sierraone
AH legend
Not interested with in-line rifles. PM me with a couple of photos, brand, LOP, price, and your name. I will respond with my name, phone number and location if interested.
Yes, 30 - 40 years ago youth model muzzleloaders were quite common. But apparently not today. Thanks for the info though.Check out the Tradiions Deer Hunter side lock. They do have a roughly 14 inch LOP, but are otherwise pretty compact. I bought one for my wife last year. She's 5'3" and while the LOP is a little long, she manages it well. I am currently looking for something similar as you for my daughter, but there just doesn't seem to be that many youth model muzzleloaders out there.
Try https://www.thegunworks.com. They are located in Springfield, OR, but have an online store and if you call, they seem to be pretty helpful. I am trying to get away and drive down there, hopefully this weekend. If they have any youth models in stock, I will message you.
Not interested with in-line rifles. PM me with a couple of photos, brand, LOP, price, and your name. I will respond with my name, phone number and location if interested.
Thanks for the advice @rookhawk, but I am looking for a specific type of youth muzzle loader (they used to be quite common) but apparently no longer. Have no intention of my almost 8 year old grandson taking a 300 yard shot anytime soon. He killed his first deer last year at 60 yards with a 6.5 Grendel his dad set up for him with downloaded ammo. Also not concerned about the gun lasting for ever. After 2 or 3 years, depending how fast he grows, we can discuss a more long distance, maybe inline type rifle. Thanks again. I do follow your post in all subjects.I know its not what you asked for, but here’s a bit of parenting advice that worked for me. Muzzleloaders produce tremendous recoil. Getting a youth gun is a fleeting correction to try to get better stock fit to mitigate recoil. I went the other way, I did get an inline muzzleloader of “forever“ quality that shoots 160gr black powder loads…it’s a 350 yard accurate gun. The key ingredient was this hideous howitzer style muzzlebrake that profoundly reduced felt recoil. It resolved the gun fit issue altogether.
For perspective, a typical muzzleloader load is producing roughly the same recoil as a 458 WinMag. ouch. The howitzer style muzzleloader brakes reduce that by 70% or more.
Even if you don’t go inline or dump $3000 into something fancy, $200 for a very ugly muzzle brake is a very practical solution for a youth shooter. It allows you to use a full power load to enable shooting accurately and lethally out to reasonable distances for any shooter.
Thanks for the advice, but see my response to @rookhawk.My opinion is don't hinder him with a .45 caliber but step up to a .50.
You will find a lot more loads for the .50 than you will in a .45.
Also see if you can find a kit unless it is for this fall hunts. You may even be able to purchase a .50 caliber and then find a .45 caliber barrel. I did this with my .54 T/C Renegade when .54 projectiles became scarce and I didn't feel like casting any out of lead.
What???!!! No they don't. Not even close. I've been shooting muzzleloaders for 50 years, and ALL of them with iron or brass butt plates. Women and children can handle them easily. And a muzzle brake on a muzzleloader? That's crazy and entirely unnecessary.For perspective, a typical muzzleloader load is producing roughly the same recoil as a 458 WinMag. ouch….
What???!!! No they don't. Not even close. I've been shooting muzzleloaders for 50 years, and ALL of them with iron or brass butt plates. Women and children can handle them easily. And a muzzle brake on a muzzleloader? That's crazy and entirely unnecessary.
WHAT?!?!?! .458 recoil??? Not hardly!I know its not what you asked for, but here’s a bit of parenting advice that worked for me. Muzzleloaders produce tremendous recoil. Getting a youth gun is a fleeting correction to try to get better stock fit to mitigate recoil. I went the other way, I did get an inline muzzleloader of “forever“ quality that shoots 160gr black powder loads…it’s a 350 yard accurate gun. The key ingredient was this hideous howitzer style muzzlebrake that profoundly reduced felt recoil. It resolved the gun fit issue altogether.
For perspective, a typical muzzleloader load is producing roughly the same recoil as a 458 WinMag. ouch. The howitzer style muzzleloader brakes reduce that by 70% or more.
Even if you don’t go inline or dump $3000 into something fancy, $200 for a very ugly muzzle brake is a very practical solution for a youth shooter. It allows you to use a full power load to enable shooting accurately and lethally out to reasonable distances for any shooter.