As a NMLRA Field Rep for North Carolina and a member since 1964, I can understand some of the comments here about what the NMLRA is not doing. However, its unfair to compare the services of the NRA versus the NMLRA.
The membership of the NRA is three million plus. The membership of the NMLRA is about 15,000 (1/2% of the NRA membership), and stabilizing. Our high point was in 1987 at 28,000. We had the same overhead back then. Now, we are supporting it with about half of that membership.
We focus on safety, education, history, and competition, to name a few. Except for about a dozen paid office staff at the headquarters at Friendship, IN, everyone else, including the officers, board members, and field reps are only "paid" by satisfaction and accomplishment in furthering interest in muzzleloading.
I rent a table at one of the largest hunting shows in the South, The Dixie Deer Classic, held in Raleigh for three days. Since 1992, I spend $300 out of my pocket to rent a table there for the weekend, representing the NMLRA and the NC State Muzzle Loading Rifle Association. I try to encourage muzzleloading hunters to visit NMLRA Charter Clubs in their vicinity to meet hunters who have "been there, done that". Out of the 20,000+ that come through the door, most of them using inlines, we sign up only about four or five NMLRA memberships. I sincerely believe inline users are a very small percentage of our membership.
Twenty years ago, we had twelve clubs in NC, today we have six. We are all getting older, and I suspect the average age of the NMLRA member is about 65. In five or ten years, they will be looking at retirement homes, and selling off or handing down their firearms to relatives.
You can badmouth our organization or complain about not having services available, that is your right. You're comparing apples to oranges. The NRA raises billions, the NMLRA raises thousands. Like the NRA, the NMLRA chooses to be an "umbrella" organization. If it loads from the muzzle, its a muzzleloader.
I believe if anyone here would take a look at the new "Muzzle Blasts" magazine, they would be impressed with the metamorphic change in the cover and contents and see the value in what $50.00 annual membership entails. The "Muzzle Blasts" magazine is a monthly magazine. Its on par with "Muzzleloader" magazine, which costs $33.00 for only six issues.
If anything here is violates the rules of the house, feel free to edit.
The only reason for displaying the Muzzle Blasts cover is to show its dramatic change.
I read the rules, but if the photo is a violation, delete it.
Keep 'em in the center, close together,
Buck Buchanan
Field Rep - NC
NMLRA