I use several. I have a "three holer" on a horn strap along with a bone powder measure and sometimes hunt with only that and no bag.
Those loading blocks are wonderful works of art and very practical. Sadly, the historical record doesn't have any until very late in the 19th century. Yes, I know of the one dated 1757. The provenance of that loading block is weak. Shot pouches get a lot of mention, but not loading blocks.
Does anyone use a loading block? A block with, say .50 inch hole to hold a roundball and patch?
I have a laser cutter and I was thinking of cutting one to see if I could use it. Now sure if it would be....just one more thing to carry, or if people find them helpful
Thanks
Jeremy
Just opened up the latest arrival from Heritage about 30 minutes ago.Heritage Products sells nicely made versions as well as French amber flints
their photo: http://www.heritage-products.com/images/SH-020a.JPG
Ned Roberts mentioned them but I’m thinking that was early twentieth century. I know of a photo from about 1870.Those loading blocks are wonderful works of art and very practical. Sadly, the historical record doesn't have any until very late in the 19th century. Yes, I know of the one dated 1757. The provenance of that loading block is weak. Shot pouches get a lot of mention, but not loading blocks.
Ned Roberts mentioned them but I’m thinking that was early twentieth century. I know of a photo from about 1870.
It’s a board with a hole in it, something we learned to make about a million years ago. Every military cartridge box had one in it.
But...
Outside of the 1757 board we have no historic reference to one.
I shoot mostly smoothies now, and a .62 five shot block is enormous and heavy to try and fiddle with.
Hunting, slowly carefully reloading in the field gives game a chance to die before I go to recover.
Historicly we can’t prove them for any of our common activities. Cowboy times are done mostly with breechloaders, even though most people of that time had ml. For MM and before?
It’s a board with a hole in it, that folks knew how to make, but we don’t know if they did.
Use’em for fun, if you want one on a hunt that’s ok, leave it out of your bag for an historic event.
I like ‘ em, have used them, but I bet it’s been ten years since one has been in my bag except when sighting in a gun.
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