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This is a fairly old thread but there is apparently some confusion about Arkansas Muzzleloading Regulations.
From the Arkansas Game and Fish Commission (AGFC) website:
"To be used for deer hunting, muzzleloading rifles must have a barrel 18 inches or longer and be .40 caliber or larger. Magnifying sights may be used. The use of shot is not legal. Legal muzzleloaders use flint, percussion cap, primer or electronic pulse, must have the bullet loaded through the muzzle and are not capable of firing a cartridge.
Hunters may use muzzleloading handguns with:
barrels 9 inches or longer
.45 caliber or larger if they shoot conical bullets (200 grains or heavier), or
.530 caliber or larger if they shoot round balls.
A hunter may carry a muzzleloading handgun of any caliber as backup to a muzzleloading rifle"
The real head scratcher is the restriction on buckshot. The regs for "modern gun" season allow buckshot in unmentionable shotguns above .410 gauge. Muzzle velocities of modern buckshot and blackpowder loads are comparable, so it's not a power issue. I have always wondered why the regulations are like that.
A theory of mine is based off the deep tradition of hunting with hounds in Arkansas. Dogs are not allowed during the muzzleloader season but are for certain areas and dates during modern gun (used to be almost state wide for modern gun). Perhaps the AGFC was lobbied by dog hunters to keep buckshot legal for modern gun, but banned it for muzzleloaders as hunting with dogs was not legal so the "need" was not there.
From the Arkansas Game and Fish Commission (AGFC) website:
"To be used for deer hunting, muzzleloading rifles must have a barrel 18 inches or longer and be .40 caliber or larger. Magnifying sights may be used. The use of shot is not legal. Legal muzzleloaders use flint, percussion cap, primer or electronic pulse, must have the bullet loaded through the muzzle and are not capable of firing a cartridge.
Hunters may use muzzleloading handguns with:
barrels 9 inches or longer
.45 caliber or larger if they shoot conical bullets (200 grains or heavier), or
.530 caliber or larger if they shoot round balls.
A hunter may carry a muzzleloading handgun of any caliber as backup to a muzzleloading rifle"
The real head scratcher is the restriction on buckshot. The regs for "modern gun" season allow buckshot in unmentionable shotguns above .410 gauge. Muzzle velocities of modern buckshot and blackpowder loads are comparable, so it's not a power issue. I have always wondered why the regulations are like that.
A theory of mine is based off the deep tradition of hunting with hounds in Arkansas. Dogs are not allowed during the muzzleloader season but are for certain areas and dates during modern gun (used to be almost state wide for modern gun). Perhaps the AGFC was lobbied by dog hunters to keep buckshot legal for modern gun, but banned it for muzzleloaders as hunting with dogs was not legal so the "need" was not there.