Two friends and I went desert cottontail hunting today, out in the rocky ravines of the oil patch. The rabbits really liked dozed out rock and boulder piles around oil well pads. Temperature never got above three degrees, but it was a beautiful sunny day. By noon we'd killed our limit of 30. They used scope sighted .22 rifles and I used a .40 Muzzleloader Builder Supply small caplock rifle "after the manner of Christian Beck" that I made. And I learned some tough things.
My muzzle isn't coned enough for .395 balls, and after dropping three in the snow and freezing my fingers looking for them (couldn't find them), I'm gonna cone that muzzle more. Had trouble pulling the brass plug from my horn. A wonder I didn't drop and lose the durn thing. I need a lever-opening horn plug, will make one soon. I probably shot 20 to 30 shots with no cleaning or wiping (40 grains of Swiss 2F) and some of the balls needed to be jabbed down. My lube is Murphy Oil Soap and alcohol, patches pre-lubed in a cap tin. I need to cast some more .380's or .390s for ease of loading.
We all took head shots, mine generally about 25 to 50 yards, and the more I missed the more the ribbing made me shoot worse. I used to use an oval Ted Cash capper but had trouble fitting the cap over the nipple in the flash guard. Used a straight one today, nothing but trouble. Those caps are so durn much trouble that the next hunt will be with a flinter.
We cleaned and gutted all the rabbits on the spot and put them in a cooler with snow. I cleaned up my share tonight and will give them to three or four friends, since I don't have a pressure cooker and that really tenderizes the meat. They are very tasty, but a bit tough unless you use only the hindquarters and backstraps.
When you hunt out of the bag like this in the snow and cold, you soon find what doesn't work well, and how to hang things on your bag. Wish I could learn better!