending to our legislature, but I'm curious, what would you write into a "primitive rifle" law? No scopes? black powder only? Straight wall cartridges only? Only firearms designed prior to a certain year?
Or just throw it out and have only Archery and Rifle with appropriate time periods and bag limits to manage game?
Here in Mississippi a primitive weapon is a single shot rifle with an exposed hammer, caliber over .35, and any sighting system is allowed. So you can have a single shot .35 whelen with a 6-24x scope if you want and have almost zero handicap during primitive season compared to the scoped 30-06 you might use during rifle season. How is that primitive? How does that make a difference with game management? Oh yeah, and it only applies on public land, which is less than 10% of our state.
I'm putting some ideas together to start sending to our legislature, but I'm curious, what would you write into a "primitive rifle" law? No scopes? black powder only? Straight wall cartridges only? Only firearms designed prior to a certain year?
Or just throw it out and have only Archery and Rifle with appropriate time periods and bag limits to manage game?