I can't show my first muzzleloaders because I sold them years ago.
I think my .44 cal Kentuckian flintlock is still hanging on someone wall as a decorator. How do I know this? Because I sold it at a big gun show here in Phoenix. When I sold it, I took the time to explain about it using only real black powder and .433 diameter patched roundballs. The guy seemed really excited to shoot it.
About a year later, I saw the same guy at another gun show so I asked him if he was still shooting it and how did he like it.
He basically said, "I never got to fire a shot. When I got it home, my wife took one look and said, 'That is going right up there on the wall. It's beautiful and I'm not going to let you dirty it up by shooting it'. "
Along with the Kentuckian, I also bought a steel framed "Colt 1851, .44 caliber revolver". After a lot of very enjoyable shooting, I got into my, "It must be authentic" mode and decided that since Colt never made a .44 caliber 1851, it must go, so I sold it at another gun show. I've always regretted doing that. It's healthy "boom" with each shot was a lot more satisfying than the smaller, "Pop" of the .36 caliber, more authentic, Colt 1851 I replaced it with.
Last and least, at the same time I also bought a Spanish made 28 ga percussion shotgun. To get components to load it, I paid an arm and leg for one box of 28 guage shotgun shells. The shells were loaded with fiber wads and shot for me to use in the gun.
On my first trip to the desert to shoot it, I noticed a LOT of smoke coming out of the barrel mortise at the breech so I didn't even load another shot.
When I got home, I noticed large amounts of powder fouling on the wood all around the breech plug. That did it for that gun. I sold it at the next gun show.
Besides, IMO, it was downright ugly. Two piece beechwood stock and what looked like a seashell for a cap box.
Yes, I did tell the buyer that I didn't trust the breech plug and warned him not to shoot it.
Anyway. That's the story of my first three black powder guns, all bought at the same time.