GAHUNTER60
40 Cal
Okay, I'm so new to flintlock shooting, that I have not even gotten one yet. How newbie is that?
I'm 69, and have been shooting sidelock percussion guns since 1967. Like many who started back then, I took up the sport because the State of Georgia sponsored special primitive weapons hunts on certain WMAs in advance of allowing modern firearms hunters on them. This appealed to me for several reasons, not the least of which was being able to hunt either *** deer with a firearm, a rare occurrence back in those days.
But the nostalgic nature of the sport was not lost on me either. I'm a history buff (I minored in History in college). I believe that this is this reason that I never "graduated" from historic sidelock rifles to modern in-lines. In 1976, I bought a .50 caliber Thompson Center Hawken, and have hunted with that rifle ever since. It is a very accurate rifle inside 120 yards, hits hard with big conical bullets and always goes boom when I want her to. In fact, it's latest kill occurred just last Saturday -- a big Georgia 8-pointer (story in the traditional hunting forum).
But lately, I've been bitten by the nostalgia bug again. While researching my mother's family genealogy, I learned that my Great, Great Great Great Grandfather, was killed at the Battle of Kings Mountain in South Carolina. (That's right, the Battle was fought in South Carolina. The town of Kings Mountain is in North Carolina). My Grandfather's name was Col. James H. Williams, and he was the highest ranking Colonial officer killed in the battle. Of course, the Battle of Kings Mountain is famous for being the one and only battle in the Revolutionary War in which the use of rifles by the Colonial side made the difference between winning and losing.
Also, let's face it, my Thompson Center Hawken is not a true historic reproduction of anything. It might kinda resemble a St. Louis Hawken rifle, but when was the last time Jeramiah Johnson changed his zero by clicking the windage screw on his adjustable rear sights? Also, it has become too easy to kill a deer with it. I still have good eyes, so I might as well be hunting with a modern open-sighted gun (which, in all reality, I am!)
So I've decided that it's time for me to "graduate" to a flintlock. Only problem is, other than watching a few folks shoot them at my range, and YouTube videos, I don't know the first thing about shooting, equipment needed, accessories, cleaning, maintaining and hunting with a flintlock! I was lucky enough back in the 1960s to have a friend whose family was into percussion rifles who showed me the "ropes!" I'm a hands-on type of learner. In one hour of personal training, I learn more than reading 10 articles on a subject. After that one hour, however, the 10 articles I read actually might make sense to me.
I'm not rich, so I need something affordable. To that end, I'm looking at buying one of the TVM Natchez Poor Boy rifles in .54 caliber. Reviews on the gun have been good, especially in the area of accuracy, which is paramount to me. Yeah, I'd love a Lancaster or Virginia reproduction rifle with all the pretty "stuff," on it, but what I'm after is a gun to serve a purpose -- and that purpose is to kill deer (much like the guns the Over-Mountain Men used when they attacked Major Patrick Ferguson's garrison of loyalist Tories at Kings Mountain!). I chose .54 because I've had bad luck in the past with round balls in smaller calibers on deer -- and those deer still haunt me at night!
So, the above is potatoes; now for the meat of my posting here:
What is y'all's opinion of the TVM Natchez Poor Boy?
If I were willing to spend a little extra, should I get a swamped barrel, or double-set trigger? (I truly do love my double-set triggers)
What are some absolute necessities to buy as accessories to the rifle?
What is the best, most user-friendly, "guide" to learning the basics of shooting flintlocks?
And now for the Big One: is there anyone who lives within a hundred or so miles of Gainesville, GA, who would be willing to meet me a range of your choice to give me hands-on experience with my new rifle (once I get it,
of course)?
Thanks in advance, guys. I look forward to the day I become a regular on the Flintlock forum.
I'm 69, and have been shooting sidelock percussion guns since 1967. Like many who started back then, I took up the sport because the State of Georgia sponsored special primitive weapons hunts on certain WMAs in advance of allowing modern firearms hunters on them. This appealed to me for several reasons, not the least of which was being able to hunt either *** deer with a firearm, a rare occurrence back in those days.
But the nostalgic nature of the sport was not lost on me either. I'm a history buff (I minored in History in college). I believe that this is this reason that I never "graduated" from historic sidelock rifles to modern in-lines. In 1976, I bought a .50 caliber Thompson Center Hawken, and have hunted with that rifle ever since. It is a very accurate rifle inside 120 yards, hits hard with big conical bullets and always goes boom when I want her to. In fact, it's latest kill occurred just last Saturday -- a big Georgia 8-pointer (story in the traditional hunting forum).
But lately, I've been bitten by the nostalgia bug again. While researching my mother's family genealogy, I learned that my Great, Great Great Great Grandfather, was killed at the Battle of Kings Mountain in South Carolina. (That's right, the Battle was fought in South Carolina. The town of Kings Mountain is in North Carolina). My Grandfather's name was Col. James H. Williams, and he was the highest ranking Colonial officer killed in the battle. Of course, the Battle of Kings Mountain is famous for being the one and only battle in the Revolutionary War in which the use of rifles by the Colonial side made the difference between winning and losing.
Also, let's face it, my Thompson Center Hawken is not a true historic reproduction of anything. It might kinda resemble a St. Louis Hawken rifle, but when was the last time Jeramiah Johnson changed his zero by clicking the windage screw on his adjustable rear sights? Also, it has become too easy to kill a deer with it. I still have good eyes, so I might as well be hunting with a modern open-sighted gun (which, in all reality, I am!)
So I've decided that it's time for me to "graduate" to a flintlock. Only problem is, other than watching a few folks shoot them at my range, and YouTube videos, I don't know the first thing about shooting, equipment needed, accessories, cleaning, maintaining and hunting with a flintlock! I was lucky enough back in the 1960s to have a friend whose family was into percussion rifles who showed me the "ropes!" I'm a hands-on type of learner. In one hour of personal training, I learn more than reading 10 articles on a subject. After that one hour, however, the 10 articles I read actually might make sense to me.
I'm not rich, so I need something affordable. To that end, I'm looking at buying one of the TVM Natchez Poor Boy rifles in .54 caliber. Reviews on the gun have been good, especially in the area of accuracy, which is paramount to me. Yeah, I'd love a Lancaster or Virginia reproduction rifle with all the pretty "stuff," on it, but what I'm after is a gun to serve a purpose -- and that purpose is to kill deer (much like the guns the Over-Mountain Men used when they attacked Major Patrick Ferguson's garrison of loyalist Tories at Kings Mountain!). I chose .54 because I've had bad luck in the past with round balls in smaller calibers on deer -- and those deer still haunt me at night!
So, the above is potatoes; now for the meat of my posting here:
What is y'all's opinion of the TVM Natchez Poor Boy?
If I were willing to spend a little extra, should I get a swamped barrel, or double-set trigger? (I truly do love my double-set triggers)
What are some absolute necessities to buy as accessories to the rifle?
What is the best, most user-friendly, "guide" to learning the basics of shooting flintlocks?
And now for the Big One: is there anyone who lives within a hundred or so miles of Gainesville, GA, who would be willing to meet me a range of your choice to give me hands-on experience with my new rifle (once I get it,
of course)?
Thanks in advance, guys. I look forward to the day I become a regular on the Flintlock forum.