Was at a show a number of years ago, guy has a Smith carbine, $125.00, I bought it, sold later for $600.00
Was wondering what your best deal was acquiring a muzzleloader, be it trade or purchase.
In 1989 I purchased basic modern pistol from a small LGS. I tried liking it, but it just didn't do it for me. At this point I didn't have a muzzleloader and had never shot one. In 1992 I was invited to go shooting with a couple of guys. One guy was a Civil War buff and had what I think was an 1861 Springfield replica. The other guy had a CVA Hawken in .50. I shot them both and was hooked. Funds were tight and I was trying to figure out how I was going to get a muzzleloader, plus whatever supplies I would need. Later that year I end up back at the same small LGS and sitting in the rack is a used .54 GPR. I forget the price, but it was more than what I could scrape up at the time. I asked him if he would take a trade and he said maybe. I went home, got the little used modern pistol, and took it back. His eyes lit up and he said sure. Then he pulled out the box of accessories that came with the GPR that he had also taken in trade. Balls, conicals, patches, jags, nipples, other ramrod attachments. We did a straight trade and we were both happy. I've acquired other muzzleloaders since then, but the GPR is still around. Need to take it out more than I do.
Dear Mr. Foley, you are welcome here on our Forum, and the U.K. forum who banned you can go jump. Whitworths are welcome here and I once watched a Whitworth repro cannon (rifled, but not hexed) being fired at a U.S. Civil war reenactment. I was on a Blakeley repro that day and so could not volunteer for service on the Whitworth. The English did make some fine ML cannon and rifles in the day, and it's a shame they have to put up with Jack-in-the-Box gun restrictions nowadays. Please remember we respect and cherish you; we are not like the rest, LOL!
Picked up a 50cal Hawken Woodsman for $110 at a pawn shop, they thought it was just a decoration.Was wondering what your best deal was acquiring a muzzleloader, be it trade or purchase.
In 1989 I purchased basic modern pistol from a small LGS. I tried liking it, but it just didn't do it for me. At this point I didn't have a muzzleloader and had never shot one. In 1992 I was invited to go shooting with a couple of guys. One guy was a Civil War buff and had what I think was an 1861 Springfield replica. The other guy had a CVA Hawken in .50. I shot them both and was hooked. Funds were tight and I was trying to figure out how I was going to get a muzzleloader, plus whatever supplies I would need. Later that year I end up back at the same small LGS and sitting in the rack is a used .54 GPR. I forget the price, but it was more than what I could scrape up at the time. I asked him if he would take a trade and he said maybe. I went home, got the little used modern pistol, and took it back. His eyes lit up and he said sure. Then he pulled out the box of accessories that came with the GPR that he had also taken in trade. Balls, conicals, patches, jags, nipples, other ramrod attachments. We did a straight trade and we were both happy. I've acquired other muzzleloaders since then, but the GPR is still around. Need to take it out more than I do.
I lost a pistol in a divorce one time. So I swore I'd never get divorced again. But it happened again as it does to many good men.I own and have owned alot of different muzzleloaders in my life. The very best deal I think I ever got was on my first ml rifle. It was a brand new, in the box, CVA .50 Hawken. I bought it at the Best Company on sale for $99.99. The regular price was $129.99. That gun was very accurate and I used it for deer hunting for my first couple of years. Lost it in the divorce.
Enter your email address to join: