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The Romance of Flintlocks

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Yes, I did this many moons ago to the exact same rifle, at that time I used Dixie's conversion and the Frizzen was a very poor sparker and I ended up selling it to my brother for a wall hanger.

I would think the L&R will give you very good service.
THANKS for the feedback about Dixie's frizzen "low spark" issues! I remember when they were available years ago! I'm glad that L&R still offers a replacement and/or conversion lock for the retro "classic style" DIXIE Tenn. rifles! I'll be ordering one very soon just in case, before any "availability" changes!đź‘Ś
 
Yep , and by the time you were 35 you were all used up and croaked soon after. Very romantic times.
Not so much.
If you made it to adulthood you had a good chance of making it to at lest your late fifties or sixties.
Chances are if you look at your genealogy you will find most of your ancestors made it to the sixties, and you may see that trend back three or four centuries when most of our record peter out
Getting to ten was real hard, getting to twenty almost as hard. After that chances were you were good to go
 
It's true , that all things go in a circle. Man comes from Above , and returns to the Above. I was blessed with a father that put a BB rifle in my hands when around five yrs. old. From there , I took a poor man's journey into shooting , involving , eventual competition , rifle , and shotgun trap. Hunting went hand in hand with all that. And since we had little money for expensive modern guns , Dad made what we needed. He was a dedicated amature gun builder , and had a friend that did modern rifle gun barrel work. Once the caliber was selected , and gunbarrel was properly head spaced , Dad did the stock work , checkering finishing bluing etc. , etc. , . We reloaded all out ammo , thousands of rounds. As a kid , I did most of the reloading under Dad's direction. This occurred up untill my 18th birthday , when I left home to get an education. The seeds of muzzleloading were planted by the Dixie Gun Works catalog , frequently found in the stack of magazines by Dad's easy chair . My circle of modern gun experience was complete , when a cousin brought his Dixie Belgian , 16 ga. import single barrel M/L shotgun for me to try . I fired it into a mud puddle , lotsa smoke , fire , noise , and water flew everywhere. That's where a 50 + year love affair with muzzleloading started. All my modern guns that I kept , have turned into "safe queens". I have no regrets , except that I wish I would have started muzzleloading earlier in my life. The circle of my muzzleloading experience , is almost complete. ..........oldwood
Pretty much my story except my Da gave me a Gecado 25 (Diana traded as Gecado. Sanctions and all that.) For my first frontstuffer I traded a .303 No.4 Mk 1 and I got the best of the deal. The country I was living in emptied their arsenals of WWII stuff and I bought it for the equivalent of around $15.

BTW, it's pretty awesome living in a country where you don't need an Explosives Permit to buy BP. Or have to fill in a registry to buy ammo so Government can make sure you don't have too much on hand.
 
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