I'm one of those once dreaded Millenials everyone used to love to hate (myself included) before the Generation Z kids started getting old enough to post on social media.
I do agree the hobby is going to contract. Its the same with the reenacting community. The time and disposable income among younger people just isn't there compared to the older hands. But I don't feel its doomed. Definitely at a turning point, but not doomed.
Reenacting, buckskinning, the modern muzzleloading community all really got their start in the 70s, the same time there was a revival in interest among folk ways and the back to the land movement. This is what gave us the Foxfire books and other countless efforts to preserve knowledge that was about to go extinct. We are approaching another one of these points. Brain fried as we are there is definitely a current among people my age that desire a more sustainable, traditional existence, and you will find a core of people who do appreciate and desire to learn from history if you dig a little.
I can say for a fact I am where I am because I was fortunate enough to grow up around a group of older guys who were willing to share their passion with a precocious eleven year old. I was able to stay involved through some lean years from older hands passing on their old kit for a song. That passion and generosity of older hobbyists is what hooks and retains the neophytes. Ultimately we need each other. The older to pass down, the younger to take up, like a family keeping the line unbroken.
I do agree the hobby is going to contract. Its the same with the reenacting community. The time and disposable income among younger people just isn't there compared to the older hands. But I don't feel its doomed. Definitely at a turning point, but not doomed.
Reenacting, buckskinning, the modern muzzleloading community all really got their start in the 70s, the same time there was a revival in interest among folk ways and the back to the land movement. This is what gave us the Foxfire books and other countless efforts to preserve knowledge that was about to go extinct. We are approaching another one of these points. Brain fried as we are there is definitely a current among people my age that desire a more sustainable, traditional existence, and you will find a core of people who do appreciate and desire to learn from history if you dig a little.
I can say for a fact I am where I am because I was fortunate enough to grow up around a group of older guys who were willing to share their passion with a precocious eleven year old. I was able to stay involved through some lean years from older hands passing on their old kit for a song. That passion and generosity of older hobbyists is what hooks and retains the neophytes. Ultimately we need each other. The older to pass down, the younger to take up, like a family keeping the line unbroken.