When hunting with a muzzleloading rifle, I carry it loaded. If it's a flinter, I prime the pan and carry the rifle with the frizzen down and the hammer on half-****. If a percussion, I carry it with a cap in place and with the hammer down. Those are the ways I was taught and they work for me, but that's not to say everybody should do it the same way. In any case, I do NOT carry whichever firearm I'm using with the muzzle pointed at some part of my anatomy -- or anybody else's. One of the images that will always make me cringe is that of a shooter leaning on the muzzle of a long rifle with it's butt on the ground.
Once I went hunting with a good friend, and he brought another friend of his also. His other friend was a recent convert to muzzleloading and his rifle was a .50 caliber percussion "Plains" type with set triggers. We spread out on the property, each hunting a pre-arranged area and at the end of the first day's hunt we met to head back to camp together. Walking along, we noticed that the new shooter was carrying his rifle in the position the Army calls "Shoulder Arms" with the hammer on full ****.
My old friend gently asked if he could examine the rifle, making it safe as he took it from the owner. Then he asked why the man was carrying it that way. Turns out he thought the set trigger was a safety mechanism, and had been packing the gun around that way all day!! We had a brief training session on the spot. The new guy is still active in muzzleloading and has become a safe and skilled shooter since then. Lucky fellow. Us too.
Once I went hunting with a good friend, and he brought another friend of his also. His other friend was a recent convert to muzzleloading and his rifle was a .50 caliber percussion "Plains" type with set triggers. We spread out on the property, each hunting a pre-arranged area and at the end of the first day's hunt we met to head back to camp together. Walking along, we noticed that the new shooter was carrying his rifle in the position the Army calls "Shoulder Arms" with the hammer on full ****.
My old friend gently asked if he could examine the rifle, making it safe as he took it from the owner. Then he asked why the man was carrying it that way. Turns out he thought the set trigger was a safety mechanism, and had been packing the gun around that way all day!! We had a brief training session on the spot. The new guy is still active in muzzleloading and has become a safe and skilled shooter since then. Lucky fellow. Us too.