Manufacturers are running a at full capacity recent videos from the honchos at Federal and Remington (Vista) have stated. One reason is politics. 'Nuff said. The other is 7 million new gun owners this year alone. Multiply that with ammo purchases to feed them alone much less the rest of us and you have a 1 Billion dollar backlog. I am one of the folk that recently saw the writing on the wall and went the BP route partly cuz I've always wanted to and partly cuz it seemed like a smart thing to do in this day and age.As I said prior some panic buying some hoarding but the manufactures are selling off their supplies and not producing items for the shooting sports. If you can find it buy it.
The recipe that dare not speak it's name.75 15 10
That's 75% salt, 15% black pepper and 10% mustard, right? That does make a really good seasoning. I hear it's especially good for venison and other wild game.
There are plenty of gun control bills out there, but it would be hard to understand
why they would target antique muzzleloaders.
Didn't have an urge to bite the wife or growl at the Mailman did you? I've heard they used to fed gunpowder to dogs to make them mean.There are stories of people using powder to season food in emergencies, such as Napoleon’s soldiers sprinkling it on horse meat to give it some flavor,
I’ve tasted real black powder and it’s sort of salty. Not bad, and reminds me of the potassium-based sodium free table salt substitutes.
Potassium nitrate does have a salty flavor. I wouldn't go crazy with for the same reason I avoid cured meat with nitrates and television. It drives up your blood pressure, then your doctor will sell you drugs to bring it back down. A lot more lucrative than just telling you to watch what you eat.There are stories of people using powder to season food in emergencies, such as Napoleon’s soldiers sprinkling it on horse meat to give it some flavor,
I’ve tasted real black powder and it’s sort of salty. Not bad, and reminds me of the potassium-based sodium free table salt substitutes.
I hinted at it earlier, but even if there are no bills that specifically target MLs (I don't know if there currently are or not), one of the big things those in power right now want to do is make all online sales of guns and ammo illegal. Nobody knows if this will apply to MLs and BP or not, but if it does, there'll be no more ordering powder from Graf's, Powder Inc., or whatever your preferred source is, and in many parts of the country real BP is just not available locally or is only available if you belong to a particular group that has a "rondy" or shoot once a year. We'll still be able to feed our percussion guns with substitutes that are available locally pretty much anywhere, but what about our flintlocks that don't work well or at all with that stuff?
The main reason I started out with percussion guns back in the '90s was that I knew flintlocks required real BP and I couldn't find any locally, despite calling every place I could find in the phone book. It wasn't until the internet came about and places started selling BP online that I decided to move to flinters. We could soon be back to the same situation we were in back in the pre-internet days, or even worse, but no one will know until the dust settles. It's this uncertainty more than anything else that's driving the panic, in my opinion.
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