Traditional Muzzleloader Shooters timid?

Joined
Feb 2, 2020
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Numerous states have already addressed that issue. As I've mentioned in CO we have to use open sights and full bore projectiles (50cal for elk and moose off memory) with loose black powder. The only advantage tech offers is a 209primer right behind the powder.
Yes, I'm referring to states that allow 209, scopes, etc during the regular ML season
 
Joined
Jan 17, 2013
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Idaho
All you have to do is restrict it to open sights.
99 % of muzzloader hunter aren’t shooting over 100 yards with open sights.

Regardless of ignition,powder or bullets allowed.

The only people that are is the dedicated few. And there dedicated enough to do it with whatever pos muzzleloader you put in there hands.

Restrictinging it all the way down to side lock doesn’t equal less animals killed.

I disagree. If projectile/powder/ignition doesn't matter then why not allow centerfire rifles with open sights? Or single-shot centerfires with open sights if you want to argue the "one shot" perspective?

I do think that creating seasons for muzzleloaders did have its origin in hobbyists wanting a separate season so as not to be at a disadvantage to modern rifles during the same time period. Inlines came along in response to make hunting those seasons easier. Nobody was producing inlines before there was the incentive of muzzleloader seasons.

Nowadays it seems that the management purpose has shifted to creating seasons to increase hunting opportunity while keeping success rates lower than modern weapons. In order to preserve that purpose there needs to be limits on what level of technology should be allowed during those seasons.

I'm a sidelock guy because I love the history. I don't dress up for it, I wear modern clothing and use binoculars but I do enjoy using my sidelocks. I'm not opposed to other hunters using in-line muzzleloaders. I think the essential elements that should be required match closely with Idaho's rules. Primarily:

Open sights
Loose powder
Full diameter lead projectile (no sabots)
Flint, percussion, or musket cap (no 209 primers)
Exposed ignition

Some of it is just for the sake of difficulty and to discourage too many hunters from participating.
 
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Nov 16, 2017
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Central Oregon
I disagree. If projectile/powder/ignition doesn't matter then why not allow centerfire rifles with open sights? Or single-shot centerfires with open sights if you want to argue the "one shot" perspective?

I do think that creating seasons for muzzleloaders did have its origin in hobbyists wanting a separate season so as not to be at a disadvantage to modern rifles during the same time period. Inlines came along in response to make hunting those seasons easier. Nobody was producing inlines before there was the incentive of muzzleloader seasons.

Nowadays it seems that the management purpose has shifted to creating seasons to increase hunting opportunity while keeping success rates lower than modern weapons. In order to preserve that purpose there needs to be limits on what level of technology should be allowed during those seasons.

I'm a sidelock guy because I love the history. I don't dress up for it, I wear modern clothing and use binoculars but I do enjoy using my sidelocks. I'm not opposed to other hunters using in-line muzzleloaders. I think the essential elements that should be required match closely with Idaho's rules. Primarily:

Open sights
Loose powder
Full diameter lead projectile (no sabots)
Flint, percussion, or musket cap (no 209 primers)
Exposed ignition

Some of it is just for the sake of difficulty and to discourage too many hunters from participating.

That’s exactly what my Oregon inline is.

It’s all those requirements.
 

dsotm

WKR
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Nov 5, 2018
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Arizona
Wait until some of you find out that there have been advances in the centerfire world that allow people to more consistently shoot at greater distances also, perhaps we should ban everything modern equipment and go back to trad bows and spears.
 

jimh406

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Feb 6, 2022
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Western MT
Wait until some of you find out that there have been advances in the centerfire world that allow people to more consistently shoot at greater distances also, perhaps we should ban everything modern equipment and go back to trad bows and spears.

There are already firearm restrictions like caliber in some states. There are also restrictions for lighted optics and weight limits in some jurisdictions as well as straight wall caliber restrictions and gun type restrictions.

Of course, there have also been magazine capacity limits for rifles and shotguns.
 

Bluefish

WKR
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Jan 5, 2023
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Honestly I like the Colorado regulations. I think it’s a good balance of why is there a different season for ML and no so obscure that people can’t go down to the local big box gun store and get a gun. With open sights, loose powder, and full 50 cal bore projectiles it’s not going to be a long range hunting rifle dressed up as a ML. The season is earlier so animals are less pressured. Seems like a good solution to me.

Note that I did live in Colorado and now am in a state that allows optics, so my ML wears a scope. I would gladly go back to open sights if the regulations changed.
 

Mtndawger

FNG
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Mar 11, 2021
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The whole bow vs crossbow thing is just a machismo pissing match. Seriously. One of those does NOT shoot further than the other, nor is it more accurate in the hands of an accomplished shooter. It's still archery.

I'd say that the muzzleloading thing is getting a bit ( a lot?) more complicated. "Muzzleloader" is starting to be a really gray area. A side lock with 70gr ffg and a Knight Disc with 70gr ffg and a 300 gr slug are on close to equal footing, especially if both are open sight or if both are scoped. A custom bolt action with a brass module for ignition, with a heavy load of smokeless, a 4-20 scope with dials, and the same 300 gr slug is a completely different machine, offering smokeless centerfire performance and reliability. I mean, a 300 gr slug at 2500 FPS or more is various 338 to 375 mag territory.

I personally think that the moniker of "muzzleloader season" should be changed to "blackpowder season". During black powder season, anything is fine as long as it's using blackpowder or a blackpowder substitute. And NO, I don't think BH209 is a blackpowder substitute. Same thing with the Firestick modules, and some states agree, saying they're not legal in their season.

I personally think that someone should be permitted to hunt with whatever they want, whenever they want. So to each their own, but I think that the smokeless thing is really going to get the primitive/blackpowder/muzzleloeader seasons all jacked up with more restrictions across the board.
Well said
 
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Why isn’t anyone asking to restrict traditional more to prevent wound loss?

To be fair to the animals don’t they deserve a more effective method of take?

I’m sure they would prefer and fast death from a modern fire arm vs a round ball blowing there leg off by some Daniel Boone wanna be, that wants to keep it pure.

Where are the at lattle/ Speer hunters tell the those more modern “traditional “ muzzle loaders to F off?

If you want to be traditional keep that modern black powder round ball crap out of here.

Sharpen a rock and tie it to a stick and stab a critter to death.
Why not restrict all archery methods as to wounding an animal, seems you have no ideal how a pure lead round ball situated over say 90 gr. Of 3-f black powder in the traditional firearm used bye a competent hunter can do for a clean kill on a animal perhaps you should do some reading on these types of weapons and there use, along with the original intent of the hunting seasons designed for them before the bastardization of the in-line gang. Just saying.
 
Joined
Feb 2, 2020
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Wait until some of you find out that there have been advances in the centerfire world that allow people to more consistently shoot at greater distances also, perhaps we should ban everything modern equipment and go back to trad bows and spears.
We absolutely should.

Not really, but I think there ought to be restrictions on all methods of take that restrict range.
 
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