Winter Muzzleloader & Flintlock Black Powder Shooting In Montana
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- čas přidán 13. 01. 2017
- Venture into the woods for the smell of burnt sulfur, coffee and a pot of navy beans and ham hocks. Best Saturday in a while.
Spring Shoot: • The Revenant Montana -...
Posse: • Flintlock, Black Powde...
Witness modern day Revenant as men walk through the barren winter wood of the great white north. Hugh Glass and Jim Bridger and the like spent time in similar woods.
Traditional Muzzleloader
Lancaster Rifle
Trade Gun
Tennessee Poor Boy
Kentucy Rifle
Lehman
JJ Henry
Trade Gun
Fur Trade - Zábava
Tip Jar (for powder, ball and grub):
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Denny Ducet 🇺🇸MAGA🇺🇸Outstanding brother!
"There is an indescribable calm that comes with the methodical loading ritual of these fine firearms... ....a meditative, zen like state is achieved when interacting with these finely fashioned pieces of steel and wood. ... Traditional muzzleloading is a vacation from the norm a reprieve from modern chaos."
This sport, this passion and hobby needs a revival. I encourage anyone and everyone to try it out. Amazing reprieve from the "tacticool", "High speed", couch commando, gun bunny, marketing crowd that makes up the modern firearms culture that I have been immersed in for over 2 decades. I still love my liberty preserving black rifles, but that entire side of the industry is now being over run with useless crap, zombie apocalypse bubba, gun bunnies who take one picture with a black rifle and get SHOT show tickets the next day and a sponsorship.....Flintlocks rule. The slower pace, methodical, meditative processes create a zen like atmosphere of primitive shooting. It is sublime, it is nirvana with firearms. Try it out.
I totally agree with you. Since i started black powder i have had absolutley no interest to even pick up my modern rifles.
czcams.com/video/7KvHeGA8-HM/video.html
I couldn't agree more. I have been very turned off by the modern gun culture lately. So much so that I have begun to retreat back to my flintlocks! I have never enjoyed shooting so much and can't believe my rock lock has been collecting dust the last couple of years.
I just love it. It gives me time to think and do things without the pressure of the the fast paced modern world. Even as a very young boy I liked the ideas and the ways of living of back then.
Just make sure you continue to support the black rifle crowd, because they're the ones on the chopping block right now, and I can tell you from personal experience, they don't feel supported by the black powder guys - they feel like the black powder guys have retreated to an area where they're safe from gun grabbers, and therefore aren't interested in fighting for RKBA. We must hang together, or we shall surely hang separately.
Flash! Boom! Clang! The simple joys of shooting a flinter. Love my .32 squirrel rifle.
The more videos I watch, the more I am ecstatic I decided to get into this hobby.
It's not a hobby it's a way of life lol
Takes one back to the days of the mountain man. Kind of wish I was alive during that era...
Being part of a muzzleloader club is pretty close to it these days.
You guys need to make more videos, great job. A group of us used to do a winter Rondy and weekend winter trail walks in Alaska. I live in Montana now.
Shooting in the spring: czcams.com/video/AArm7ObVs5c/video.html
Muzzleloader Posse Shoot: czcams.com/video/1ay0VF9L_qc/video.html
June 2017 Shoot: czcams.com/video/7KvHeGA8-HM/video.html
BLOG ARTICLE: dennyducet.blogspot.com/2017/02/flint-steel-and-blackpowder.html
www.flatheadvalleymuzzleloaders.com
This was a great share! Really enjoyed your video.
Thank you!
dennyducet.blogspot.com/2017/02/flint-steel-and-blackpowder.html
czcams.com/video/7KvHeGA8-HM/video.html
Some fine firearms there! Cold fingers, too. Thank you.
Thanks for watching! Please LIKE , SHARE and SUBSCRIBE!
looks like lots of fun.
Absolutely.
Nice 😄
I have watched lots of your videos , enjoy them all . I watched a man load his shotgun using cornmeal on top of the powder , then shot , no wads , other than the last wad to hold it all in the barrel . I would like to talk to him or someone else that uses this method to load shot . I intend to try this in a 62 cal trade gun.
Look for Gene in the comments here. He’s the man!
Thanks Denny
Most welcome! I am glad you enjoyed it.
I really love this video! I have watched it numerous times and it always makes me smile. Looks like so much fun!
Question: What is the song at the beginning of the video? I like it and would enjoy tracking it down.
Thanks!
Music made by Robert W Fredere, the song is called "Steal away, reprise".
Link below:
czcams.com/video/D7TcRiXyu40/video.html
Starts at 2:10, enjoy!
Captured the event really well. Nice video!
czcams.com/video/7KvHeGA8-HM/video.html
Yes!!!!!!!!!
I love these videos. I have a lot of modern firearms. Nice ones. They have all lost their lustre to me because the flintlock called me back home to the primal fire and steel. A good muzzeloader, regardless of who builds it, isn’t stamped out by the thousands like a cookie cutter, they are produced one at a time. They are almost a living thing. Even the “mass produced” ones are far more labor intensive. If you tire of the tacticool, training for an imaginary war fought only in their own minds, shooting experience turn back the clock to when each and every single shot was as important as the other. You may only fire 10 rounds to the AR-15 shooter with his 15 loaded 30 round magazines and a barrel so hot it’s lost it’s temper, but you will REMEMBER each of those shots and take satisfaction in them like nothing else. Stepping off soap box now.
👍👍
Hi.
Does Pedersoli rifles are most expensive than T.O.W rifle in USA ?
The track of the wolf muskets are handmade from very high quality materials and can be purchased ready made but they are anywhere from $1-2000 dollars. You can also order kits to make the musket of your choice but the cost for the kit alone can range from $500-1000. If you go to Cabela's you can buy Pedersoli which is a fine firearm and a Kentucky flintlock alone can cost nearly $700. That being said the choice is up to you. Just whatever route you decide to take I hoped this info could help. Whatever you choose best of luck.
Steady hands.
I try to figure out the difference between a Flintlock Rifle and a Muzzleloader. I can barely tell the difference by looking at them, yet alone their mechanism
Flintlocks and caplocks (or percussion) are both muzzleloaders. The difference isn't in the loading, it's in the ignition system. Here's a description of both with pictures:
traditionalmuzzleloader.com/index.php/flintlock-and-percussion
Cool video but that one dude is blue
Pretty cool, but even purists should wear eye and ear protection in my opinion.