The PA ‘One-of-a-Kind’ Flintlock Deer Season Turns 50!

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Yep, Born and raised in Gettysburg area. Moved away in 1991 because of lack of work. But was fortunate enough to have killed 3 deer with my Lyman Trade flint between 1979 and then. I have been blessed to hunt all over USA but those three I'm as proud of as anything I ever harvest to include Bear, Elk, Moose.
 
Maryland (where I live and hunt) just in the last few years started to offer a "primitive" hunting season. You can only use sidelock muzzleloaders with iron sights. It is only three days in the beginning of February, but it is the last opportunity to take a deer until September and I have had a blast hunting that mini season. Last year I got a nice doe on the last day in the last few minutes of the season with my TC Renegade. Looking forward to it again next month. My goal this year is to take my first deer with a flintlock.
 
PA ‘One-of-a-Kind’ Flintlock Deer Season Turns 50!
‘The greatest hunting sport there is’:


Published: Dec. 19, 2023, 6:59 a.m.

Twenty years ago, Michael Vaka’s grandfather-in-law Glen Barlow showed up at his door with a gift for his grandson-in-law – a box containing a flintlock rifle he’d bought decades before for $50 at a local bar. The Thompson/Center Hawken, which had been stored in Barlow’s attic for many years, started Vaka on a magical journey to what has become his favorite hunting pursuit, and one that’s unique and steeped in history.

“My wife’s grandfather gave it to me and I was so excited that I went to the range and I tried shooting it and I could not get the damn thing to fire; I couldn’t get any ignition,” Vaka recalled. “Here, I was shooting Pyrodex (powder) instead of black powder. I mean you want to talk about being a newbie – I understood muzzleloading, but I didn’t understand black-powder hunting.”

When it comes to black-powder firearms, Pennsylvania and in fact, the Lehigh Valley, has a rich tradition, with the Moravians bringing their gunsmithing and gunstocking skills with them from Europe when they settled Bethlehem in the early 1740s. The state is also known as the home of the Pennsylvania Longrifle, with the first of those longrifles likely made in the Lancaster area sometime early in the 18th century. By the late 1770s, according to information from Jacobsburg Environmental Education Center, which is home to Jacobsburg National Historic District, William Henry II of the Henry Family of gunmakers from Lancaster had opened a small gunmaking shop in Christian Springs near Nazareth. Then, in the 1790s, he purchased land at Jacobsburg and built a gun manufactory, with a larger facility opened in the area in 1812. Today, visitors can learn about the history of the Pennsylvania Longrifle and gun manufacturing in the area by visiting the Jacobsburg Historical Society and its Pennsylvania Longrifle Museum.

Pennsylvania’s Flintlock Season
The Pennsylvania Game Commission (PGC) honors the tradition and history of the flintlock rifle in the state by holding what is believed to be the nation’s only flintlock-only deer-hunting season. While other states have muzzleloading and primitive weapons seasons, those seasons allow black-powder percussion rifles and/or modern inline rifles. Pennsylvania’s flintlock season has been held since 1974, which makes the 2023 event, set for Dec. 26-Jan. 15, the 50th year of the hunt.

According to PGC Director of Communications Travis Lau, the first flintlock hunt was held Dec. 26-28, 1974, on 37 State Game Lands, with 65 deer taken during the 3-day affair. “Eventually it was expanded to include more game lands, then made statewide in 1979,” Lau said. “Today, it remains a much-anticipated opportunity to enjoy the deer woods after Christmas, and it seems like every year some dandy bucks are taken in this season. I believe Pennsylvania is the only state that has a season dedicated to flintlocks, and in Pennsylvania, it’s the only deer season in which hunters can harvest an antlerless deer with their unused buck tag.”

Hunting with a flintlock in the flintlock season is a challenge in many ways, starting with the fact that sportsmen are using a weapon that has the opportunity to misfire, especially if the powder, flint or frizzen get damp or wet. Plus, it’s often cold and windy – weather conditions that certainly aren’t for everyone. Then there’s the fact that the major deer seasons have come and gone, so whitetail numbers are at or near their lowest point of the year.

The game commission estimates 77,000 hunters took part in the flintlock season in 2022-2023, harvesting an estimated 12,000 antlerless deer and only 1,230 antlered deer. Compare that to the overall deer harvest, where an estimated 650,000-plus hunters took 422,960 deer over the course of the entire hunting season, and you can see the odds aren’t necessarily stacked in the flintlock hunter’s favor.

A Passion for Flintlock Hunting
After his initial experience shooting his flintlock, Vaka called upon friend Rick Grgurich for guidance. The pair then spent time at the shooting range, with Grgurich going over the proper powders and setup for Vaka, including finding the right projectile for his particular gun. Fast-forward to today, and Vaka’s love for black-powder hunting burns strong. Every winter, he, his sons Ben and Cameron, and several friends gather to make deer drives on public hunting lands during the flintlock season, hoping to take a deer or two if the opportunity presents itself. Over the past 18 years, the Lowhill Township resident has been fortunate to harvest eight or nine deer, pretty remarkable when one considers the challenges of flintlock hunting.

“Our groups were originally like five or six people and now there are times when we get up to maybe a dozen guys,” Vaka said. “I think it’s the most beautiful time of the year, generally because of the snow and there’s no pressure. We’ll put on little pushes to each other and my sons are usually on the mountain with me, (plus) a lot of our friends. There are times we’ll see groups in excess of 20 or 30 deer because they’re in winter herds.”

When it comes to flintlock hunting, Vaka stresses the importance of practicing regularly to ensure you are familiar with the gun and have it in excellent working condition. “We spend a lot of time at the range, getting the guns to run right, getting good ignition, making sure you’re using the right flint, the right projectiles, the right powders,” he said. “Making sure you’re cleaning them between shots. It takes a lot of love and time.”

Vaka is so adamant about practicing with his flintlock that not only does he hit the range several times a year, he and his friends started a muzzleloading jamboree a few years ago to hone their marksmanship skills. During the daylong event held each June, the group competes in several skills challenges including shooting freehand at a target 50-yards away, taking aim at an egg suspended 10-yards away and shooting from a rest at a steel deer target 100-yards away. The winner of the competition then walks away with the coveted Wolverine Trophy. “We came up with this idea … because we felt like it just wasn’t enough,” Vaka said. “We felt like we needed to continue to challenge ourselves. It was an excuse really to just shoot more. And we love it so much — we spend more time with the guns and with each other.”

When it comes to actually being in the woods, Vaka says the biggest challenge for flintlock hunters is keeping everything dry so the gun fires properly. Unlike other black-powder or modern firearms, the flintlock relies on an ignition system that is completely exposed to the elements. Basically, the gun’s flint, frizzen (the metal plate the flint strikes when the trigger is pulled to create a spark) and black-powder pan sit on the outside of the barrel. That primer powder in the pan then ignites the powder inside the barrel via a touch hole on the side of the barrel.

“I would absolutely say you want to be prepared,” he said. “If there is any type of precipitation whatsoever, you have to have something to cover your frizzen and your lock.” He also notes that cleaning the gun regularly – both inside and out – is essential. That helps keep all of the parts in good working order, prevents rusting and wards off possible damage to the inside of the barrel.

“Every time you shoot it you should give it a really good cleaning,” he said. “And that takes time; it’s a commitment.”

Looking Ahead
While Christmas 2023 will be spent with family and friends, come Dec. 26, Vaka will once again be in the same environment he always finds himself on that day – making deer drives in the woods and hills of eastern Pennsylvania, his trusty flintlock at his side. For Vaka, it’s a tradition he tries to never miss.

“We always say that the day after Christmas is our favorite day of the year because it’s just like a reunion,” he said. “A lot of guys travel in from different areas to hunt in our group. I love all seasons, but if there was one (hunting) tag or one season I could only hunt, it would be flintlock, purely because of the challenge and camaraderie and the tradition. It’s not easy to get started. You kind of have to shift through the gears, but once you really understand it and you have confidence in your gun and your ability, it’s the greatest hunting sport there is.”

Source = ‘The greatest hunting sport there is’: Pa.’s one-of-a-kind flintlock deer season turns 50

View attachment 278307
Love it. Texas has pretty well thrown out the muzzleloader season unfortunately.
 
PA ‘One-of-a-Kind’ Flintlock Deer Season Turns 50!
‘The greatest hunting sport there is’:


Published: Dec. 19, 2023, 6:59 a.m.

Twenty years ago, Michael Vaka’s grandfather-in-law Glen Barlow showed up at his door with a gift for his grandson-in-law – a box containing a flintlock rifle he’d bought decades before for $50 at a local bar. The Thompson/Center Hawken, which had been stored in Barlow’s attic for many years, started Vaka on a magical journey to what has become his favorite hunting pursuit, and one that’s unique and steeped in history.

“My wife’s grandfather gave it to me and I was so excited that I went to the range and I tried shooting it and I could not get the damn thing to fire; I couldn’t get any ignition,” Vaka recalled. “Here, I was shooting Pyrodex (powder) instead of black powder. I mean you want to talk about being a newbie – I understood muzzleloading, but I didn’t understand black-powder hunting.”

When it comes to black-powder firearms, Pennsylvania and in fact, the Lehigh Valley, has a rich tradition, with the Moravians bringing their gunsmithing and gunstocking skills with them from Europe when they settled Bethlehem in the early 1740s. The state is also known as the home of the Pennsylvania Longrifle, with the first of those longrifles likely made in the Lancaster area sometime early in the 18th century. By the late 1770s, according to information from Jacobsburg Environmental Education Center, which is home to Jacobsburg National Historic District, William Henry II of the Henry Family of gunmakers from Lancaster had opened a small gunmaking shop in Christian Springs near Nazareth. Then, in the 1790s, he purchased land at Jacobsburg and built a gun manufactory, with a larger facility opened in the area in 1812. Today, visitors can learn about the history of the Pennsylvania Longrifle and gun manufacturing in the area by visiting the Jacobsburg Historical Society and its Pennsylvania Longrifle Museum.

Pennsylvania’s Flintlock Season
The Pennsylvania Game Commission (PGC) honors the tradition and history of the flintlock rifle in the state by holding what is believed to be the nation’s only flintlock-only deer-hunting season. While other states have muzzleloading and primitive weapons seasons, those seasons allow black-powder percussion rifles and/or modern inline rifles. Pennsylvania’s flintlock season has been held since 1974, which makes the 2023 event, set for Dec. 26-Jan. 15, the 50th year of the hunt.

According to PGC Director of Communications Travis Lau, the first flintlock hunt was held Dec. 26-28, 1974, on 37 State Game Lands, with 65 deer taken during the 3-day affair. “Eventually it was expanded to include more game lands, then made statewide in 1979,” Lau said. “Today, it remains a much-anticipated opportunity to enjoy the deer woods after Christmas, and it seems like every year some dandy bucks are taken in this season. I believe Pennsylvania is the only state that has a season dedicated to flintlocks, and in Pennsylvania, it’s the only deer season in which hunters can harvest an antlerless deer with their unused buck tag.”

Hunting with a flintlock in the flintlock season is a challenge in many ways, starting with the fact that sportsmen are using a weapon that has the opportunity to misfire, especially if the powder, flint or frizzen get damp or wet. Plus, it’s often cold and windy – weather conditions that certainly aren’t for everyone. Then there’s the fact that the major deer seasons have come and gone, so whitetail numbers are at or near their lowest point of the year.

The game commission estimates 77,000 hunters took part in the flintlock season in 2022-2023, harvesting an estimated 12,000 antlerless deer and only 1,230 antlered deer. Compare that to the overall deer harvest, where an estimated 650,000-plus hunters took 422,960 deer over the course of the entire hunting season, and you can see the odds aren’t necessarily stacked in the flintlock hunter’s favor.

A Passion for Flintlock Hunting
After his initial experience shooting his flintlock, Vaka called upon friend Rick Grgurich for guidance. The pair then spent time at the shooting range, with Grgurich going over the proper powders and setup for Vaka, including finding the right projectile for his particular gun. Fast-forward to today, and Vaka’s love for black-powder hunting burns strong. Every winter, he, his sons Ben and Cameron, and several friends gather to make deer drives on public hunting lands during the flintlock season, hoping to take a deer or two if the opportunity presents itself. Over the past 18 years, the Lowhill Township resident has been fortunate to harvest eight or nine deer, pretty remarkable when one considers the challenges of flintlock hunting.

“Our groups were originally like five or six people and now there are times when we get up to maybe a dozen guys,” Vaka said. “I think it’s the most beautiful time of the year, generally because of the snow and there’s no pressure. We’ll put on little pushes to each other and my sons are usually on the mountain with me, (plus) a lot of our friends. There are times we’ll see groups in excess of 20 or 30 deer because they’re in winter herds.”

When it comes to flintlock hunting, Vaka stresses the importance of practicing regularly to ensure you are familiar with the gun and have it in excellent working condition. “We spend a lot of time at the range, getting the guns to run right, getting good ignition, making sure you’re using the right flint, the right projectiles, the right powders,” he said. “Making sure you’re cleaning them between shots. It takes a lot of love and time.”

Vaka is so adamant about practicing with his flintlock that not only does he hit the range several times a year, he and his friends started a muzzleloading jamboree a few years ago to hone their marksmanship skills. During the daylong event held each June, the group competes in several skills challenges including shooting freehand at a target 50-yards away, taking aim at an egg suspended 10-yards away and shooting from a rest at a steel deer target 100-yards away. The winner of the competition then walks away with the coveted Wolverine Trophy. “We came up with this idea … because we felt like it just wasn’t enough,” Vaka said. “We felt like we needed to continue to challenge ourselves. It was an excuse really to just shoot more. And we love it so much — we spend more time with the guns and with each other.”

When it comes to actually being in the woods, Vaka says the biggest challenge for flintlock hunters is keeping everything dry so the gun fires properly. Unlike other black-powder or modern firearms, the flintlock relies on an ignition system that is completely exposed to the elements. Basically, the gun’s flint, frizzen (the metal plate the flint strikes when the trigger is pulled to create a spark) and black-powder pan sit on the outside of the barrel. That primer powder in the pan then ignites the powder inside the barrel via a touch hole on the side of the barrel.

“I would absolutely say you want to be prepared,” he said. “If there is any type of precipitation whatsoever, you have to have something to cover your frizzen and your lock.” He also notes that cleaning the gun regularly – both inside and out – is essential. That helps keep all of the parts in good working order, prevents rusting and wards off possible damage to the inside of the barrel.

“Every time you shoot it you should give it a really good cleaning,” he said. “And that takes time; it’s a commitment.”

Looking Ahead
While Christmas 2023 will be spent with family and friends, come Dec. 26, Vaka will once again be in the same environment he always finds himself on that day – making deer drives in the woods and hills of eastern Pennsylvania, his trusty flintlock at his side. For Vaka, it’s a tradition he tries to never miss.

“We always say that the day after Christmas is our favorite day of the year because it’s just like a reunion,” he said. “A lot of guys travel in from different areas to hunt in our group. I love all seasons, but if there was one (hunting) tag or one season I could only hunt, it would be flintlock, purely because of the challenge and camaraderie and the tradition. It’s not easy to get started. You kind of have to shift through the gears, but once you really understand it and you have confidence in your gun and your ability, it’s the greatest hunting sport there is.”

Source = ‘The greatest hunting sport there is’: Pa.’s one-of-a-kind flintlock deer season turns 50

View attachment 278307
I attended the first season in Mifflin County PA and years later almost got my butt kicked for mentioning the season at a Colorado State Muzzle Loading Event. I was the President of this Association and they thought I was wanting to lobby for such a season just because of mentioning it.
 
My buddy and I were out there the first year of the Pa. flint season in the early 1970's. Looking back , we were among the first guys around , trying to unravel the practical deer hunting use of flint guns. Looking back , only way to describe it was we were having trouble finding our a$$es w/ both hands. Because we were regular shooters at a local m/l club , we did know how our guns worked , but had to adapt our thinking from using modern scope sighted ctg. guns to kill deer , to short range iron sight , single shot m/lers. Learning curve was conquered using "still hunting" and slow tracking techniques. Also ,we found our best deer killing days , were in the worst weather. We had 60 k + acres of State Game Lands to learn. the craft ,as well. Learning about deer , using all custom built m/l's , jaegers to longrifles of different calibers , so we could understand what worked best for us. It's been an experiment few folks ever get to try. So many deer to eat. Too old these days to go where the deer are. ......oldwood
I hear you about old age, I have been hunting since the mid 60's with flintlock rifles and will probably go under with one in my hands or near bye like many of you. I'm getting like 'oldwood' now, need to be close to my hunting friends if there's an issue. !@#$%^&
 
Had the best times of my life , hunting with my buddy , and our two sons. Most times I can't find my keys , but can recite every detail of those late season Pa. flint hunts. Had to learn how to hunt again , and learn about how and where deer go about their lives. I can't go into the woods any more , but it was a blast.
 
I attended the first season in Mifflin County PA and years later almost got my butt kicked for mentioning the season at a Colorado State Muzzle Loading Event. I was the President of this Association and they thought I was wanting to lobby for such a season just because of mentioning it.
Yeah, sometimes people will shout a person down simply for mentioning a subject they don't like.
 
I started hunting PA's flintlock season in 1979 and I haven't missed one since. No matter where in the world I was stationed I made sure I had leave time to get home for at least a few days. It has always been my favorite time in the woods. Other than bow season, I hunt all of PA's seasons with one flintlock or another now and for the past 10 years, but being out after Christmas in the cold, snow and wind chasing deer with 5 or 6 hunting buddys makes for a lot of action. Miss fires, Misses and all, even if we didn't fill any tags; I won't give it up for anything.
 
I got a late start as I wasn't officially licensed until 1976. ,I still have that back tag in my souvenir box of licenses
I trapped enough muskrats to by a CVA 45 and had many failures but memorable successes and made believers out of some naysayers over the years
It's been a fun ride and I'm so happy our Commonwealth sees fit to continue this season as it does set us apart from the herd
Like everyone else has said already the weather the late season population decline sure makes a body be on their A game to succeed!
 
Pa. is a great state to hunt with some nice deer.

Like certain other good state Pa has a program for vets and seniors for discounts and other benefits.
 
I had no idea PA does a flintlock only season.
Can you get an out of state permit for that? I’m in NJ.
 
I had no idea PA does a flintlock only season.
Can you get an out of state permit for that? I’m in NJ.
You can purchase the muzzleloader option when you buy your PA hunting license, which allows you to hunt antlerless (doe) only in mid-October and flintlock only from December 26 til mid to late January, depending on the WMU. However, you will have a tough time at this late point finding a doe tag or a DMAP permit anywhere around eastern PA. That said, the cool thing abouot the flintlock only season is that you can use your one buck tag for a buck OR a doe.
 
You can purchase the muzzleloader option when you buy your PA hunting license, which allows you to hunt antlerless (doe) only in mid-October and flintlock only from December 26 til mid to late January, depending on the WMU. However, you will have a tough time at this late point finding a doe tag or a DMAP permit anywhere around eastern PA. That said, the cool thing abouot the flintlock only season is that you can use your one buck tag for a buck OR a doe.
Interesting, thank you!
 
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