Howdy agin, y’all. I’d asked if anyone was aware of a rationale for prohibiting primitive BP weapons during regular firearms deer season, and from your answers it would appear that no one knows of any. In any case, many thanx for the timely responses, and for those of you who wondered, it’s the Great Sovereign Confederate State of Georgia that doesn’t permit BP weapons during regular firearms deer season hunts, and I’m trying to discover why.
Rancocas, your Tennessee lawmakers must be N-S hunters and knowledgeable game managers. Georgia too requires a $19 BP permit to hunt the short late-summer BP season, and offers an all-inclusive Sportsman’s License as well, but still disallows BP hunting during firearms deer season (though any muzzleloading rifle may be used to take turkey).
Big Bore, I’ve no sympathy for you ”“ a people get the government they deserve, and if you Yanks are happy to shell out $167 for Connecticut’s “favor” of a short BP deer season, you’ve done it to yourselves. (Not to mention the fact that, down here the Confederacy, any game warden who tried to confiscate any weapon would be taking his life in his hands.)
A tip of the hat to you, Kirrmeister, and my best regards to Bavaria, my favorite home-away-from-home, where I became an expert on off-roading with tracked vehicles and lived the Panzerlied.
It may be that the Georgia legislature has simply devoted no thought to the issue of whether muzzleloaders may be employed during the regular firearms season. If so, I guess we’ll just have to make ”˜em change the law.
Thanks again, and best regards to all y'all, Walt