- Joined
- Mar 19, 2020
- Messages
- 77
- Reaction score
- 93
My apology for the Bashing!!
I also get both, and am glad that THE BEVEL BROTHERS CAME BACK. they are just great!!
There a many international members. There is one fellow from Germany who attends the National shoots every year.Just joined the NMLRA. I didn't know they'd accept Canucks. No wonder I dont know anything.
That’s a good perspective as one is an organization, the other a magazine.Muzzle Blasts gives you more NMLRA news and information. Muzzle Loader has more historical articles. It has been many years since I last had a look at Muzzle Loader. MB runs adverts for ML.
Nice post NotcheyBob totally agree with you. The glossy pages are an expensive waste. Guess we all should post some how to articlesI get both. Muzzle Blasts is one of the perks that come with being an NMLRA member. Muzzleloader has no affiliation that I know of.
In my opinion, Muzzle Blasts has too much fluff and not enough substance. They could save a lot of money on printing if they would just use black print on white pages. Every page has some kind of colored background. Fine white print on a black page is harder to read, at least for me. I like the Bevel Brothers articles and the column to which people write for identification of old guns, and some of the hunting articles. Editorial quality in general is not the best. I have back issues of this magazine from about 1955 to the mid eighties, then a long gap in the collection, resuming just a couple of years ago. However, I don't keep every issue anymore. The older ones, the "black and white" ones, tend to be more interesting. George Shumway's old "Longrifles of Note" column was head and shoulders above Dr. Whisker's articles in the issues that come now.
I look forward to receiving Muzzleloader near the end of every even-numbered month. Mike Nesbitt's "Shootin' the Bull" column and T.C. Albert's "how to" articles are my favorites, and I like the feature stories about contemporary gunmakers and craftsmen. I miss Rex Norman's "Far West" articles, with his incomparable pen and ink illustrations. These ended several years ago. Ted Belue is back as a staff writer now, and I always like his articles. However, I find the other writers' long, serialized historical articles and the "Keep it Simple" reenactor columns tend to get awfully tedious, and I seldom read them.
Anyway, I would recommend both... a subscription to Muzzleloader, for the best current reading entertainment, and also membership in the NMLRA to support the organization. You'll get Muzzle Blasts with your membership. It is noteworthy that they have now digitized every back issue of Muzzle Blast, and with membership you get access to them online. That way, you can read those great old magazines from the fifties, sixties, and seventies, with articles by such notables as John Baird, George Shumway, John Barsotti, and the inimitable Bull Ramsey, as well as the always entertaining and sometimes hilarious ads placed by barrel maker Bill Large. Read about muzzleloading before T/C, CVA, or Traditions ever existed.
Best regards,
Notchy Bob
Actually the colour costs less to print than B&W in today's world.Nice post NotcheyBob totally agree with you. The glossy pages are an expensive waste. Guess we all should post some how to articles
I'm pretty sure they even have a member in Guam; they're happy for members from anywhere!Just joined the NMLRA. I didn't know they'd accept Canucks. No wonder I dont know anything.
I get BW magazine, but wouldn't necessarily recommend it for the ML articles; they're OK, but a little shallow on content. I do enjoy the spirit of BW, don't get me wrong.Back Woodsman normally has an article or so about ML. May have to order it also, would rather read than watch TV.
We in the US couldn't want a better neighbor than Canada. When you see around the world how some countries are doing, we're one lucky Country!Just joined the NMLRA. I didn't know they'd accept Canucks. No wonder I dont know anything.
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