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Pros and Cons of Carrying a Flat Powder Horn

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I have others besides flat horns, I just like them both.
These are the ones laying around the family room, some of them I carry at different times depending on wether I am doing French or English or whatever. Bruce Horne, Scott Sibley, a couple of originals and any really ugly ones I probably did.
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now they are a passel of day horns, just gorgeous!!
 
I am impressed with the artistic nature of the various flat horns members have shared! Collecting horns could become yet another expensive hobby! LOL
 
I see this is an old thread - but there’s a lot of good information within. I’m funny - I have beautiful carved horns made by @PathfinderNC that I love. I wear them to show off around my non-ml friends.

When I hunt I love small horns. I have a little banjo horn that lives in the bag for my .40 and a nice flat horn that lives in the bag with my .62 jaeger.
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Just read a description , and drawings of some old original Ky. /W.Va. shot pouches . Most had some of the contents , which showed a preference for flat horns to carry powder either tied under the bag flap , or stored inside the pouch totally out of the weather. It was thought these flat horns were for smaller cal. guns , under .40 , due to the other accoutrements . My choice is flat horns to use these days , cause they are out of my way , and can be used for priming horns , and larger for charge powder.
 
Don't overlook Scandinavia. Sweden produced some nice flat horns, as did some of the Slavic countries.

I carry a small flat priming horn (fits nicely in my outer pocket of my bag) and a medium flat horn either in my waistcoat pocket or under my bag flap. Even on a grouse hunt, I don't expect to shoot more than three or four times in a day. Plenty of powder. I also have a flat horn which holds shot.

ADK Bigfoot
 
Looking back over decades of hunts I realize the only times I might want to carry a large horn would be on an all day dove shoot. Even if you are calling in rafts of waterfowl you are only getting two shots at a time with your muzzleloader.
 
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