I had not heard of the stick shooting incident before but those guys definitely knew how to think outside the box.
Not any different than folks shooting their ram rods out of their rifles today!!
I had not heard of the stick shooting incident before but those guys definitely knew how to think outside the box.
The most complete description of any rifle carried on the expedition is Clark's "Small" rifle. It is mentioned that the ball size was 100 to the pound and may have been by the gunsmith Small. The next description is that of the air rifle, but that is sketchy at best. The Army troops that went with the Corps of Discovery to the Mandan villages probably carried the issue 1795 smoothbored muskets they were issued. Other than a passing reference to the rifle that was used when Lewis was shot is that it was of military caliber. The Hunters from Kentucky signed on at Fort Massac probably carried their own rifles. The only description of the 15 rifles that Lewis brought from Harper's Ferry was that they were configured with the new interchangeable locks, and he brought along 15 extra locks. No gauge is referenced when describing the swivel gun. The book I have on the weapons carried by the Corps of Discovery leaves a lot of the description of the firearms as unknown.What were the arms carried by L&C?
1803 Harper's Ferry's?
They lost one guy right at the beginning of the trip, after they left St. Louis, Sergeant Charles Floyd, who was from Kentucky.the L&C Expedition did all that, and lost no guys in the doing
A few decades ago when I was in Germany, our "Partnership" unit (a reserve unit) used wax bullets for very short range target practice indoors. I don't know how difficult cleaning was, nor what charges they were shooting.. But my point is that you CAN do the equivalent of darts that way. I imagine wood would also work but would be considerably more dangerous: You could probably put a wooden projectile through a sheetrock wall. Try it with a piece of sheetrock and see if I am right. Larger charges might produce a cloud of splinters, so start small and work up.I'm with you, FC. Maybe somebody on the forum has a junker and would like to experiment and take one for the team. Now my brain is going crazy thinking about the grain weight of a 3" long .50 caliberish oak dowel, patched and lubed, and maybe backed with 20-25 gr of FFFg. Accuracy at 30 and 50 feet??? This might lead to a whole new way to do darts at the corner tavern.
M-80's either.I get the impression there's lots of people on here that never succumbed to curiosity in their misspent youth.
There's not much you can't shoot out of a mountain man rifle. And, flaming arrows never stay lit.
Just drop a termite in your barrel and wait for the sound of chewing to stop.Wonder how you get a stuck stick unstuck?
Don’t tell the feds about this or they’ll ban sticks too.
Does anyone know of a good formula for wooden stick lube?
Thanks, JP. If I ever decide to try stick shooting a squirrel I'll give it a try. Historically L&C would not have had Pledge or Murphy's to use. Perhaps deer fat from the outside of the tenderloin ? I'm pretty sure that any alcohol they carried with them wasn't denatured.5 part Pledge (lemon)
1 part Murphy's Oil Soap
1 part linseed oil (not boiled)
2 parts woodcock schmaltz
6 drops denatured alcohol
7 parts snowshoe hare tallow
3 parts bees wax (wildflower only)
Mix only during a waxing gibbous moon.
No substitutions, no omissions!
I'm certain that was to lube the shooters, not the bores!I'm pretty sure that any alcohol they carried with them wasn't denatured.
That’s the author’s interpretation. Has anyone got the primary source to hand? I’m guessing it was more like a bolt than a bullet.https://lewis-clark.org/members/george-shannon/
He actually carved a bullet out of a stick.
Outlaws are alive and well !I once shot a stuck ramrod out of a .45 cal. flintlock with just a few grains of 4F pushed into the vent. I aimed it at 45 degrees and it went out of sight! Took me an hour to find it.
I also knew a father and son that shot deer in the archery season with their Thompson Center .45’s using aluminum arrows with broadheads. They loaded a light load with a wad over the powder and pushed the arrow against the wad. Claimed it shot more accurately than they could shoot with a bow. Vey illegal!
Nope. Purely medicinalThanks, JP. If I ever decide to try stick shooting a squirrel I'll give it a try. Historically L&C would not have had Pledge or Murphy's to use. Perhaps deer fat from the outside of the tenderloin ? I'm pretty sure that any alcohol they carried with them wasn't denatured.
I would of sworn there was a few drops of oil of snipe in that formula.5 part Pledge (lemon)
1 part Murphy's Oil Soap
1 part linseed oil (not boiled)
2 parts woodcock schmaltz
6 drops denatured alcohol
7 parts snowshoe hare tallow
3 parts bees wax (wildflower only)
Mix only during a waxing gibbous moon.
No substitutions, no omissions!
The read is interesting and goes way beyond the twig bullet question. A very interesting fellow and a very interesting life.https://lewis-clark.org/members/george-shannon/
He actually carved a bullet out of a stick.
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