Side note, and a good gun safety story.
I hadn't hunted with my dad or my flintlock in years, like probably close to a decade. The gun had been in a gun sock in a fairly damp basement for that whole time. When I got married, my wife and I were back in town for the wedding and were going to be driving back to the west coast. This was my only chance to pick up the guns I'd been separated from for all these years.
So I grab the flintlock and a few other guns, put them in the back of the car and drive about a half hour down to my wife's parent's house. I decide before I pack it all up for the long haul that I should probably check to see if the flintlock is loaded right? Well turns out it is. SO I prime it, hammer back, took aim at a dirt backstop and let er rip. Went off first try after a decade of being loaded in a humid basement.
Obviously there was a big gun safety error made when we put it away like that which is why its always important to treat every gun like its loaded, because in this case it was.