What got you hooked on muzzleloading? I'm a bit of a history afficionado, so I think what drew me in was the connection to a bygone era. While that's still applicable, I grew to appreciate the fact that many of these weapons were simply functional art.
My story is pretty similar. Always with an interest in the
olden days as I called any era before I was born, I was lucky to have a father who was a gifted storyteller. And sometimes he never let the facts get in the way of his stories. Some however, were pretty factual, others were family folklore. Of these last, most contained guesses where the facts were missing; like for instance the story of the Prussian draft dodger.
I had the same teacher for both third and fourth grades. She was very interested in history. In fact she said that on one side of her family she was related to the Boone family. I can remember during story time after noon recess, she read through the entire Little House books, and some others about local pioneers
In the early 1970s there came a series of books called
Foxfire. By the time the books ceased publication some ten years later, there were eight or so volumes.
Foxfire V was the one that really sparked my interest in muzzle loaders. It contained interviews with luminaries like Bud Siler, Hershel House, and Warren "Hawk" Boughton. After reading that book (several times!) I had to have a muzzleloader. And it had to be flintlock.
It wasn't too long that a Dixie Gun Works catalog showed up on my doorstep, followed by a .50 caliber Tennessee Mountain Rifle. But for the fact that the gun was a bit awkward to handle, it shot reasonably well, and the lock never failed. That was some forty years ago. And I haven't lost my passion yet.