One of the benefits of being in a BLACK POWDER gun club is that you get to LISTEN to other shooters as they load and fire their guns. You get an idea what creates audible sounds, and what doesn't, from your own activity, and from theirs.
When I was first Hunting deer, I left my stand at the top of a ridge, to walk back down to my car. It was a bright sunny day, much warmer than forecast, and what deer were in the woods were taking long naps during the day, in the sun. There just was Not any shooting to be heard around me. As I walked down the ridge, I noticed, up ahead, more than 50 yards from me, another hunter, sitting with his back to a huge tree growing next to, but not on, the ridge line I was walking. He was facing a ravine away from me.
I didn't want to disturb him, or his hunt, so I began "fox walking", setting my foot down on its outside edge, my back leg bent at the knee, so I could find any twigs, or sticks that would break under my feet when I transferred my weight to the forward foot. I then rolled the foot over from the outside so it was flat to the ground, and only then shifted my weight slowly to my forward foot. I could "Hear" the crunch of leaves under my foot, as sound travels much faster through solids( bone) than through the air. Of course, I thought I was fooling myself to think I could walk that close to the guy, with my feet stepping on the trail at EAR LEVEL to him, and only the 6-8' width of the base of that tree between his head, and my feet, but I continued anyway.
I walked right past him, and he never saw or heard me. I even stopped as I was dropping down on the trail where I would not be able to see him any more, to see if he was asleep. Only my head, topped by my Blaze Orange hat would have been visible to him at that point. He moved his head, to look to his left( away from me)and then back to looking straight towards the ravine, so He was awake through all my walking.
I went on down the ridge to my car, and got my lunch out. I was both thrilled at having accomplished walking that close to another hunter and not being seen or heard, and also amazed that I could not be heard. I too thought you could hear small noises.
It was this experience that lead me to watch and listen to the other men in my club at the firing line, cleaning, loading, and shooting their guns. None was purposely trying to be quiet. I stood at various distances from the people I was watching, to measure just how far certain sounds travel.
Now, the ears of a deer are a lot better than my ears ever were, even in my youth. But, I found I could muffle metallic sounds from my lock by just pressing the lock against my stomach, and then covering the other side of the lock with my hand.The tapping of a horn on metal would not make an acute metallic sound, and is far easier to muffle. :hatsoff: