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I'm am 66. Darn, I had to do the math. I remembered 62 or 63, couldn't believe 66. Old math don't lie. 2021 -1955= 66. Where I live, I know 1 young guy (early 40's). After him, I'm the one wearing peach fuzz on my cheeks. Started shooting muzzleloaders just after High School,(73) Civil war stuff. While stationed at Ft. Benning, Ga.( early 80's) I graduated to flint locks. Most of the cartridge stuff you guys were shooting in the early 80's seemed to be happening out west. ML were hot where I was. There was a match with in driving distance every weekend. No BPCR matches that I knew of. I tinkered with an 1884 TD that I still have. But no one else to shoot with. Wasn't until I retired that I got into BPCR. From what I can tell, you can't possibly work, tend a family, and shoot these rifles.My God, cast bullets, weigh and sort bullets, recast rejects, repeat. Make lube. Test lube. Remake lube.Test again, repeat. Compress powder, test, retest. I read threads where some of you weigh primers, and make patch presses to squeeze the water out consistently! One MUST have time on his hands to do all this. I shot ML until our club literally died out. I have no one here to compete with BPCR, so I only entertain myself. There is hope though. I have a young friend (under 30, that is young!) who once introduced to a real wood and steel gun fell in love. He is now collecting S&W revolvers, and shooting a Hawken. Problem is, gotta work, gotta woman, got competing priorities. My Son has the same issues. "Gotta work Dad" I call it doing the responsible adult thing. Sure gets in the way. Another issue with getting new members is most guys can't shoot for s..t. They would show up to a ML match, despite all the help we could give them, they couldn't consistently hit a 12" gong at 50 yards offhand. We'd be shooting clay pigeons. They'd show up all hot to trot, embarrass themselves and never come back. What to do?
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